SpiritMeadow
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- Sep 20, 2007
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an extremely lovely and well thought out post...thank youThere are a number of questions that have to be explored to come to any sort of an answer here.
I would like to suggest two.
1. What does it mean to be human? What makes a human "human"?
2. How does sin spread from Adam to all men?
There are two answers to the first question depending on whether we are thinking in terms of our animal nature or our spiritual nature.
In terms of our animal nature, what it takes to be human is to have a certain set of biological characteristics. And I agree with you that evolution does not permit the appearance of two literal individuals as "human" in this sense. The first humans would be a population of humans and the transition to this population from a pre-human population would be a slow process over many generations such that we could not clearly point to any one generation as the first human generation.
If Adam and Eve were literal individuals, they were not the only humans in existence at the time, but part of a biologically human population.
However, are we human solely by virtue of our biology? Maybe it takes more than biology to make a human "human"?
When we look to see what distinguishes humanity from our near animal relations, it is not the physical differences which strike us, but the spiritual differences: self-awareness, consciousness of our mortality and a yearning for eternal life, a moral sense of right and wrong, and -- most importantly--an awareness of a spiritual reality that transcends the physical world and gives it order and purpose i.e. God.
If it is this complex of spiritual sensitivity that is the real mark of being human, then there is no problem in thinking that God gifted two individuals among a population of merely biological humans with this "image of God". In that sense, even though Adam and Eve were the same biological species as the rest of the population, they and only they were fully "human".
btw, I personally do not believe that Adam and Eve were literal individuals, but I think the above is a reasonable explanation of how they could be within a framework of evolution.
Question two can be handled similarly. Notice that Paul does not actually say that sin spread from Adam. He says that death spread to all men because all men sinned. Nowhere does the bible say we inherit sin from Adam through our parents.
The connection of sin with biological reproduction stems from an interpretation of original sin developed in the 4th century by Augustine of Hippo.
What if sin does not spread biologically, but in some other way?
Personally, I like the analogy of language. We all inherit the language of our parents. But the parents we inherit our language from do not have to be our biological parents. They can be adoptive parents. They can even be adoptive parents of a different country speaking a different language than our biological parents. A child born in China, adopted by a family in France, will inherit French, not Chinese, as their mother tongue.
Now language is a good thing to inherit and sin is not. But why can sin not spread in the same way. All of our parents are sinners and surround us with an example of sinful attitudes and lifestyles. Even the most exemplary parents are not totally free of sin, and beyond the family we have many more models of sin in neighbours, teachers, friends, and the whole array of pseudo-experience in films, TV programs, etc.
We are programmed to imitate the adults around us. That is how we learn language and all sorts of behaviour. It is inevitable that we will also learn sin in the same way. We cannot avoid learning sin in a sinful world where everyone we meet is in some way a sinner.
So, it is not strictly necessary that we have a biological connection to a particular ancestor to inherit sin.
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