- Joined
- Jun 19, 2023
- Messages
- 1,285
- Reaction score
- 2,406
- Points
- 133
- Age
- 47
- Location
- Canada
- Faith
- Reformed (URCNA)
- Country
- Canada
- Marital status
- Married
- Politics
- Kingdom of God
Would you hold, then, that Adam and Eve were the first humans via special, direct creation, ...
Personally? No. That view is held by some—I think Swamidass in his book explained it as a possible position—but I've never seen any reason to adopt it.
There are theological reasons to hold that Adam and Eve historically existed, and approximately 6,000 years ago, but it matters not theologically whether they were specially created or had parents—yes, I've taken into account Genesis 2:7 and 2:21-22—and there is not a single doctrine in all of Christian theological orthodoxy that requires them to be the first humans.
That is, therefore, my position at this point: They historically existed and lived 6,000 years ago in a world populated by millions of people, and were born to parents like everyone else. (I could be persuaded that they were specially created directly by God, but nobody has convinced me yet.)
... and not evolved from prior primates?
Again, populations evolve (e.g., humans), not individuals (e.g., Adam and Eve).
Would you agree that while there is evolution in a sense within the species, they never changed into a distinct different species?
No, I would not agree with that. Speciation has been observed—genuinely new species, reproductively isolated from the parent species. Again, "evolution in a sense within the species" can, as a result of accumulated divergent change along separated lineages, eventually become different species (e.g., certain cichlids in a volcanic lake in Nicaragua, certain salamanders in southern California, and so on).
