Anthropology (The Doctrine of Man)
I. The
Origin of Man
A.
Man Was Created by God
1.
God created man male and female (Gen 1:27, 31).
2.
Adam was the son of God as he was begotten by
God (Lk 3:38).
3.
The Lord Jesus testified that God created man
(Mt 19:4; Mk 10:6).
B.
God Made All Nations from One Blood
1.
God made all nations from one blood (Acts
17:26).
2.
Eve was made from one of Adam’s ribs (Gen
2:21–23; 1 Tim 2:13).
3.
God created one man with the intention of
seeking godly offspring (Mal 2:15).
II.
Man’s PrimitiveState In The Garden
A.
Man Had the Image of God
1.
God created man in his own image, after his own
likeness (Gen 1:26–27).
2.
The likeness of God is true righteousness and
holiness (Eccl 7:29; Eph 4:24).
3.
Man lost the likeness of God because of sin;
Christ comes to re-create man for the restoration of the image and likeness of
God (2 Cor 3:18, 5:17; Col
3:9–10).
B.
Man Had the Honorable Title of the Son of God
1.
Adam was called the son of God (Lk 3:38).
2.
Man had the privilege to communicate with God
(Gen 2:16–17, 3:8–19).
3.
Man was entrusted by God to rule over the living
creatures of the earth (Gen 1:26–28, 2:19).
C.
Man Led a Happy and Blessed Life
1.
Man did not need to worry about food or clothing
(Gen 2:8, 16, 25, 3:7).
2.
Adam and Eve led a harmonious life (Gen 2:18,
22–24).
3.
There was no threat of death (Gen 2:9, 3:22).
III.
The Sin Of Humanity’s First Parents
A.
Biblical Evidence for the Fall of Humanity
1.
God said, “But at Adam they transgressed the
covenant; there they dealt faithlessly with me” (Hos 6:7).
2.
Job said, “If I have covered my transgressions
as Adam, by hiding my iniquity in my bosom...” (Job 31:33, NKJV).
3.
3.‑ Paul
said, “But I am afraid that as the serpent deceived Eve by his cunning, your
thoughts will be led astray from a sincere and pure devotion to Christ” (2 Cor
11:3; cf. Rom 5:14; 1 Cor 15:22; 1 Tim 2:13–14).
B.
The Fall of Man
1.
Satan’s temptation toward Eve
a.
At first, Satan made the woman doubt God’s
words. So Satan said to Eve, “Did God say...” (Gen 3:1; cf. Gen 2:16–17).
b.
Satan thwarted God’s words by saying, “You will
not die” (Gen 3:4; cf. Gen 2:17).
c.
Satan tempted Eve with the lust of the flesh,
the lust of the eyes, and the pride of life (Gen 3:5–6; cf. 1 Jn 2:16).
2.
Eve yielded to Satan’s temptation
a.
Eve liked to talk to Satan,
therefore, he took advantage of this opportunity (Gen 3:1–2; cf. Jas 4:7).
b.
Eve did not resist Satan’s temptation, and
therefore twisted God’s word to her own ends (Gen 3:2–3; cf. Gen 2:16–17).
c.
Eve became a victim of Satan’s deceit when she
picked and ate the forbidden fruit. So blind was Eve to her own deception that
she also handed the fruit over to her beloved husband Adam (Gen 3:4–6).
C.
The Effects of Sin
1.
God’s immediate judgment.
a.
On Eve: “I will greatly multiply your pain in
childbearing” (Gen 3:16).
b.
On Adam: “In the sweat of your face you shall
eat bread till you return to the ground” (Gen 3:19).
2.
Expulsion from the garden.
a.
God would not allow Adam and Eve to eat the
fruit from the tree of life lest they should live forever, for it is miserable
for an accursed man to live in this world (Gen 3:22). Therefore, God expelled
Adam and Eve from the garden because of his mercy and love.
b.
God expelled Adam and Eve from the garden of Eden and placed a cherubim with a fiery sword east
of Eden. The
cherubim, with the flaming sword, swung the sword every which way to guard the
way to the tree of life (Gen 3:23–24). At this point, no man could again regain
eternal life or paradise.
3.
Death of the spirit and body.
a.
God clearly said, “For in the day that you eat
of it you shall die” (Gen 2:17). Our first parents died spiritually on the day
of the fall. They became alienated from God, and their bodies, which were made
of dust, eventually returned to the ground (Gen 3:19; Isa 59:2).
b.
By one man’s disobedience, namely Adam, all men
became sinners. The spirits of humankind are darkened, souls are debased and
corrupted, and physical bodies are subject to disease and death (Rom 5:12–19,
8:21; Eph 4:17–19).
IV.
The End Of Humanity
A.
All Humanity Has Sinned
1.
We sin because we do not have true love.
a.
The law of God can be summarized as follows:
(a)
Love God with all our heart, soul, strength, and
mind (Mt 22:37; Lk 10:27).
(b)
Love our neighbors as ourselves (Mt 22:39).
b.
The lack of true love is seen in the following:
(a)
By not honoring our parents (Ex 20:12).
(b)
By not loving our neighbors, relatives, friends,
and others (Lk 10:28–37; 1 Tim 5:8).
c.
Sinning upon others is seen through:
(a)
Harming others physically.
(b)
Forcefully taking the rights and benefits due
others.
(c)
Disturbing the mental well-being of others (Ex
20:13–17; Rom 1:28–32).
2.
We sin by not loving God.
a.
If you love your neighbors as yourself but you
do not worship, honor, and love God, your Creator and Savior, you are still a
great sinner in God’s sight (Eccl 12:1, 13–14; Rom 1:19–20; Jn 3:16–18).
b.
Worshipping idols and denying Jesus Christ is
sin compounded upon sin (Ex 20:3–5; Isa 2:8–9; Rom 1:21–25).
3.
The sin our first parents passed on to humanity
is known as the original sin, while the sins we commit ourselves are called
moral sins, i.e., sins for which we ourselves make moral decisions and are
thereby responsible for.
a.
The Bible says, “For as by one man’s
disobedience many were made sinners” (Rom 5:19). “For as in Adam all die” (1
Cor 15:22). Adam’s posterity, which is all humanity, inherited the original sin
from Adam—generation after generation.
b.
A psalmist once said, “I was brought forth in
iniquity, and in sin did my mother conceive me” (Ps 51:5; cf. Ps 58:3; Job
25:4, 14:4; Rom 7:17–18).
c.
After the fall of humanity, death reigned over
all humankind, for humanity inherited the original sin. But how do we know
humanity inherited the original sin? Well, according to the Bible, death comes
from sin (Rom 5:12, 14, 17; 6:23), and all humankind, young and old alike, are
subject to death. For we are all sinners ruled by sin; as the Bible says,
“...all have sinned...” (Rom 3:23).
B.
The Effects of Sin on Sinners
1.
Sinners come under the devil’s dominion (1 Jn
3:8; 5:19).
a.
Sinners become slaves to their sins (Jn 8:34;
Tit 3:3).
b.
Sinners do not have peace in their hearts and
conscience (Isa 48:22; Rom 3:13–17).
c.
Sinners do not have any hope for the future
(Prov 11:7; Eph 2:12).
2.
All sinners eventually come under God’s
judgment.
a.
Sinners labor and toil for life (Gen 3:16–19; Ps
90:10).
b.
A sinner’s physical death is inevitable (Rom
6:23; Heb 9:27).
c.
Sinners will suffer eternal condemnation (2 Thess
1:8–9; Rev 21:8).