I hesitate to equate any promises about the future Kingdom with what the original creation was like. If the perfect future Kingdom required Jesus' death and rise to kingship to come about, then you couldn't have it at the start of creation. However "good" the original creation was - it wasn't "perfect." Any goodness of the original creation will pale in comparison to the future Kingdom.Hello folks!
The serious questions that I want to pose are these:
I would greatly appreciate knowing what you think about this. Please tell me what your view is on the matter and the reason why.
- Did God create animals to live for a while and then die?
- Prior to Adam & Eve disobeying God (“sinning”), did the animals die?
My actual experience with two pet dogs I have had over the past 25 years is that their lifespans proved to be 12 and 13 years. Sadly, in both cases I had to have a Vet put them to sleep in order to alleviate their suffering. Even though my having them “put down” was an act of kindness, it still proved to be the most absolute hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in life.
I find it extremely Interesting that Revelation 21:4 promises that reasons for crying will be eliminated. Please notice what it says:
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.” (King James Version)
How could there be no more tears and no more sorrow if a person’s beloved animal is short lived? Seemingly, the answer can only be that there will come a time when animals will NOT die. Therefore, does this not add weight to the idea that animals did not die originally?! And isn't it only reasonable that God intends on resurrecting the animals that once enjoyed life?
I eagerly await your response.
.
Genesis 1:30, And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.Hello folks!
The serious questions that I want to pose are these:
- Did God create animals to live for a while and then die?
- Prior to Adam & Eve disobeying God (“sinning”), did the animals die?
Those dead animals still exist in some form today somewhere.
The first record of God or Man killing an animal is in that verse - because there is something very significant about that instance. If there was animal death before the fall (which I think there was) - it wouldn't necessarily appear in a verse if it was just the ordinary way of things.Genesis 1:30, And to every beast of the earth, and to every fowl of the air, and to every thing that creepeth upon the earth, wherein there is life, I have given every green herb for meat: and it was so.
The first animal death we have record of is God making coats for Adam and Eve from animal skins to hide their nakedness which was exposed by sin.. It would be no hard thing for animal life to be resurrected. Those dead animals still exist in some form today somewhere.
Do you know what happens when wood burns, when mater decomposes? Nothing ever goes away; it changes form. Can you mention one existing thing that will cease to exist?Where's it say this?
Why do you think there was death before the fall; there could have been.The first record of God or Man killing an animal is in that verse - because there is something very significant about that instance. If there was animal death before the fall (which I think there was) - it wouldn't necessarily appear in a verse if it was just the ordinary way of things.
Do you know what happens when wood burns, when mater decomposes? Nothing ever goes away; it changes form. Can you mention one existing thing that will cease to exist?
Why do you think there was death before the fall; there could have been.
I agree that what we know as 'death' is mostly a sense of loss or grief. Before the curse, maybe it wasn't so. But I agree with you and one reason I do is because there were no carnivores in the Garden of Eden. Death entered the world through sin, but does that mean that plants didn't die before the curse? What about when they were eaten?Hello, and thank you very much for expressing your thoughts relative to the questions I had and the answers I am seeking.
You asked a most important question, and I'm really anxious to hear/see what the person will have to say.
MY PERSONAL THOUGHTS:
It is taught that life in the Garden of Eden was paradisiac, meaning that Adam & Eve lived in a Paradise so that they had ideal conditions and everything they needed to experience the bliss of complete happiness. QUESTION: If the animals did in fact die "before the fall," then how would it be possible for Adam and his family to be completely happy with DEATH being a common occurrence? What person is it that can view even a dead sparrow lying on the ground and not feel a sense of sorrow? What person is it that does not feel grief when witnessing the death of a dog that he or she has bonded with? "The words "death" and "garden of pleasure" are not compatible with one another. There is no pleasure in death or the sight of it. It seems to me that the weight of the debate lies in favor of the animals did NOT die prior to the fall.
Please let me know what you think.
Where's it say this?
Polly want a cracker?Where's it say this?
I can't necessarily point to a Bible verse - but I think there was death out of necessity. Consider the alternative. If animals lived forever, the smallest, quickest reproducing animals like mice would multiply exponentially, and would soon out-compete larger animals for resources. How long before the world would have been covered in mice? Nature needs checks and balances so that everybody survives. I also have a hard time attributing massive "evolution" to the fall. Did whales "evolve" baleen after the fall? Baleen is one of those features that are perfectly designed to feed off other living creatures.Why do you think there was death before the fall; there could have been.
I can't necessarily point to a Bible verse - but I think there was death out of necessity. Consider the alternative. If animals lived forever, the smallest, quickest reproducing animals like mice would multiply exponentially, and would soon out-compete larger animals for resources. How long before the world would have been covered in mice? Nature needs checks and balances so that everybody survives. I also have a hard time attributing massive "evolution" to the fall. Did whales "evolve" baleen after the fall? Baleen is one of those features that are perfectly designed to feed off other living creatures.
