There was no need for any concept for salvation.Is the serpent’s “You will not surely die” the ancient version of OSAS?
No. The serpent was not teaching a salvation doctrine. He was attacking the authority of God’s Word.Is the serpent’s “You will not surely die” the ancient version of OSAS?
Scripture never mentions a prehistoric world, dinosaurs teaching Satan about death, or God instructing angels through the fall. The Bible only tells us that God warned Adam about death ~Genesis 2:17, the serpent denied God’s word ~Genesis 3:4, and death entered through sin ~Romans 5:12. Where Scripture is silent, we should be silent.But it was Satan who held a concept of death. He knew of death because of seeing death taking place in the destroyed prehistoric world. Physical death Satan understood. For dinosaurs had killed other dinosaurs.
Satan in his limited understanding thought if he could get them to eat of the wrong fruit?
That he would be rid of man and have dominion over the new earth for himself....
Scripture never mentions a prehistoric world, dinosaurs teaching Satan about death, or God instructing angels through the fall. The Bible only tells us that God warned Adam about death ~Genesis 2:17, the serpent denied God’s word ~Genesis 3:4, and death entered through sin ~Romans 5:12. Where Scripture is silent, we should be silent.
The issue is not wording. The issue is biblical evidence.Never mentions?
Or, never indicates?
It was nice visiting here...
Scripture neither mentions nor indicates a prehistoric world, dinosaurs teaching Satan about death, or God educating angels through Adam’s fall. There is no passage that teaches, implies, or even hints at those ideas.
Is the serpent’s “You will not surely die” the ancient version of OSAS?
Good morning, Rose;The issue is not wording. The issue is biblical evidence. Scripture neither mentions nor indicates a prehistoric world, dinosaurs teaching Satan about death, or God educating angels through Adam’s fall. There is no passage that teaches, implies, or even hints at those ideas. What Scripture actually says is plain:
If by “wrong forum” you mean a forum where claims are tested by Scripture, then yes, that is exactly what Biblical Truth Forum is meant to be.That is where you are wrong.
And, sound like you are all loaded to the gills to make sure no one will be allowed to know how.
If you are a die in the wool young earth creationist?
I would rather not bother.
It would mean... "wrong forum for me."
I will give it one more shot...The issue is not wording. The issue is biblical evidence.
Scripture neither mentions nor indicates a prehistoric world, dinosaurs teaching Satan about death, or God educating angels through Adam’s fall. There is no passage that teaches, implies, or even hints at those ideas.
The problem here is not Hebrew vocabulary. The problem is context.I will give it one more shot...
And, I am going to keep it as simple as possible.
Wars are won by reality. Not wishful thinking.
We are in spiritual warfare.
Good bye, David....The problem here is not Hebrew vocabulary. The problem is context.
Jeremiah is not teaching that Genesis 1:2 describes a destroyed prehistoric world. He is using creation language as prophetic imagery of judgment. Scripture itself explains this if we simply read the passage carefully.
Genesis 1:2 says, “And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” ~Genesis 1:2.
Nothing in the text says judgment happened. Nothing says destruction occurred. Nothing says a previous world existed. The verse describes the initial unformed state of creation before God ordered it.
Now look at Jeremiah.Jeremiah is delivering a prophetic vision of Judah’s coming judgment. Notice how the prophet repeatedly says, “I looked…” (~Jeremiah 4:23–26). This is prophetic imagery, not a historical retelling of Genesis.
“I looked at the earth, and, behold, it was without form, and void; and the heavens, and they had no light” ~Jeremiah 4:23.
Jeremiah deliberately reverses the creation order:
• light removed (Genesis 1:3 reversed)
• land undone (Genesis 1:9–10 reversed)
• birds gone (Genesis 1:20 reversed)
• people absent (Genesis 1:26 reversed)
He is describing de-creation, not pre-creation.
The point is simple: Israel’s sin would bring the land back into chaos, symbolically undoing creation blessings. The prophets regularly use creation imagery this way. Isaiah does the same when describing judgment: “the earth shall be utterly broken down” ~Isaiah 24:19.
This is prophetic poetry communicating devastation, not geology or a lost civilization.
If Genesis 1:2 meant a destroyed world, Scripture would say so somewhere else. But instead Scripture consistently teaches:
“In six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is” ~Exodus 20:11.
