Chapter, Paragraph
1 15,3| last with the creation of Adam and Eve. — 65 million to
2 15,4| judgment was made concerning Adam's future (and ours). But
3 15,4| ours). But we know that Adam lived a long time after
4 15,4| the garden, God clothed Adam and Eve in animal skins
5 15,4| procreate. Most people believe Adam died spiritually that day.
6 15,4| his innocence died. But Adam continued to talk with God
7 15,2| The animal would become ‘adam, the first man. What if
8 15,2| What if God then placed Adam in a special place on the
9 15,2| Sapiens Sapiens animals, Adam would have been alone. God
10 15,2| Eve in the same manner as Adam, but for whatever reason,
11 15,2| instead to create from 'adam the ‘ishshah, the woman.
12 16 | the Fall of all mankind in Adam and of the Redemption of
13 16 | having one common root in Adam and one crown in his general
14 16 | origin of all mankind from Adam and Eve.~ ~
15 16,2| according to our image; Adam is become as one of us;
16 17,2| to Genesis (chapter 3), Adam and Eve, having obeyed the
17 17,3| things) is the result of Adam's sin. Scripture does not
18 17,3| who subjected it. Now, did Adam will the universe to decay?
19 17,3| We have been taught that Adam's sin affected the entire
20 17,3| universe.~ The fact that Adam and Eve persisted biologically
21 17,3| only. It might be lost. Adam's immortality before the
22 17,3| providential support from God. Adam and Eve had to be banished
23 17,3| eternal life, and hence Adam and Eve were not inherently
24 17,3| Augustine believed that “Adam's body (was) a natural and
25 17,3| Further, he said that “Adam's body (was) ... mortal
26 17,3| concluded, therefore, that Adam and Eve before the fall
27 17,3| precisely what God warned Adam and Eve about (Gen 2:17;
28 17,3| 17; 3:19). Upon sinning, Adam lost fellowship with God
29 17,3| mast have existed only for Adam and Eve in the Garden of
30 17,3| Garden of Eden.~ Because Adam was not immortal by nature,
31 17,3| Moreover, the animals, like Adam, were created with physical
32 17,3| susceptibility to death. Unlike Adam, however, animals were not
|