Assyrian
Basically pulling an Obama (Thanks Calminian!)
Is Adam's relationship with God biological? If you want to look at biblical genealogies, at some stage you move away from a simple father son relationship.Well, the geneology in Luke literally reads..."Enos, which was of Seth, which was of Adam..." Matthew, however records the geneology as "Abraham begat Isaac; Isaac begat Jacob;" so..it's pretty clear that it is a biological relationship and some of the characters are repeated in the geneologies. One line traces through Joseph as the supposed father and the other goes through Joseph's father in law, Mary's lineage. So...why would the writers mention actual fathers and sons but then throw in some allegorical characters?
But even if the story of Adam and Eve is allegorical it doesn't mean 'Adam' didn't exist. Adam may be allegorical, but it is an allegorical name for something very real. Adam is God's name for the human race. And yes, Jesus of Nazareth was a child of the human race, the human race God created. Jesus is a Son of Man.
Sorry I was working from memory there. Paul calls Jesus the second man and the last Adam, though I am sure Adam Smith would have disagreed with the last part. And if you accept Noah, Abraham and Moses were real literal people then Jesus was hardly 'the second man' either.I believe He's actually called "the last Adam"...the verse in context is referring to Christ being raised a life-giving spirit.
So Paul was not describing Jesus literally or historically when he called him 'the second man' in 1Cor 15:47. Was he being literal and historical when he called Adam 'the first man' a few lines before in verse 45?
Sadly he is only a hypothetical parrot. But real parrots are living, and Eve is not their mother. Genesis calls Eve mother of all living (chai) a word which describes not just human beings but beasts of the earth, beasts of the field, and living birds too.I think he was speaking in tongues...he actually said he wanted a cracker lol.
Upvote
0