Site icon Caleb Woodbridge

Notes on the Fall and science

A subject that I touched on briefly in my recent sermon on the Fall is how our scientific understanding of the origins and development of man should fit with Genesis 3. This is not one of the main points of what Genesis 3 is saying, so when preaching, I only acknowledged the issue rather than discussing it in detail.

But all truth is God’s truth, and so understanding how the Bible and science fit together is important. Also, our culture gives a very high status to science, and there’s a widespread perception that the Bible and science are at odds. For these reasons, I put together the following notes for my handout to encourage people to think about these questions:

Science and the Fall

How would you respond to the following?

The Bible says that there was no death before the Fall, but science shows us that life evolved through millions of years of pain and death. Science disproves the Fall, and without the Fall there is no need for Jesus to die for our sins. The whole of Christianity is based on a fairy-tale about a talking snake, a magic tree, and two people who never existed.”

Some points to consider:

Christians have a variety of opinions on how the Fall fits with scientific understandings of the origins and development of humanity. Creation or Evolution: Do we have to choose? by Denis Alexander (Monarch Books, 2008) lists five basic models:

Which do you most agree with, and why?

What are the wider implications of how we interpret Genesis 3 for what we believe? See Romans 5, especially verses 12-21. What’s the connection between Adam and Jesus?

Some further reading:

I hope to explain my current thinking on how exactly I think the Fall in Genesis fits with science in subsequent blog post.

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