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If I may say,Is death the consequence for sin?
Here is one attempt to deal with the issue of death coming into the world via sin that I came across. Seems like it's worth taking into consideration:
Does Death Predate Adam?
The first argument, evolution presupposes the change of generations. The change of generations presupposes death. The essence of the problem is that if there were generations of developing animal forms before the appearance and fall of man then in this case we have to say that death was in the world before the appearance of sin! We know that death is the consequence of sin, and the sin of man. Hence, there was no sin in the world, before man than theologically it is impossible to presuppose the existence of death in it.
If death was in the world before the fall of man, then the universe became corrupted, not through man. This statement is against the biblical belief. Here, we have to stop and think hard about the meanings of the words death and sin.
The word death is too human; the word death is very rich with human tragedy. Can we apply the word death, that is so full, up to the brim with human meaning, to a non-human world? Death for a person is a tragedy, it is something outrageously wrong. It is not by chance that in Russian Philosophy the terrifying fear of death was taken as an experiential witness of its non-human origin. Suppose that man was a legitimate outcome of natural evolution and a struggle for survival; then he would not experience disgust towards that (death) which is so natural.
Undoubtedly the death of man entered into this world through sin. Death is evil and it was not created by God. This is also an axiom of Biblical Theology.
Hence, it seems to me, that only one conclusion should be drawn from this: the departure of animals is not death, and it is not the same as the departure of a man. When we say The death of Socrates we do not have a right to apply the same word to the phrase The death of a dog. The death of a star is a metaphor. We can use the same metaphor to say the death of an atom or a chair. Animals were disappearing from existence, they were going out of the world before the time of man. This was not death. Hence, it is impossible to talk about the phenomenon of death in a theological or philosophical meaning of the word, while applying this to a non-human world. The death of a lifeless star or atom, the splitting of a living cell or bacteria, and the discontinuance of a physiological process in monkeys: this is not the same is the death of man.
Yes, death is a consequence of sin! Sin is a violation of the will of the Creator. Can we be sure that the death of animals is also a violation of the Creative will? Did God create animals for eternal life? Did he want to create them as participants in eternity? Did he intend them to partake in the Bread of Life, and Eucharist?
If not it means those temporary limitations of animals and their accessibility to decay is not a violation of the Plan of the Creator.
It is not a sin or distortion of the creative will. If the Eucharist is the only Bread of Life, and in our Cathedrals we do not administer communion to puppies, it means that this Bread is not for them and Eternity is not for them either. The death of animals is not a violation of the Plan of God. The Bible does not promise eternal life for our world. Only the human soul is prepared for Eternity. The Savior appeals to people, not to kittens, when he says: Come, you blessed of my Father, inherit the kingdom prepared for you from the foundation of the world (Mathew 25:34). The rest will be burned up.There are, of course, many within Orthodoxy who've spoken on the issue. Specifically, - and thankfully, there are many articles and books by Orthodox Christians who have either accepted and written or spoken on the theory of evolution charitably for what it is.
On what was noted, Evolution was never about denying death - and others have noted that what generally happens (when understanding the argument) is that death has differing levels. Things being made MORTAL in the world (unless one tries to make the argument that even animals themselves were immortal and ate from the Tree of Life as Man did ) is a matter of dealing with how only man had special priveleges.
Breck, Archpriest John V. "Ex Nihilo" Life in Christ, February 2008 #1. Ex nihilo (1) - Orthodox Church in America
Fritts, Kevin Basil, "On the Dogma of Creation" On the Dogma of Creation | Kevin Basil
Hallam, Fr. Gregory, "Orthodoxy and Creationism" Antioch Abouna: Orthodoxy and Creationism
Kalomiros, Dr. Alexandre, "The Six Dawns" zephyr.gr
Maletis, John P., "Let There Be Light: An Orthodox Christian Theory of Human Evolution for the 21st Century". Theandros Vol. 5 No. 3. Green Smoke Coupon Codes for (10-50% OFF) in Savings at GreenSmoke.com
Mileant, Bishop Alexander of Buenos Aires and South America (ROCOR). The Origins of the World and Mankind: An Attempt to Reconcile the Biblical Account with Scientific Discoveries. Transl. by Karyn and Michael Grigoriev. Ed. by Natalia Semyanko. Holy Trinity Orthodox Mission, La Canada, California, 2004. http://www.orthodoxresearchinstitute.org/articles/patrology/metallinos_faith_and_science.htm
Nicozisin, Fr. George, "Creationism versus Evolution" Creationism Versus Evolution
And that's where the irony lies - people claiming that you can't have evolution and deny death do not realize where death is still present even for others who DO NOT support evolution since the text of scripture from Genesis alone does not say all creatures died when Adam ate the Forbidden Fruit - nor does it say that all the animals in the sea/oceans God made ate herbs and food. The text NEVER advocates such. As said before, the statement given by the Lord to beasts eating plants, if saying it was a commandment forbidding animals from killing, CANNOT apply to all creation....for the creatures of the SEAS/great deep are not included in the command.
