1 Corinthians 15:21-22 “For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive.”
I read that modern
evangelicals have found it fashionable to accommodate Scripture to the concept
of a very old earth. These views all do serious harm to Scripture, including
the current compromise of choice, the “framework hypothesis,” which holds that
the passages that seem to deal with science and early history contain only
“spiritual” truth but not factual content. Each such attempt to accept vast
ages before the appearance of man has many flaws, but perhaps the most damaging
to the Christian faith is the problem of death before sin. ot fol
The Bible in Romans 6:23, plainly teaches that “the
wages of sin is death”. Genesis 1:30
tells us that before Adam and Eve rebelled, animals ate only plants. Death came
as a result of sin and the curse: “For in the day that you eat thereof [the
forbidden tree] you shall surely die” (Genesis
2:17). The first death in all of creation occurred when God provided Adam
and Eve animal skins for clothing. Sin always brings death.
Romans 5:12 “By one man
sin entered into the world, and death by sin; and so death passed upon all men,
for that all have sinned”.
Indeed, “the whole creation groans and travails
in pain together until now”. That this is not referring to spiritual death only
is clear from 1 Corinthians 15:21-22, which deals with physical resurrection
from the dead. Just as Adam’s sin brought death on all creation, so Christ’s
resurrection brings victory over death. But here is the problem. If death
existed before Adam, then death is not the penalty for sin. How, then, did
Christ’s death pay the penalty for our sin? If death is not tied to Adam’s sin,
then life is not tied to Christ’s death and resurrection, and the Christian
faith is all in vain. I choose to trust the God and His holy Word; not unbelieving secular world system. How about you?
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