Not remade. Not restored after catastrophe. Made.
Death also enters the world only after Adam’s sin: “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. A prehistoric world full of destruction and death before Adam directly contradicts this clear teaching.
So Jeremiah does not interpret Genesis 1:2 as destruction. He borrows Genesis language to warn that sin brings chaos resembling an uncreated world.
Scripture interprets Scripture. And when it does, the conclusion is straightforward:
Genesis 1:2 describes creation before order, not a judgment after a lost world. Jeremiah uses that imagery as a warning, not as evidence of prehistory.
Where Scripture is silent about a prehistoric civilization, we must remain silent too.
Notice the "And" at the beginning of the verse.Genesis 1:2 says, “And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep.
Notice the "And" at the beginning of the verse.
Notice the "And" at the beginning of the verse.
GeneZ,But it was Satan who held a concept of death. He knew of death because of seeing death taking place in the destroyed prehistoric world. Physical death Satan understood. For dinosaurs had killed other dinosaurs.
Sorry, David. My post was intended for GeneZ. I already learned that the "And" in Gen 1:2 is a continuation of the creation account, that there was no gap theory. But I did learn something new from you - A prehistoric world filled with destruction and death before Adam contradicts that clear teaching from Rom. 5:12. Thanks a lot.If you're asking, “Does the ‘And’ at the start of Genesis 1:2 indicate that something happened between verse 1 and verse 2?”
No. The “And” at the beginning of Genesis 1:2 does not indicate that some catastrophe occurred between verse 1 and verse 2. That idea is imposed on the text. It is not drawn from it.
Genesis reads: “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth. And the earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” ~Genesis 1:1–2.
The Hebrew word translated “And” is the common conjunction waw. It is used constantly in Hebrew narrative simply to continue the description of what is happening. It does not introduce a gap, a judgment, or a destroyed world. In this case, verse 2 is explaining the initial condition of the earth at the moment of creation. The earth had not yet been shaped or filled. It was “without form and void,” meaning unformed and uninhabited. The six days that follow describe how God ordered what He had created.
Nothing in the text suggests ruin or reconstruction. There is no language of judgment, no reference to destruction, and no indication of a previous world. Those ideas are imported into the passage. The text itself simply describes the earth before God formed the land, produced light, and filled the world with life.
Scripture also confirms this reading elsewhere. God says plainly, “In six days the Lord made heaven and earth, the sea, and all that in them is” ~Exodus 20:11. Not remade. Not restored after catastrophe. Made.
Furthermore, Scripture teaches that death entered the world only after Adam’s sin: “by one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. A prehistoric world filled with destruction and death before Adam contradicts that clear teaching.
So the “And” in Genesis 1:2 is simply a continuation of the creation account. Verse 1 states that God created the heavens and the earth. Verse 2 describes the earth’s initial unformed condition before God shaped and filled it during the six days of creation. The text is straightforward when we allow Scripture to speak for itself.
GeneZ,That is where you are wrong.
And, sound like you are all loaded to the gills to make sure no one will be allowed to know how.
If you are a die in the wool young earth creationist?
I would rather not bother.
It would mean... "wrong forum for me."
Hi Gene Z,I will give it one more shot...
And, I am going to keep it as simple as possible.
Genesis 1:2? Amplified translation...
The earth was without form and an empty waste, and darkness was upon the face of the very great deep. The Spirit of God was moving (hovering, brooding) over the face of the waters.
Seems benign. Yes?
Then why did Jeremiah use Genesis 1:2 in the Hebrew as a threat to the rebellious Jews whom God was about to destroy as a nation?
Jeremiah 4:6-8 was the warm-up of God's judgment about to come upon them.
6Raise the signal to go to Zion!Flee for safety without delay!For I am bringing disaster from the north,even terrible destruction.”7A lion has come out of his lair;a destroyer of nations has set out.He has left his placeto lay waste your land.Your towns will lie in ruinswithout inhabitant.8So put on sackcloth,lament and wail,for the fierce anger of the Lordhas not turned away from us.
Israel was about to be ripped apart by God!
For they had been going off to the high places to perform pagan sex orgies and child sacrifice.
And, the Jews knew the Hebrew of Genesis 1:2. They knew it indicated utter destruction of all life. The prehistoric world ended that way. Where do we find that?
Right here!