Gen. 1:21 says that on the fifth day of creation week God created ‘great sea creatures’ (‘great whales’ (KJV) / ‘great sea monsters’ (NASB)) along with all the other moving living things in the oceans. (Scholars inform us that in the original Hebrew this would have been their word used to describe specifically a monster, particularly a ‘huge marine animal’ or a ‘hideous land animal’.) . The Levitithan/great monstets of the waters and other creatures.....the Bible declares that “The darkness, the sea, the leviathan ....all good things for which God is praised” ( Psalm 104:4, Job 41:1-3 / Job 41, Psalm 74:13-15 /Psalm 74 , Isaiah 27:1-3 , etc ).
But the command of Genesis 1 for eating herbs/fruit was given to the LAND-DWELLING animals alone - nothing was ever said of other creatures in differing realms eating meat. Thus, you can't argue for no death according to the text and really be complete.
And it never says Adam and Eve were ever made IMMORTAL from Day One - so you're still dealing with issues of mortality even before anything of evolution comes on the scene.
Thus, people tend to redefine death whenever they assume that no animals or creatures on the planet could die in order to tackle what they see in Romans 5 when it speaks of death entering the world through Adam. The entire story of Romans (especially when seeing Romans 6) was centered on the death that comes from living for self - and the life that comes to living for Christ. And before there were chapters added much later, it was one flowing letter with every chapter building upon itself.
And there's nothing saying St. Paul was speaking of sin in regards to the animals when he was talking on new life for the believers. It all goes back to actually seeing how the Apostles and Jesus defined death to begin with - many noting, in consistency with Matthew 16 on dying to self being the path to life, that the DEATH Adam brought was the death that comes from not dying to self......something Christ changed. But it was not focused on all animals or plants dying since the context never supported that.
Moreover, it is a false scenario claiming evolution only deals with death - if that's the case, that one needs to cease saying mankind was able to grow/develop new skills and technologies as time went on. As said elsewhere,
I think what many tend to struggle with is the concept that believing God to gradually develop things isn't counter to God making something "perfect" - there are stages and process.
Man was made in God's image (not a physical image). So his nature, his psyche and spirit comes from God's breath. Yes, "God formed man of the dust of the ground". The word "formed" implies a process, and we need not see God forming man like we would put together a gingerbread man. "Out of the ground the Lord God formed every beast of the field". The same word "formed" is used and the human body has the physics of the universe in it.
The word formed could refer to cellular ancestry. However, the inbreathing of God clearly refers to man's spiritual nature which separates him decisively from the animals. biologically, man is a type of animal and always has been. To do otherwise would not be logical as many believers in the sciences have always noted, as man doesn't cease being a Mammal (a type of creature/animal) simply because he is made in the Image of God. Moreover, saying that man did not develop in stages doesn't really deal with the Biblical text since Man was not made fully all at once. God first formed man from the dust of the ground (just as He did with the beasts of the field), then he breathed life into Him...and man became a living being. The Image of God was something that God blessed man with upon creation--but it could have easily taken time time.