I hear you; however, something happened when Adam ate from the tree, whatever that was, and it affected more than Man.I can't necessarily point to a Bible verse - but I think there was death out of necessity. Consider the alternative. If animals lived forever, the smallest, quickest reproducing animals like mice would multiply exponentially, and would soon out-compete larger animals for resources. How long before the world would have been covered in mice? Nature needs checks and balances so that everybody survives. I also have a hard time attributing massive "evolution" to the fall. Did whales "evolve" baleen after the fall? Baleen is one of those features that are perfectly designed to feed off other living creatures.
What God tells us we have the opportunity to learn, what God's word does not tell us, we do not have the opportunity to learn.Hello folks!
The serious questions that I want to pose are these:
I would greatly appreciate knowing what you think about this. Please tell me what your view is on the matter and the reason why.
- Did God create animals to live for a while and then die?
- Prior to Adam & Eve disobeying God (“sinning”), did the animals die?
My actual experience with two pet dogs I have had over the past 25 years is that their lifespans proved to be 12 and 13 years. Sadly, in both cases I had to have a Vet put them to sleep in order to alleviate their suffering. Even though my having them “put down” was an act of kindness, it still proved to be the most absolute hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in life.
I find it extremely Interesting that Revelation 21:4 promises that reasons for crying will be eliminated. Please notice what it says:
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.” (King James Version)
How could there be no more tears and no more sorrow if a person’s beloved animal is short lived? Seemingly, the answer can only be that there will come a time when animals will NOT die. Therefore, does this not add weight to the idea that animals did not die originally?! And isn't it only reasonable that God intends on resurrecting the animals that once enjoyed life?
I eagerly await your response.
.
If humans and animals didn't die, the earth would be very crowded and we wouldn't have much to eat? It would be troubling to live with the ancient dinosaurs.Hello folks!
The serious questions that I want to pose are these:
I would greatly appreciate knowing what you think about this. Please tell me what your view is on the matter and the reason why.
- Did God create animals to live for a while and then die?
- Prior to Adam & Eve disobeying God (“sinning”), did the animals die?
My actual experience with two pet dogs I have had over the past 25 years is that their lifespans proved to be 12 and 13 years. Sadly, in both cases I had to have a Vet put them to sleep in order to alleviate their suffering. Even though my having them “put down” was an act of kindness, it still proved to be the most absolute hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in life.
I find it extremely Interesting that Revelation 21:4 promises that reasons for crying will be eliminated. Please notice what it says:
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.” (King James Version)
How could there be no more tears and no more sorrow if a person’s beloved animal is short lived? Seemingly, the answer can only be that there will come a time when animals will NOT die. Therefore, does this not add weight to the idea that animals did not die originally?! And isn't it only reasonable that God intends on resurrecting the animals that once enjoyed life?
I eagerly await your response.
.
I would suggest that if there was a time when God intended animals to live forever He must have also intended for them to never have offspring as well, or the planet would have quickly become a vast wasteland of extinct creatures because of the shortage of available food to feed them all.Hello folks!
The serious questions that I want to pose are these:
I would greatly appreciate knowing what you think about this. Please tell me what your view is on the matter and the reason why.
- Did God create animals to live for a while and then die?
- Prior to Adam & Eve disobeying God (“sinning”), did the animals die?
My actual experience with two pet dogs I have had over the past 25 years is that their lifespans proved to be 12 and 13 years. Sadly, in both cases I had to have a Vet put them to sleep in order to alleviate their suffering. Even though my having them “put down” was an act of kindness, it still proved to be the most absolute hardest thing I’ve ever had to do in life.
I find it extremely Interesting that Revelation 21:4 promises that reasons for crying will be eliminated. Please notice what it says:
“And God shall wipe away all tears from their eyes; and there shall be no more death, neither sorrow, nor crying, neither shall there be any more pain: for the former things are passed away.” (King James Version)
How could there be no more tears and no more sorrow if a person’s beloved animal is short lived? Seemingly, the answer can only be that there will come a time when animals will NOT die. Therefore, does this not add weight to the idea that animals did not die originally?! And isn't it only reasonable that God intends on resurrecting the animals that once enjoyed life?
I eagerly await your response.
.
Give some Biblical support for what you think "is God's purpose".Howdy Marke, and thank you for commenting.
I believe that the countless other planets were put there for man and the animals to spread out to when planet Earth became comfortably occupied. I don't believe that God's purpose has changed in that regard. Those other stars (suns) and planets that we see in the night sky weren't put there just so we could watch them "twinkle".
Sevenz