Critical
scholars generally consider the first chapters of Genesis to be
myth, not history. They point to the poetic nature of the text, the
parallel of the early chapters of Genesis to other ancient myths,
the alleged contradiction of the text with evolution, and the late
date for Adam in the Bible (ca. 4000 B. C.) which is opposed to
scientific dating that places the first humans much earlier. All of
this they consider as evidence that the story of Adam and Eve is
mythical. However, the Bible presents Adam and Eve as literal
people, who had real children from whom the rest of the human race
descended (cf. Gen. 5:1f.).
Historical Adam and Eve.
There is good evidence to believe that Adam and
Eve were historical persons. First, Genesis 1-2 presents them as
actual persons and even narrates the important events in their
lives. Second, they gave birth to literal children who did the same
(Genesis 4-5). Third, the same phrase ("this is the history
of"), used to record later history in Genesis (for example,
6:9; 10:1; 11:10, 27; 25:12, 19), is used of the creation account
(2:4) and of Adam and Eve and their descendants (Gen. 5:1). Fourth,
later Old Testament chronologies place Adam at the top of the list
(Gen. 5:1; 1 Chron. 1:1). Fifth, the New Testament places Adam at
the beginning of Jesus’ literal ancestors (Luke 3:38). Sixth,
Jesus referred to Adam and Eve as the first literal "male and
female," making their physical union the basis of marriage
(Matt. 19:4). Seventh, the book of Romans declares that literal
death was brought into the world by a literal "one
man"—Adam (Rom. 5:12, 14). Eighth, the comparison of Adam
(the "first Adam") with Christ (the "last Adam")
in 1 Corinthians 15:45 manifests that Adam was understood as a
literal, historical person. Ninth, Paul’s declaration that
"Adam was first formed, then Eve" (1 Tim. 2:13-14) reveals
that he speaks of real persons. Tenth, logically there had to be a
first real set of human beings, male and female, or else the race
would have had no way to get going. The Bible calls this literal
couple "Adam and Eve," and there is no reason to doubt
their real existence.
Objections to Historicity.
The Poetic Nature of Genesis 1.
Despite the common assumption to the contrary and
the beautiful language of Genesis 1 and 2, the creation record is
not poetry. Although there is possible parallelism of ideas between
the first three and last three days, this is not in the typical form
of Hebrew poetry, which involves couplets in parallel form. A
comparison with the Psalms or Proverbs readily shows the difference.
Genesis 2 has no poetical parallelism at all. Rather, the creation
account is like any other historical narrative in the Old Testament.
The account is introduced like other historical accounts in Genesis
with the phrase, "This is the history of…" (Gen. 2:4;
5:1). Jesus and New Testament writers refer to the creation events
as historical (cf. Matt. 19:4; Rom. 5:14; 1 Cor. 15:45; 1 Tim.
2:13-14). The Ebla tablets have added an early nonbiblical witness
of a monotheistic ex nihilo creation.
Contradiction with Evolution.
The Genesis creation account contradicts
macro-evolution. Genesis speaks of the creation of Adam from the
dust of the ground, not his evolution from other animals (Gen. 2:7).
It speaks of direct immediate creation at God’s command, not long
natural processes (cf. Gen. 1:1, 3, 6, 9, 21, 27). Eve was created
from Adam; she did not evolve separately. Adam was an intelligent
being who could speak a language, study and name animals, and engage
in life-sustaining activity. He was not an ignorant half-ape.
However, granted that the Genesis record conflicts
with macroevolution, it begs the question to affirm Genesis is wrong
and evolution is right. In fact, there is substantial scientific
evidence to critique macroevolution on its own merits.
The Late-Date Objection.
The traditional biblical date for the creation of
Adam (ca. 4000 B.C.) is much too late to fit the fossil evidence for
early human beings, which ranges from tens of thousands to hundreds
of thousands of years. The early date for humankind is based on
scientific dating and analysis of bone fragments.
However, there are false or challengeable
assumptions in this objection. First, it is assumed that one can
simply add all the genealogical records of Genesis 5 and 11 and
arrive at an approximate date of 4000 B.C. for Adam’s creation.
But this is based on the false assumption that there are no gaps in
these tables, which there are.
This objection also assumes that the dating method
for early human-like fossil finds is accurate. Yet these dating
methods are subject to many variables including the change in
atmospheric conditions, contamination of the sample, and changes of
rates of decay.
It assumes that early human-like fossil finds were
really human beings created in the image of God. But this is a
questionable assumption. Many of these finds are so fragmentary that
reconstruction is highly speculative. The so-called "Nebraska
Man" was actually an extinct pig’s tooth! Identification had
been based on a tooth. "Piltdown Man" was a fraud.
Identifying a creature from bones, especially bone fragments, is
extremely speculative.
There may have been human-like creatures that were
morphologically similar to human beings but were not created in the
image of God. Bone structure cannot prove there was an immortal soul
made in God’s image inside the body. Evidence for simple tool
making proves nothing. Animals (apes, seals, and birds) are known to
use simple tools.
This objection also assumes that the
"days" of Genesis were twenty-four-hour solar days. This
is not certain, since day in Genesis is used of all six days
(cf. Gen. 2:4). And "day seven," on which God rested, is
still going on, thousands of years later (cf. Heb. 4:4-6).
It is impossible to affirm that Genesis is not
historical. In fact, given the unproven assumptions, the history of
misinterpretation of early fossils, and the mistaken assumption that
there are no gaps in the biblical genealogies of Genesis 5 and 11,
the arguments against the historicity of Adam and Eve fail.
Sources
G. L. Archer, Jr., An
Encyclopedia of Biblical Difficulties
A. Custance, Genesis and
Early Man
N. L. Geisler and T. Howe, When
Critics Ask
R. C. Newman, Genesis and
the Origin of the Earth
B. Ramm, The Christian
View of Science and Scripture