God made Adam and Eve perfect - yet they were still able to develop/grow in WISDOM and knowledge (no different than Christ in Luke 2 when he grew up in wisdom/understanding gradually). One doesn't assume that man didn't grow over time when the evidence points otherwise - to take dominion over the entire planet, you need to be resourceful. They did not have airplanes, media technology, dams for rivers/lakes, space ships designed to go into space (as well as mathematical formulas for creating the designs and understanding physics of the world), crop rotation and using tools...or boats to travel the seas.....or even making MUSICAL instruments and iron-working (as Genesis 4:20-22). Yet those things were developed in time. We don't say "Man is IMPERFECT" because he creates/develops new skills and abilities over the centuries - that is a process of development....trial and error.
We have to actually be honest with the text if we're going to deal with it on its own terms.
Of course - and in the same way one leans that way, others note that scripture need not be pitted against evolution in order to support the Word of God. Others believes we die as a result of sin - but others also believe God's Word also notes where not all forms of death are a result of sin. Thus, one cannot do the "I stand for the Word of God" dynamic as if others are not of the same mindset - what is present is one disagrees on interpretation of God's Word.
Yep - and of course, so do chimps (even though chimps eat meat and other monkeys) AND other species without sharp teeth still prey on others.
Genesis 1:29-30 does not explicitly say that meat was forbidden...for it only says the positive: God gave man and beast "every green plant for food." One individual suggested that this passage has a special literary purpose....not given to define man's diet comprehensively, but to set the stage for the prohibition of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil in the following chapter (Gen. 2:16-17).
And creatures of the SEAS/great deep are not included in the command.
Genesis 1:26The Levitithan/great monstets of the waters and other creatures did not get notice for eating plants...and that is something on my mind greatly when it comes to seeing how the Bible declares that The darkness, the sea, the leviathan ....all good things for which God is praised ( Psalm 104:4, Job 41:1-3 / Job 41, Psalm 74:13-15 /Psalm 74 , Isaiah 27:1-3 , etc ). Perhaps some creatures were made to eat vegetarian, including others that were considered predatory in our times..while others were not and always remained as such due to the way the Lord wanted certain creature to represent what it meant to fear the Lord.
20 And God said, Let the water teem with living creatures, and let birds fly above the earth across the expanse of the sky. 21 So God created the great creatures of the sea and every living and moving thing with which the water teems, according to their kinds, and every winged bird according to its kind. And God saw that it was good. 22 God blessed them and said, Be fruitful and increase in number and fill the water in the seas, and let the birds increase on the earth. 23 And there was evening, and there was morningthe fifth day.
As scripture notes:
The verse says that God created plants with seed and fruit and gave it to the animals for food. However, the verse does not say that all animals ate only plants. It merely says that the plants were given as food. Ultimately, all animals rely upon plants for food - even the carnivores. God specified to three distinct groups what they could or couldn't eat--and the groups were in the class of air and ground/earth. If going from a strictly literal interpretation at all points, then one would logically have to conclude that he was not speaking to other animals in other areas.If saying something could be assumed, one must wonder how far to take it.Genesis 1:29
Then God said, "I give you every seed-bearing plant on the face of the whole earth and every tree that has fruit with seed in it. They will be yours for food. 30 And to all the beasts of the earth and all the birds of the air and all the creatures that move on the groundeverything that has the breath of life in itI give every green plant for food." And it was so.
Genesis 2:7
8 Now the LORD God had planted a garden in the east, in Eden; and there he put the man he had formed. 9 And the LORD God made all kinds of trees grow out of the groundtrees that were pleasing to the eye and good for food. In the middle of the garden were the tree of life and the tree of the knowledge of good and evil.
IMHO, A partial list is given, including the beasts of the field, the birds, and the creatures that creep around. Notably missing from the list are the large creatures of the sea, created on the fifth day. With few exceptions, these animals are all carnivores. Did God make them starve until after the Fall?
...."There is the sea, great and broad, In which are swarms without number, Animals both small and great... They all wait for Thee, To give them their food in due season." (Psalm 104:25, 27)
There are several differing views on the issue which I've engaged in - I have my inclinations toward the Old Earth Creationist model even though I'm very for the simplicity of anything noting that there is a God who is Love and created the entire world while sending His Son to redeem it later.
