Cameron said the conception of women was increased in Gen 3.
The reason he suggested is "to introduce the election". When I asked what that means, he said -
Cameron143 said:
Really? I'm not coining a new phrase. Surely you know what an introduction is and the term elect engenders.
There was no need to preserve a chosen people for Christ until after sin. Had Adam been successful, all humanity would have inherited life through him. Instead, all died in Adam. Hence, the need for a second Adam.
God chose Adam as a representative for all mankind...in him. God also chose those in Christ...in Him. All the choosing was before the foundation of the world.
I still don't understand why electing people for whatever purpose in Gen 3 required an increase in the birth rate.
First of all, it's most likely Cameron's answers generally relate to his own personal beliefs and he will force that view upon any scripture presented. But let's look at Chapter 3 where God even mentions child birth.
16 Unto the woman He said: '
I will greatly multiply thy pain and thy travail; in pain thou shalt bring forth children.
That's it, that is all that God said and nothing about increase in conception whatsoever nor anything about Election.
Even when we read the next chapters we do not see anything that refers to such an idealism either.
We do not even see Election in Enoch or Noah.
God see's this continuous evil in the world and only one family is thinking about God.
Noah, Great Grandson of Enoch, is literally fulfilling Acts 17 like Enoch did:
26 And he made from one man every nation of mankind to live on all the face of the earth, having determined allotted periods and the boundaries of their dwelling place,
27 that they should seek God (
Noah was seeking God)
And we read in Genesis
6:8 But Noah found grace in the eyes of HaShem.
Personally, you see what the Bible claims and then you are seeing what some doctrine interjects into what the Bible claims.
If the doctrine doesn't align with what the Bible claims then you automatically know what's going on.
I have also found it interesting that the Reformed typically refuses Theological interpretation almost 100% of the time.
They have 100 verses out of almost 30,000 verses they live by.
So they basically reject 99.7% of the rest of the Bible or they interject their beliefs into those verses.
I would love to know what God thinks about that even though it's between them and God.