Only spiritual death. Physical death in the animal kingdom was present before the fall:
So this guy starts out asking, what did scorpions look like before the fall?
We don’t know what they looked like.
Then he says why is their whole body decked out in plated armor like a mid evil knight?
He just implied that we don’t know what they looked like before the fall then he preceded to assume what they looked like before the fall.
Then he asked, why did they need those massive pincers?
That’s like asking, why did Adam & Eve have arms?
Then he asked, why did their tail have a curved syringe capable of injecting neurotoxins?
This brings us back to question 1 where he asks, what did they look like before the fall.
Again we don’t know what they looked like before the fall.
The he says if these features were added after the fall that sounds suspiciously like evolution.
It’s completely irrelevant what it sounds like, we can’t base our doctrines on what something sounds like. We base our doctrines on what the Bible actually tells us. That’s all we can know that was true during that time.
Then he says it seems weird if God created animals with these kinds of features based on His prediction of the fall of man.
Weird is subjective, it’s an opinion not a fact. The fact is we don’t know what they looked like before the fall like he specifically said in his first statement about scorpions. So we can speculate on what they looked like but we can’t know for certain. Does it seem weird when we dress ourselves and our children based on weather predictions?
Next he moves on to the mortality of Adam & Eve saying that because God said that if they ate from the tree of life they might live forever. So he’s assuming that because God said this, it means that they were mortal before the fall, but that’s not necessarily the case. They very well could’ve been immortal before the fall, and now that they had fallen and had lost that immortality they were capable of regaining it by eating from the tree of life. So it makes sense that God would take measures to not allow that to happen.
Next he brings up the issue of if man was created immortal then it would’ve created a problem of overpopulation eventually destroying the ecosystem. This idea fails to take into consideration God’s omniscience and omnipresence. Obviously God knew that this wasn’t going to pose a problem before He even began His creation. So man very well could’ve been immortal because God knew that he would sin and overpopulation wasn’t going to be a problem. Furthermore the Bible never says that Adam & Eve were immortal before the fall. Maybe they were, maybe they weren’t. We don’t know because it’s not stated in the scriptures. So we can speculate but you can’t actually formulate a doctrine on speculation.
Next he quotes Genesis 1:28 where God tells Adam to subdue the earth and rule over the fish, birds, and everything that lives and says this is evidence that God allowed man to kill and eat meat before the fall.
But the Hebrew words translated to subdue and rule do not mandate killing and or eating. They can certainly be used in that context but that particular context is not explicitly mandated in the usage of these words. As this guy said himself these words are also used in reference to slaves in the Bible, but they weren’t used in reference to killing or eating them. One doesn’t subdue and rule a slave by killing and or eating him now does he? In order for the person to actually become a slave he must, at the very least, survive being subdued.
So his takeaway on this particular verse is that man was commanded to conquer and take rulership over the animals similar to the way Israel was commanded to conquer Canaan.
The problem here is that the same Hebrew word translated to subdue in Genesis 1:28 is also used in Jeremiah 34:11 and Jeremiah 34:16 neither of which mentions anything about killings which would’ve been illegal according to Mosaic Law.
”But afterward they turned around and took back the male servants and the female servants whom they had set free, and brought them into subjection for male servants and for female servants.“
Jeremiah 34:11 NASB
”Yet you turned and profaned My name, and each man took back his male servant and each man his female servant whom you had set free according to their desire, and you brought them into subjection to be your male servants and female servants.” ’“
Jeremiah 34:16 NASB1995
So according to this all of the slaves were brought back into subjection without any of them being killed which means that Genesis 1:28 does not imply that Adam was commanded to conquer and rule the animals similarly to the way the Israelites were commanded to conquer Canaan. In fact God specifically commanded the Israelites to attack and kill all the Canaanites.
”Only in the cities of these peoples that the Lord your God is giving you as an inheritance, you shall not leave alive anything that breathes. But you shall utterly destroy them, the Hittite and the Amorite, the Canaanite and the Perizzite, the Hivite and the Jebusite, as the Lord your God has commanded you,“
Deuteronomy 20:16-17 NASB
So obviously God was not commanding Adam to slaughter all the animals in the same manner that He commanded the Israelites to slaughter all the Canaanites and the use of the Hebrew word kâbash does not mandate killing.
Then he mentions that God made clothes for Adam & Eve out of animal skins after the fall so why were the able to kill animals to use the carcasses to make clothes but not allowed to eat the meat.
Nobody knows why. Only God knows why He made that commandment. Maybe there weren’t a lot of animals created yet and using a few for clothes wasn’t going to have such a huge impact on the ecosystem as using them for food. You can kill four deer and make clothes for two people that will last a few years whereas killing them for food would only last a couple days before it is spoiled. I’m not saying this is why God didn’t allow them to eat meat, it’s just a possible explanation. Ultimately nobody knows why God gave that commandment. Why did God allow Noah and his family to eat anything that moves all the way up until Mt Sinai then prohibited man from eating certain animals? Again nobody knows.
Next He goes on the quote Isaiah 11:1-9 because some people claim that this passage describes what it was like before the fall.
For me that’s not what the passage is saying and it’s not what the passage is about so I wouldn’t speculate that this passage has anything to do with life before the fall. I will however point out that this is not claimed by all YEC advocates as I do believe in YEC but I don’t claim that this passage has anything to do with life before the fall.
One thing I would point out is that we don’t know how long Adam lived in the garden before the fall. We also don’t know what would’ve happened if Adam hadn’t sinned. The Bible doesn’t tell us that death wouldn’t have came into the world if Adam hadn’t sinned. The Bible only tells us what actually took place it doesn’t provide any hypothetical scenarios on this topic. Maybe death would’ve still entered the world thru another means, we have no way of knowing.
Next he quotes Genesis 4:4 where Able offered a sacrifice to God and says “what did Able just leave the meat out to rot in a field”?
Yeah he probably did since God was very pleased with his offering. Are we going to assume that God was pleased with Able’s offering after he defied His commandment to eat plants?
Then he quotes Genesis 9:1-5 where God told Noah he could eat anything that moves and says “considering the evidence we see that meat was previously being consumed at God’s pleasure, why does Genesis 9:1-5 go out of its way to declare man’s right to eat meat after the flood”?
There is no evidence that meat was previously being consumed at God’s pleasure. That was just this guy’s assumption that Able didn’t leave the meat out in a field to rot. The Bible doesn’t say that Able ate the meat from his sacrifice, this guy only assumes that he did.
So what he’s done here is he set up a strawman argument then he proceeds to knock it down as if he’s achieved some sort of victory.
I’m just gonna stop here at 11 minutes into the video because I feel like I’ve pointed out enough errors in this commentary. This guy is quoting commentaries to formulate his commentary. That’s just hearsay of hearsay which is why I don’t do commentaries. You’ll never learn a thing about what the Bible actually teaches by allowing other people to tell you what it teaches. That’s like throwing a 30,000 sided die and crossing your fingers hoping it lands on the correct interpretation.