#80792 - 04/30/06 05:10 PM
Re: Orgins > Sin & Death
[Re: mausman]
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Craftsman
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3513
Loc: N38d14.516m, W122d37.982m
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Shane, is this thread in the right forum? Would seem more apropriate for the 'theology' forum. I understand this forum to focus on scientific issues in regard to origins.
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#80795 - 05/01/06 06:51 AM
Re: Orgins > Sin & Death
[Re: mausman]
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Craftsman
Registered: 03/13/06
Posts: 3513
Loc: N38d14.516m, W122d37.982m
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Honestly, Shane, after reading your three posts, it sounds like this thread belongs in the 'Bible and Theology' forum rather than Origins. I would hope that the Origins threads may be serious, solid, in-depth scientific discussions. We gotta have something like that here. Otherwise, the ol' brain may atrify!
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#80797 - 05/01/06 09:25 PM
Re: Orgins > Sin & Death
[Re: mausman]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 7070
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Putting on my moderator hat for just a second, I don't think this thread falls outside the scope of the Origins forum. The only reason it might be better off elsewhere is to find a broader readership/broader participation, but Shane has put it where he wants it and that's fair enough.
_________________________
If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate
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#80799 - 05/01/06 10:42 PM
Re: Origins > Sin & Death
[Re: mausman]
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Husband and Father
Registered: 09/05/04
Posts: 7070
Loc: Brisbane, Australia
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Perhaps salvation and eternal life require consciousness (this actually gets back to the old 'will my dog be in heaven?' discussion). In that case, we could assume that animals and pre-humans who died died forever - it is only humans who have (or, a better way to say it from an Adventist perspective) are souls, and therefore the potential for salvation or damnation. So the Genesis account becomes the story of the rise of the ability to choose good or evil, symbolised by the tree, and the story of the first humans' choice and its consequences.
This is a speculative approach, not something I'm saying I believe, but it is one way of thinking about the origin of sin and death within a theistic evolutionary framework. That is, the death that sin introduced was separation from God and the loss of the promise of translation, transformation and immortality that God offered the first humans.
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If you're not part of the solution, you're part of the precipitate
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#80800 - 05/02/06 12:22 AM
Re: Orgins > Sin & Death
[Re: mausman]
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Registered: 09/04/02
Posts: 4699
Loc: New England
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Quote:
Did sin cause death?
Like most of the questions in this general area, this question needs a better definition.
As I asked, in another topic
1) Can non-animate objects sin? 2) Can animals sin?
Now we have to ask another question.
What is death? For example, 1) can a virus die? 2) can an individual cell die? 3) can a leaf die? 4) can a bacteria? 5) can a colony of bacteria? 6) can a fungus? 7) can an ant?
/Bevin
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