Yes, that is exactly what it proves: Adam and Eve had daughters.
You said, “The Bible doesn’t say … whether Adam and Eve had daughters” (
here). But it actually does.
We are both making an argument from silence, but they are not symmetrical. One argument is a valid inference, the other is potentially fallacious. One argument establishes
probability from the text (looking at both Genesis 5:4 and 4:25), while the other establishes
compatibility with the text (looking at Genesis 5:4 while ignoring 4:25). One argument is a probative appeal to silence, a contextual argument from narrative logic, which is a legitimate exegetical move. The other argument is a naïve appeal to silence, a bare argument from mere possibility, which is a weak exegetical move.
As my response suggested, the whole matter turns on Genesis 4:25, which my argument accounts for and the other does not. (I hesitate to call it
your argument, because I think it belongs to someone else, perhaps Ken Ham.) The textual coherence of that text gives my inference some weight, but it weakens the other inference.
If one restricts the analysis to
what the narrative actually states, the sequence falls out like this:
- Cain is born first (Gen 4:1), then Abel (v. 2), then Seth (v. 25).
- Genesis 5:3-4 picks up the genealogy from there, saying that after Seth they had other sons and daughters.
- The etiological explanation of Seth’s name in Genesis 4:25 is coherent and fits naturally if Seth is understood as the next son after Abel’s death. If other children had already been born between Abel and Seth, the coherence of the explanation is compromised.
- There is no relevant text that mentions any children before Seth, so claiming there were is a potentially fallacious argument from silence, given Genesis 4:25.
When is an argument from silence fallacious? If a source does not mention the existence of
x, and we can reasonably expect that it would, that silence counts against the existence of
x. Therefore, to infer the existence of x ignores the evidential significance of the silence, drawing a conclusion contrary to what the silence suggests.
Whether other humans existed in addition to Adam’s family is a separate question. If we bracket that issue and focus strictly on what Genesis says about Adam and Eve’s children, the narrative provides no positive evidence of additional children between Abel and Seth, strongly implies there were none, and explicitly situates additional sons and daughters after Seth’s birth.
And that it perfectly fine. I am not here to talk you out of it. I am simply arguing for my view. I want it tested, not accepted.
No, what you said was, “The answer I read on this showed that it is easily possible there were several generations of children by the time Cain married and built his city.”
Okay, but on what textual basis did they argue for this possibility? Any at all? If you found it persuasive, what biblical evidence did they give you? What persuaded you? “Since the text says this and this, it is possible for there to be several generations of children by the time Cain married and built his city.”
I can grant that it was a logical possibility, but given what and what?
If you do not personally believe that other children existed before Seth, then why are we even having this discussion? Are you simply informing me that such a view is out there? I was already aware, just to be clear. As a matter of fact, it was the view I once held.
Anyway, I don’t agree that Scripture and reason logically allow that view. They do not.
My argument for the age of the earth is not drawn from any biblical text, so it is not reasonable to ask me for a textual warrant. And I am not the first person to notice that the Bible doesn’t say the earth is either young or old.
Since he doesn’t engage in debate, I tend to overlook his posts. It seems he is here to teach, not engage—and I go elsewhere for teachers.
What about the young-earth argument from silence that there were other sons and daughters prior to Seth? Does that wash with you?
If not, then why did you raise it?
I think the confusion comes from the timeline—which is perhaps what you meant by sequential lines?—so let me lay it out as clearly as I can muster.
In my view there are three distinct stages: (1) pre-covenant humanity, (2) covenant humanity, and (3) fallen humanity.
- Pre-covenant humanity: This is from the emergence of Homo sapiens until God installs Adam in the garden of Eden and institutes a covenant relationship with humanity through Adam as our representative head. So, from something like 250,000 years ago until roughly 6,000 years ago is “pre-covenant humanity,” for no covenant relationship existed between God and mankind. (I am somewhat arbitrarily defining humanity in terms of our species; if it’s not H. sapiens, it’s not human.)
- Covenant humanity: This is from the moment that God installs Adam in the garden as our covenant head right up until the moment of his transgression. During this indeterminate (and perhaps brief) period, humanity situated in Adam was regarded as covenant-keepers. This pertains only to that humanity living at the time.
- Fallen humanity: And this, of course, is from the moment of the Fall onward. Now all humanity situated in Adam is regarded as covenant-breakers (sinners), a divine judgment resulting from the one transgression leading to condemnation. Thus, “the many died through the transgression of the one man.”
Before the covenant with mankind through Adam was instituted—a prehistoric window spanning tens of thousands of years—humans existed who were morally aware and capable of wrongdoing. But they were not yet covenantally situated in Adam, thus sin as a covenant category did not yet apply to them. Then, roughly 6,000 years ago, God established a covenant with mankind through Adam as the representative head. At that moment all those who existed at the time became covenantally situated in Adam; humanity now existed under the Adamic covenantal regime. But then Adam transgressed that covenant, and since he stood as the federal head, all those represented by him became covenant-breakers through his offense.