Notice how he already subscribes to evolutionary theory. "Animal death existed too, for many fossils of predators have been found with their prey in their stomach." He obviously believe these animals lived well before Adam and is interpreting Scripture based on this assumption.
Actually, he is an old-earth creationist, but you are right about what he believes. But Scripture backs up what he says as well. After all, God tells birds and fish and livestock to
multiply. Why should they multiply unless they will die? And what would we do with the teeming multiplied animals when they started to outcompete us for resources?
Oh, I know, we could
eat them! God could surely make it okay for animals to die if He wanted to, right?
Also, Stott fails to notice the different Hebrew words that describe plants and animal life. Plants are not "alive" in a biblical sense of nephesh chayyah (the living creature) as the animals and man are. My car can die on me, but it was never alive like me.
From the Bible we learn that there was no death of any nephesh chayyah before sin—both humans and animals ate plants, which do not die in the biblical sense. Therefore any animal or human fossils must have come after sin. And the Bible spends three whole chapters explaining a watery cataclysm that would explain this—the globe-covering Flood of Noah’s day.
If you can be so specific as to tell me that only animals and man are considered
nephesh chayyah, then I'm sure you can be so specific as to give me the verse where God tells all
nephesh chayyah, before the Fall, that they will never die. Or give me the verse where God tells all
nephesh chayyah, after the Fall, that they will die.
Now there is plenty of Bible evidence that the death of humans has to do with sin. And I will agree with you that human fossils must have come after sin. But animal fossils as well? You're reading too much into the Bible there.
Actually, it is a true trilemma.
Either
all creation obligations are binding on humans even after the Fall, in which case it is plain wrong to eat meat and God commanded the impossible after the Flood;
or
no creation obligations are binding on humans even after the Fall, in which case verses like Exodus 20:8-11 and Mark 10:6-9 lose their force and are either unintelligible or reduced to "wouldn't it be nice if you behaved?" suggestions;
or
some creation obligations are binding on humans even after the Fall while others aren't,
in which case it is only natural to assume that the obligations not binding on humans after the Fall are obligations with little or no moral consequence,
in which case animal death has little or no moral consequence.
In any case, the force of my original argument still stands. I might as well have Jack the Ripper tell me that human death is evil and horrible.
(Lest you think this is an exaggeration, remember that animal death before the fall is the
single argument creationists have for saying things like this:
It's hard for me to believe that you honestly think that pile of bones is such a big deal if you are personally and unnecessarily adding to it with abandon.)
This does not prove death was good.
I have always found this particular argument of animal death before the Fall weak and particularly modernistic / humanistic. At least there actually is a verse saying "For in six days God created the heavens and the earth", or "In the beginning God created male and female", or "And it rained upon the earth forty days and forty nights". Disagree though I may with your interpretation of those verses, we can agree that the text is right there.
But there simply isn't any verse saying that animals would not have died before the Fall. It's all extrapolation and interpolation between verses that can be interpreted sensibly without referring to animal death. Indeed, immortality is never explicitly mentioned in God's original purpose for creation - animals and humans are told to "multiply and fill the earth", not "live forever". (Yes, creation was "very good"; then again, God took the only child with anything good in him in Jeroboam's family, and decided that the most fitting result was the "privilege" of dying a peaceful death as an innocent child.)
We only (though rightly) infer the original immortality of humans because of the way the New Testament speaks of death as the enemy, for in the Old Testament little is said about death being good or bad after Genesis 3, and any fear of death when examined is really a fear of the unknown after death, the fear of shadowy
Sheol. (It goes without saying that for animals, without immortal souls, such fear is irrelevant, which is why there is no moral effect to animal death, and no power to cleanse sin in the sacrifice of bulls and goats.) But for those left alive who succeed the bereaved kings of Kings and Chronicles, the newly departed king is simply "sleeping with his fathers".
And in the New Testament, this fear of the unknown after death is sharpened and shown for what it truly is: hell. The (only) sting of death is sin. Whenever death is the enemy, it is the enemy because it causes the ultimate separation between sinful humanity and their Creator and Judge; and whenever death is defeated, it is defeated because it is forced into uniting Christians with their Father and their King. You see? The Bible's treatment of death is nuanced and pastoral, and it certainly says almost nothing about whether the supposed horror of animal death.
Contrast this with what DA Carson (a noted conservative theologian, and firm critic of liberal theology) observes as the current mood about death:
... Death has become the last taboo. I can write about sex and breasts, discuss homosexuality in public, and debate the ethics of abortion, but I must not mention death in civilized company.
Corpses are whisked off to the undertakers' where family members will not see them until they have been "prepared". Even the bereaved themselves find candor difficult. Many is the grieving family that refuses to talk out its grief, even within the family - with incalculable loss of comfort and perspective. Meanwhile, incredible advances in medical science have convinced us we have the right to live.
... We are more likely to lionize Dylan Thomas's counsel to his dying father: "Rage, rage against the dying of the light." Indeed, after we have accepted our place in God's world and grasped the desperate realities of sin and its consequences, rage may be called for. But Dylan Thomas's rage is not called for. He still wants to be the center of the universe, and is frustrated to the point of rage that he cannot be.
I have some amount of respect for the other creationist arguments from the Bible, but the argument from animal death basically devolves into "If Adam hadn't sinned, my puppy wouldn't have died, boo hoo" for me. It reflects our modern fear of death more than a Biblical attitude towards death. The shameless groping for immortality - especially from those who are all too involved in shortening many animals' mortal lives - is more befitting amidst the fantasies of Gilgamesh than the realities of Genesis.