Gophers could've easily eaten above the ground for grass if they wanted to. The grass above would still die in the same way that it is with over-grazing when animals feed in massive quantities and seeds are carried to start the process again. And with gophers themselves, they don't just burrow to avoid predators. It is a part of keeping the eco-system going since it irrigates the soil....in the same way that Bats are present throughout most of the world, performing vital ecological roles of pollinating flowers and dispersing fruit seeds (with many tropical plant species depending entirely on bats for the distribution of their seeds). There's a natural balance for earths sustenance - and certain rodents (especially for example, the prairie dog) are recognized to be keystone species upon which other species depend, and who are markers for the ecological health of a bioregion.
Specifically, Gopher tunnels funnel off irrigation water and cause soil erosion. Every animal has a purpose - something that seems to be seen even later with the Law of Moses when certain animals were forbidden from being eaten (but that's another story). The point is that gophers being underground wouldn't just be tied to predation from today
.....I am open to certain things due to the fact that NO ONE on the planet was there and will ever know fully. Some things speculated upon might be closer in truth than others - but no one will ever have it all connected since we'd literally need to be there for that.
There are things happening today that may not have happened necessarily in times past, as many against evolution or any concept of animal predation have argued before when saying we can't judge things according to what's seen. On the same token, however, there's just as much unknowns with claiming that nothing of what's seen today was able to happen before (as others have said in regards to where scripture is silent and how others for evolution/similar views have said it tends to be assuming too much in order to claim nothing with animal predation occurred). When I see animal species with designs for predation that are HIGHLY fine-tuned and Psalm 104 (for example) noting where the Lord provides for them and is pleased, I don't assume that predation was not glorifying God. On the same token, seeing how even Lions and other animals have been able to eat grain, I don't assume they couldn't of eaten herbs/fruit as well ...or think they were made with sharp teeth/claws as if to say they could ONLY hunt others or assume they ONLY ate herbs because they can do so.
The vegetarian lion at Vienna Zoo - YouTube
I've already argued before for things like Vegetarianism being what was emphasized for the Fall (The Lion, the Lamb &...Lettuce?: Was Torah Meant for Vegetarian Leanings? ) - as I've equally argued for a Pre-Fall state of having certain forms of predation occurring. For me, it really isn't something that is all that problematic depending on how one sees it. Specifically if focusing in on the garden and not assuming that is representative of the ENTIRE world...
As said best in Death Before the Fall | Alastair's Adversaria :
three ways in which we might choose to reconcile the text with the reality that we observe:
- Possibility One. After the sin of Adam, God gave over the animal kingdom to natural predation.
- Possibility Two. God cursed or dramatically modified the animal kingdom after Adams Fall.
- Possibility Three. Predatory animals are a result of demonic forces at work in the world.
.... the following are a few thoughts on a fourth possibility. I believe that this possibility is suggested by reflection upon the text of Genesis itself, rather than being a highly speculative theory to fill a crucial gap in the biblical account.
The fourth possibility begins by challenging the premise that there was no animal death before the Fall (along with the assumption that human beings were naturally immortal). The claim that there was no animal death before the Fall is not one that the text itself gives us, but arises out of the conviction that animal death is characteristic of the futility and bondage of corruption to which creation was subjected following the Fall of Adam. For this fourth approach, death is associated with the state of innocence, immaturity, wildness, and being unperfected.
....The world was never created perfect, but was created good. In Genesis 1:2, the entire creation was formless, void, and untamed. In Genesis 2:5, this situation is recapitulated on a smaller scale. God begins to address this situation by creating a man. Then, after creating the man, he creates the Garden and places the man within it. It is not unreasonable to assume that the man would have witnessed both the unformed, void, and untamed creation and then Gods planting of the Garden within it. The Garden is the divine sanctuary, the place where God walks in the midst of mankind, and the template for the solution to the problem of the wider world. The Garden is walled or hedged and there is limited access to it, enabling those within it to defend it against intrusion (cf. Genesis 3:24). In creating the Garden, God establishes boundaries within the land, preventing unauthorized access and dividing one zone from others. The act of creating the Garden is one of forming and filling, much like that of Genesis 1. The Garden is walled off from the untamed creation that surrounds it and then it is filled with trees and with beauty. Within the Garden itself there are further boundaries established. The Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil were placed in the heart of the Garden. These trees dont only organize spaceidentifying the centre of the Gardenbut also create a world with new ethical boundaries.
