Man’s Sinfulness and Woman’s Sinlessness: Chapter 7: Alternative Second Generations — Testing the Logic of Sin’s Transmission
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Why Hypothetical Scenarios Matter in Theology
Biblical theology is not built on speculation, but it does rely on counterfactual reasoning to clarify causality. Scripture itself frequently invites such reasoning by presenting claims that exclude certain possibilities. When Scripture states that sin entered humanity “through one man,” it implicitly denies other pathways. Those denials must be examined, not ignored. This chapter explores paths not taken—not to rewrite the biblical narrative, but to test its internal logic. If sin truly progresses through man and not woman, that claim must hold under alternative generational arrangements. If it fails under those conditions, the thesis collapses. The question guiding this chapter is simple but decisive: What combinations of sinlessness and sinfulness would—or would not—produce fallen offspring?The Unchosen Option: Complete Re-Creation
The most straightforward solution to the fall would have been annihilation followed by re-creation. God could have allowed Adam and Eve to die without offspring and restarted humanity entirely, free from sin. Consider that God was so mad with both of them, that he created a second generation of humans, sinless in every way, and recreated the world again, letting the first Adam and first Eve to die naturally. But that never did happen. This option is never pursued. Its absence is instructive. Scripture consistently portrays God as working through history rather than discarding it. Redemption is not achieved by erasure, but by intervention. The continuity of humanity matters. God chooses to work through what's is available.- Sin is not eliminated by deletion.
- It is addressed by interruption.
Scenario One: A Sinless Woman, a Fallen Man
Consider a hypothetical in which God creates a second woman, untouched by deception and unmarked by sin, and gives her to Adam after the fall. In this arrangement:- The woman is sinless.
- The man is sinful.
Scenario Two: A Sinless Man, a Fallen Woman
Now reverse the arrangement. Imagine a man who remains sinless, paired with a woman who has been deceived and has sinned. In this case:- The woman is sinful.
- The man is sinless.
- The union produces children.
Why This Case “Never Arises” in Genesis
The Genesis narrative never presents a sinless man paired with a sinful woman producing children because Adam sins before any such generation can occur. Eve’s deception precedes Adam’s transgression, but conception does not occur until after both have fallen. This sequence matters. It prevents the demonstration of this principle in the early narrative, but it does not negate the principle itself. Instead, it preserves it for a later, singular event.Scenario Three: Eve Never Confesses, Adam Never Eats
This scenario is the most revealing and the most unsettling. Suppose Eve eats the fruit in deception and does not inform Adam. Suppose Adam remains obedient and sinless. Suppose they conceive children during this interval. Under these conditions:- The woman is sinful.
- The man is sinless.
- The children would be conceived without fallen seed.
- Sin requires progression.
- Progression requires a fallen man.
Why This Scenario Is Theologically Essential
This hypothetical accomplishes what no doctrinal assertion alone can do. It isolates variables. It shows that:- Sin in the woman does not necessitate sin in the child.
- The woman’s body is not the source of corruption.
- The determining factor is the condition of the man’s seed.
The Replication of This Principle in History
This “unrealized” Genesis scenario occurs exactly once in human history.- A woman, born in sin - Mary the Mother of Jesus
- A conception without fallen male seed, through the Holy Spirit, and the spotless seed from above.
- A child is born without sin.
Why This Does Not Exalt Women as Sinless Beings
It is critical to state what this argument does not claim.- It does not assert that women are morally superior.
- It does not deny women’s participation in sin.
- It does not redefine righteousness along gender lines.
Why Theology Has Avoided This Chapter
This line of reasoning has been largely ignored for two reasons.- First, it disrupts simplistic readings of equality that confuse sameness with symmetry. Scripture affirms equal value without affirming identical function.
- Second, it reframes Eve not as the origin of humanity’s corruption, but as the first bearer of a fallen condition she did not create. This challenges centuries of interpretive inertia.
The Logical Threshold of the Book
At this point, the reader must decide whether the internal logic of Scripture is coherent or contradictory.- If sin is transmitted through both parents equally, the virgin birth explains nothing.
- If sin is transmitted through the woman, Mary must be sinless.
- If sin is transmitted through the man, everything aligns.
Preparing for the Mother
Having tested every alternative, the narrative now turns to the one historical case where sin’s progression is decisively interrupted. Not by destroying humanity. Not by erasing woman. But by removing fallen seed. The next chapter examines Mary—not sentimentally, but structurally.
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