22“My people are fools;they do not know me.They are senseless children;they have no understanding.They are skilled in doing evil;they know not how to do good.”
23I looked at the earth,and it was formless and empty; (Genesis 1:2!)and at the heavens,and their light was gone.24I looked at the mountains,and they were quaking;all the hills were swaying.25I looked, and there were no people;every bird in the sky had flown away.26I looked, and the fruitful land was a desert;all its towns lay in ruinsbefore the Lord, before his fierce anger.
Jeremiah 4:23 was almost a direct quote of Genesis 1:2!
"Tohu wabohu"...
Meaning an utter destruction and wreak and havoc of the land!
That was what Genesis 1:2 meant in the Hebrew to the Jews.
Not some flowery translation. "Void and empty."
It was so bad in Genesis 1:2, that Jeremiah had to add something to tell them that their fate will not be like the one of the first creation. Right here in verse 27, Jeremiah makes that known to the Jews.
27 This is what the Lord says:“The whole land will be ruined,though I will not destroy it completely.
Genesis 1:2 in the Hebrew spoke of an utter destruction!
The Jews who spoke Hebrew knew it.
So, Jeremiah had to add that they would not be utterly destroyed in the same way
as found in Genesis 1:2.
Wars are won by reality. Not wishful thinking.
We are in spiritual warfare.
Hi Rose, what do you mean about "And"?Notice the "And" at the beginning of the verse.
Hi Rose, what do you mean about "And"?
"And" points out that v2 is the continuation of v1. There is no gap in the creation.So the “And” in Genesis 1:2 is simply a continuation of the creation account. Verse 1 states that God created the heavens and the earth. Verse 2 describes the earth’s initial unformed condition before God shaped and filled it during the six days of creation.
Here is an excellent reference online to see the outline of what I am dealing with.GeneZ,
Where do you get this information please? Thanks : )
"And" points out that v2 is the continuation of v1. There is no gap in the creation.
Sorry, David. My post was intended for GeneZ. I already learned that the "And" in Gen 1:2 is a continuation of the creation account, that there was no gap theory. But I did learn something new from you - A prehistoric world filled with destruction and death before Adam contradicts that clear teaching from Rom. 5:12. Thanks a lot.
Rose
GeneZ, the issue is not whether someone can write a detailed theory. The question is whether Scripture actually teaches it. Genesis simply says, “The earth was without form, and void; and darkness was upon the face of the deep. And the Spirit of God moved upon the face of the waters” ~Genesis 1:2. The passage describes the condition of the earth at the beginning of creation. It does not say the earth became ruined or that a previous world was destroyed.Here is an excellent reference online to see the outline of what I am dealing with.
Link -- Without Form and Void - Frontpage
GeneZ, appealing to Midrash, Jewish legends, encyclopedias, or later scholarly opinions does not establish the meaning of Genesis. Those sources are not the authority. Scripture is.In short, this mark indicates a "break" in the text.Such a mark appears at the end of Genesis 1.1. This mark has been noted by several scholars including Luther. It is one indication among others, that the initial waw () which introduces verse 2should be rendered "but" rather than "and", a dis-junctive rather than a con-junctive.![]()
There is also another problem. Scripture connects the entrance of death to Adam’s sin: “By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. Placing death and destruction before Adam contradicts that statement.
GeneZ, Romans 5:12 does not limit the entrance of death to the human race alone. The verse says plainly, “By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. The word used there is the world into which Adam was placed, the created order he was given dominion over. Scripture does not speak of separate inhabited worlds outside that order.Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, and in this way death came to all people, because all sinned— Rom 5:12
That is not speaking of the planet, nor life outside the known human race.
It is designated to the state of mankind as we now know it.
When Adam fell the angels did not fall.
Likewise, other worlds do not pertain to Romans 5:12.
GeneZ, reasoning together is not difficult when both sides stay with what Scripture actually says. The problem arises when the discussion keeps moving outside the text. Romans 5 is not addressing when Satan first sinned. Paul is explaining how sin and death entered the human world through Adam. That is the subject of the whole section. “By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. The point Paul presses is that death came through Adam, just as life comes through Christ.So the serpent (who was possessed) was not tainted with sin until Adam sinned?
For sin did not enter the world until Adam sinned. Romans 5:12.
According to your truncated logic?
That would have to be the case.
How can anyone reason with you?