As the man upholds the order of the Garden, it will provide a model that he will bring out into the world and a temple into which he will bring in the riches of the world (we should note the references to precious stones and metals in the description of the lands surrounding Eden). He must make the world into a Garden and the Garden into a glorious garden city, clothed with all of the riches of the world, much like the city that we see in Revelation. He learns within and from the order of Gods own creative work, so that he can engage in creative work of his own as Gods image.
....The world is unlike the Garden and doesnt yet have any gardener working within it. It is formless, void, and untamed, and the beasts that dwell within it are also untamed. It remains to be subdued by a gardener and a tamer of wild beasts. God brought the animals to the man for him to name. Just as God had planted the Garden after the mans creation, providing the man with a model for his own work within the world, the bringing of the animals to the man also served to acquaint him with the nature of his task.
I think it should be considered that of course it is the case that plants don't have to die in order to be food - and no one saying that plants DID die when eaten before the Fall has ever been of the mindset that all plants eaten died afterward. What is noted is that there is a good degree of death that does occur for many plants when they are eaten. Where others are coming from (and to be clear, I also mean those who are NOT evolutionists such as Old Earth Creationists since they feel the same) is that it doesn't make sense to assume no death/dying occurs in the eating process - nor do things being different in the Post-Fall era mean that NOTHING we see today was already happening.
Even with God’s permission to eat fruit, there are many fruits that still experience death when you eat them. Specifically, the death of the fruit’s flesh (and its seeds, if those get chewed up, too) - as well as the fruit’s flesh (and its seeds) are alive, made of living cells. Those seeds are tiny fruit embryos, making them independent organisms. They do die when we eat and digest them. And the same thing is true of other plant matter we eat. Thus, even on a highly literal reading of Genesis, that there was plant death before the Fall. animals. The idea that no creatures, including plants, died prior to the Fall is the extreme position of a minority of young earth creationists...and whenever it's claimed that only parts of plants are eaten, and, therefore, no plants actually died in the Fall, the argument seems to be a bit inconsistent.
And then there's what Christ noted (as mentioned before elsewhere):
John 12:23It was not accidential that the Lord used the language of "death" to describe what it was that the trees experienced in the Garden. There was a serious spiritual view that was always in place within Judaism when it came to plant life and the way it experiences things just like the animals.
23 Jesus replied, “The hour has come for the Son of Man to be glorified. 24 I tell you the truth, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. 25 The man who loves his life will lose it, while the man who hates his life in this world will keep it for eternal life. 26 Whoever serves me must follow me; and where I am, my servant also will be. My Father will honor the one who serves me.
Although a number of grazing animals eat only the tops of grass or leaves, leaving the plant alive, there are a number of exceptions - as even grass grazers pull up whole plants (including the roots) on occasion, which results in the death of entire plants. Some animals eat only roots, such as gophers. Once the roots are eaten, the plant quickly dies. From an aquatic perspective, many sea animals eat diatoms and microscopic plants - ingesting and killing entire organisms. And thus, unless God changed the way these herbivores eat, plants surely died during the fifth and sixth days of creation.
Even outside of that, we still have the issue of how even in the plant kingdom, some species such as sundews and Venus Fly Traps obtain much of their nutrition by trapping and digesting insects and other small animals.
No, Adam was warned not to eat of the tree of life before Eve was formed.Is death the punishment for sin?
It prevents us from sinning for eternity. It is God mercifully putting a cap on how much we can sin in our lifetime, as I suspect that what one suffers in Hell would bear some relationship to how much we have turned our back on God by rebelling against HimIs death the punishment for sin?
Fr.John Behr seemed to discuss the dynamic in his book "The Mystery of Death" when showing how dying to self as Christ lived/proclaimed was actually the means of having life. ...that embracing one's imminent death rather than living in fear of death is the way Eternal life was re-opened to man.It prevents us from sinning for eternity. It is God mercifully putting a cap on how much we can sin in our lifetime, as I suspect that what one suffers in Hell would bear some relationship to how much we have turned our back on God by rebelling against Him
Is death the punishment for sin?
It is the natural end to the unnatural act of sinning
Matt answered why babies die, death is "the natural end of sin."