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Wouldn't that mean that all the other people created on the 6th day were still holy and without sin? Adam & Eve were not the first two humans on earth, but rather the first two of the Adamites.

2007-12-20 11:54:53 · 12 answers · asked by ZORRO 3 in Society & Culture Religion & Spirituality

Koshka19__says Adam brought sin and death into the world. She needs to read her Bible. It was Eve who ate the apple first and brought sin & death to the whole human world.

2007-12-20 13:58:57 · update #1

12 answers

I don't know where you get your information. In the bible, Adam and Eve were indeed the first people, and sin entered the world at the fall, when they disobyed God.

2007-12-20 11:59:06 · answer #1 · answered by Esther 7 · 5 1

I dont know where U are getting your info but Adam and eve are the 1st 2 humans on earth.
Here is a little info and history on the Ideah of the Adamites be carefull what u are taught..........

"The French Jesuit priest Teilhard de Chardin brought about one of the biggest changes in Catholic thought. He considered evolution to be a gradual climb to a spirit existence. According to his theory, life forms evolve, passing through the animal and human stages, being finally destined to become united at a focal omega point—Christ. Although initially condemned by the church, the theory gained the approval of many Catholic ecclesiastics. However, it was clearly contrary to Scriptural evidence and heaped reproach on God himself, denying the necessity of the ransom for humans to recover perfect human life.

This pseudoscientific theory has had very serious consequences for the church. As was explained in the book L’épopée des adamites (The Epic of the Adamites) by Jean Rondot: “All seditious or revolutionary trends in the Church, among both clergy and laity, literally surged into the breach opened up by Teilhard. Now that a certain liberty in Scripture interpretation was permitted (even if it meant changing the spirit of the text), why not make the most of it and build a new religion according to individual taste?”

The fruitage of this trend is particularly visible today. In 1980 a poll organized by an important French institute showed that only 40 percent of French Catholics believed in Adam and Eve and original sin. Doubt had also contaminated other equally important areas, since only 59 percent of Catholics in France now believed in the fundamental Christian doctrine of the resurrection of Jesus Christ."

2007-12-20 12:08:39 · answer #2 · answered by Kitty Kat 2 · 1 1

Adam was created, and then Eve was created out of the rib of Adam. The sin entered when Adam bit into that apple, and handed over his authority on this earth over to satan.

2007-12-20 12:01:02 · answer #3 · answered by Winters child 6 · 1 2

First of all, let me say that Eve was not a playmate for Adam. A playmate is not a spouse,which is what she was to him... genesis 2: 21-25. God is God, he does have to do what is so obvious to us. Besides. Adam at it too afterward. Neither one should have eaten it.

2016-05-25 05:45:59 · answer #4 · answered by maribel 3 · 0 0

Are you illiterate? READ YOUR BIBLE. regardless of what you believe about Adam being the first person created in the Bible (and he was, but regardless)... Noah's lineage goes back to Adam, and God destroid everyone else's family. Therefor everyone on earth came from Adam. Now does Romans 5:12 make sense to you?

2007-12-20 11:59:28 · answer #5 · answered by Matthew P (SL) 4 · 2 2

Judaism has no such concept as Original Sin. The Church twisted the meanings of those verses in Genesis and invented this idea, probably as a means of control over their followers. It doesn't exist in Judaism, never has.

So, if Christians want to believe something the Church invented like that, that's their choice, but it has no relevance to Judaism whatsoever.

Source: Torah, me, Jewish

2007-12-20 12:01:13 · answer #6 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

Go to www.nationalgeographic.com And lookup the human genome project. It pretty much says that all humans do in fact share a common ancestor.


God required the shedding of blood for remission of sin. But, as Adam, the federal (representative) head of the human race brought sin and thus death into the world, another man (another representative, without sin, but also a member of the human race) was required to pay the penalty for sin—the penalty of death.

The Bible teaches, of course, that the atoning death of Christ was "for the sins of the whole world" (I John 2:2). In fact, it was only when "by one man sin entered into the world" that death came into the world and then "passed upon all men" (Romans 5:12).

Thus the idea that there were "pre-Adamite men" or other human-like creatures in the world unaffected by Adam's sin is theological nonsense. "As by the offense of one judgment came upon all men to condemnation; even so by the righteousness of one the free gift came upon all men unto justification of life" (Romans 5:18).

Since all men and women are descendants of Adam and Eve and "all the world" has "become guilty before God" (Romans 3:19), and since "the grace of God that bringeth salvation hath appeared to all men" (Titus 2:11), all people—of every age and every place—can be saved, if they simply believe on the Lord Jesus Christ (Acts 16:31).

This wonderful solution to the problem of sin and death is beyond anything we finite humans could ever imagine. God made another Adam! He, Himself, in the person of Jesus Christ, the perfect sinless son of God, came to earth to be a man born of a woman—a perfect man—man as God intended man to be. Paul calls Christ the "last Adam" (I Corinthians 15:45). The "God–man" died on the cross of Calvary and "became sin for us," and then was raised from the dead, so that we might have a living sacrifice—a new representative head. Only as we are united to him do we have the gift of eternal life with our Creator.

And just think of what Jesus Christ has done for us. He became a man (but is also God) and will remain a man, God and man in two distinct natures, but one person, forever, so we will have a Savior.

What a wonderful message! What a wonderful Savior! What a blessed redeemer! What a God of grace and mercy! Oh, how we should praise Him—and for those of us who do love and trust and serve Him, we will praise Him forever and ever.



1 Timothy 2:13 For Adam was first formed, then Eve.

1 Timothy 2:14 And Adam was not deceived, but the woman being deceived was in the transgression.

1 Timothy 2:15 Notwithstanding she shall be saved in childbearing, if they continue in faith and charity and holiness with sobriety.

Adam was not deceived by Satan’s lie, but deliberately associated himself also with Eve in her sin because of her wanting him to join her in eating the forbidden fruit (Genesis 3:12) and presumably also because of his love for her and his willingness to share her punishment. The many daughters of Eve share the trusting nature of their first mother and so (in general, at least) are more easily deceived by those evil spirits who can masquerade as angels of light (II Corinthians 11:13-15).

2007-12-20 12:52:01 · answer #7 · answered by Anonymous · 0 2

No, they were the first people... then they had sons, and one went off and found a city that had always been there...

2007-12-20 11:59:03 · answer #8 · answered by Alex - Æsahættr 4 · 0 1

What's you Scriptural basis for ths?

2007-12-20 11:59:35 · answer #9 · answered by Anonymous · 3 1

YOU need to READ the BIBLE

not ones own opinions of it

2007-12-20 11:58:35 · answer #10 · answered by hghostinme 6 · 3 1

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