GeneZ, Romans 5:12 does not limit the entrance of death to the human race alone. The verse says plainly, “By one man sin entered into the world, and death by sin” ~Romans 5:12. The word used there is the world into which Adam was placed, the created order he was given dominion over. Scripture does not speak of separate inhabited worlds outside that order.
The passage then continues the same line of thought: “For since by man came death, by man came also the resurrection of the dead. For as in Adam all die, even so in Christ shall all be made alive” ~1 Corinthians 15:21-22. The argument is simple and direct. Death enters through Adam. Resurrection comes through Christ. Introducing other worlds or unrelated realms breaks the point Paul is making.
You also mentioned angels. Scripture actually confirms that angels did not fall through Adam, but that does not support the idea of other worlds. Angels are a separate order of creation. “The angels which kept not their first estate, but left their own habitation, he hath reserved in everlasting chains under darkness unto the judgment of the great day” ~Jude 1:6. Their fall is described independently, not tied to some destroyed world before Genesis.
The idea of multiple inhabited worlds or previous creations being destroyed simply does not appear in the text. Scripture consistently points to one creation, one fall through Adam, and one redemption through Christ. When the Word speaks so plainly, adding other worlds or earlier civilizations moves beyond what God has revealed.
Hi GeneZ,So the serpent (who was possessed) was not tainted with sin until Adam sinned?
For sin did not enter the world until Adam sinned. Romans 5:12.
According to your truncated logic?
That would have to be the case.
How can anyone reason with you?
Hi GeneZ,
You may label as David's puppets, and under his Spell?
We are NOT, we are Lovers of Jesus Christ!
We are here to find out more about our God!
Never mentions? Or, never indicates? It was nice visiting here...
That is where you are wrong. And, sound like you are all loaded to the gills to make sure no one will be allowed to know how. If you are a die in the wool young earth creationist?
I would rather not bother. It would mean... "wrong forum for me."
I will give it one more shot...
So the serpent (who was possessed) was not tainted with sin until Adam sinned? For sin did not enter the world until Adam sinned. Romans 5:12.
According to your truncated logic? That would have to be the case. How can anyone reason with you?
One lesson I have learned. Do not try to correct someone who has a serious comprehension problem.
Yet...I never said what you claim I did. Have a nice Day!
Hello GeneZ;
Let's put aside our fellowship discussion for a moment and take a step back. My name is Bob. I red-lighted your posts in this discussion. I was receiving (listening) to your views, but your responses broke down your presentation. This is not beneficial.
Last Sunday when I joined in the thread, I was reading your posts carefully, and at first it seemed like a constructive dialogue between you and David. He was merely sharing his view and Scriptures. But instead of receiving (listening) what he posted, I was taken aback by your "reactive" posts as defensive and dismissive. For example;
GeneZ,You're right.... And, David is right.
I am wrong.
You quote me saying:
"It was nice visiting here" and "wrong forum for me" followed by "I will give it one more shot..." etc... What does all this mean?
That is why I sensed this forum is not where I belong.
Maybe after I grow more in understanding, it might be good then to return and be able to exchange ideas better on your level.
Grace and peace!
The serpent tempts Man to challenge God's direct order - 'you will not die'. The serpent appeals to Man's innate curiosity and he eats of the tree of knowledge. Sure enough, Adam and Eve do not die as God seemingly suggested but instead gain this knowledge of good and evil and become 'like God'. The true effect of this act is paradoxical, however. We become dead in the sense of spiritual separation from God and thus, are farther from him than ever. The serpent has tricked Man into questioning God's authority, into believing he can determine morality for himself. It was our act of disobedience which led to the state of the world as we know it today. From this point on, Man is cursed to know shame, enmity, pain, oppression, desire, toil and death. God must now intervene to prevent catastrophe - 'behold, the man has become like us, knowing good and evil; and now, lest he put forth his hand and take also of the tree of life, and eat and live forever' we are banished from the Garden. This raises the possibility of there having been an intended, additional chapter to the creation story which has been thrown off course by Man's curiosity and disobedience. Now it is paramount that Man must not be able to eat of the tree of life, as he was once free to do. This is an act of mercy by God - he saves Man from a harm he cannot possibly fathom. Our actions have real and cosmic consequences.Is the serpent’s “You will not surely die” the ancient version of OSAS?
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