1) Name & Identity
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Name (MT): אָדָם (’ādām) — common noun “human(ity), man” (Gen 1:26–27; 2:5–7), title “the man” (hā’ādām), and proper name Adam (Gen 3:17; 4:1, 25; 5:1–5). Semantic range includes generic “humankind” (Gen 1:27; 5:2).
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Etymology/wordplay: Connection to אֲדָמָה (’ădāmâ, “ground/soil”) and to “red” (’ādom) noted by many lexica; the narrative foregrounds dust-ground linkage (Gen 2:7; 3:19). Cf. HALOT; BDB.
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Status: First human; covenantal steward of Eden; husband of Eve; father of Cain, Abel, Seth, and others (Gen 4–5).
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Canonical footprint: Gen 1–5; genealogical anchors (1 Chr 1:1; Luke 3:38); Pauline theology (Rom 5:12–21; 1 Cor 15:21–22, 45–49; 1 Tim 2:13–14).
2) First–Progressive–Full Mention (Conner)
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First mention (Gen 1:26–27; 2:7): Humanity created in God’s image/likeness; Adam formed from dust; divine inbreathing grants life; appointed to rule, fill, subdue.
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Progressive development: Placement in Eden with priest-king stewardship and a probationary command (Gen 2:15–17); formation of the woman as suitable counterpart (2:18–25); the transgression (3:1–7); judicial oracles and exile (3:8–24); life east of Eden with worship, labor, family, and death (Gen 4–5).
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Full/clustered mention(s): The theological crystallization appears in Rom 5:12–21 and 1 Cor 15:21–22, 45–49, where Adam is the historical and typological head whose act contrasts with Christ’s.
3) Historical & Cultural Frame
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Setting: Primeval history (Gen 1–11) situated by Scripture as real space-time origins for humanity; genealogies bridge Adam to Israel (1 Chr 1; Luke 3).
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ANE idiom: Eden narrative employs temple-cosmic imagery (garden, river, precious stones; priestly “guard/serve” verbs, Gen 2:15 cf. Num 3:7–8); marriage as covenant union (Gen 2:24).
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Jewish thought vs. Western: The Hebrew narrative emphasizes vocation, covenantal obedience, and corporate consequences through a head; not Greco-modern individualism.
4) Original-Language Exegesis of Key Texts
Genesis 1:26–27 (MT/LXX)
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ṣelem/dĕmût (צֶלֶם/דְּמוּת): “image/likeness.” In context, royal-representative function (rule, Gen 1:26, 28). LXX renders εἰκών/ὁμοίωσις, preserved in NT theology (cf. 1 Cor 11:7).
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Plurals “Let us make” are best taken as a heavenly–court/majestic plural (conservative options vary), without undermining monotheism.
Genesis 2:7
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wayyîṣer… ’āpār… wayyippāḥ: God forms from dust and “breathes” into his nostrils; nephesh ḥayyāh “living creature/soul.” LXX: ἐνεφύσησεν… εἰς τὸ πρόσωπον… ἐγένετο ὁ ἄνθρωπος εἰς ψυχὴν ζῶσαν, quoted in 1 Cor 15:45.
Genesis 2:15–17
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Verbs: ‘ābad (“serve”) and šāmar (“guard/keep”) signal priestly caretaking of sacred space. The prohibition (2:17) establishes ethical headship and a probationary economy of life/death.
Genesis 3
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Serpent’s strategy: lexical distortion of divine word (3:1–5); the woman sees (rā’â), desires (ta’avâ), takes (lāqaḥ), gives — Adam listens (שָׁמַע) to the voice of his wife (3:17), highlighting abdicated headship.
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Judicial oracles (3:14–19): death, pain, cursed ground, relational distortion; protoevangelium promised enmity and a skull-crushing seed (3:15).
Textual variants: Genesis is textually stable at these loci; LXX differs stylistically (e.g., “face” vs. “nostrils” in 2:7) without altering doctrine. No significant variant undermines the theology treated here.
5) Roles, Offices, Gifting
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Image-bearer and vice-regent (Gen 1:26–28).
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Priest-guardian of Eden (2:15) and covenant head of the nascent human family (Gen 2:24; Rom 5).
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Namer (taxonomy authority) over animals and his wife (2:19–23; 3:20).
6) Covenantal & Redemptive-Historical Position
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Adam stands at the head of humanity; his disobedience ushers in sin, death, and exile (Rom 5:12; Gen 3:22–24). Promise of a victorious seed (Gen 3:15) inaugurates the redemptive line culminating in Christ (Luke 3:38; Rom 5:14–19).
7) Character Traits (Conner)
Virtues (pre-Fall):
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Receptivity to vocation: receives mandate to work/keep the garden (2:15).
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Cognitive–linguistic authority: naming (2:19–20).
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Covenant loyalty (initial): cleaves to wife; innocence and unashamedness (2:23–25).
Vices/Weaknesses (Fall narrative):
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Passivity/abdicated headship: present yet silent; “he was with her” (3:6 ESV margin) is a contextual inference from narrative sequence; text explicitly indicts him for “listening to the voice” of his wife (3:17).
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Blame-shifting: “The woman whom you gave…” (3:12).
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Unbelief/disobedience: transgresses explicit command (3:11, 17).
8) Crises, Sin, Repentance, Restoration
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Crisis: Serpentine temptation; misrepresentation of God’s word; desire for autonomous wisdom.
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Sin: Eating the forbidden fruit (Gen 3:6, 11).
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Immediate outcomes: shame, fear, relational rupture, curse, exile (3:7–24).
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Post-crisis markers: Naming the woman Eve (3:20) recognizes promised life; accepting garments indicates divine condescension/covering (3:21). Genealogical continuity via Seth (4:25; 5:3) signals hope within judgment.
9) Relationships
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With God: Creaturely dependence turned to fear post-transgression (3:8–10).
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With spouse: From one-flesh unity (2:24–25) to tension and domination (3:16).
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With creation: From joyful dominion (1:28) to toilsome labor (3:17–19).
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With offspring: Tragedy of Cain/Abel; consolation in Seth (4–5).
10) Typology & Foreshadowing (Conservative Controls)
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Adam as type of Christ (Rom 5:14): two representative heads; the first man a “living soul,” the last Adam a “life-giving Spirit” (1 Cor 15:45). The typology is explicitly canonical; it grounds substitution, resurrection life, and new-creation anthropology (1 Cor 15:47–49). Avoid speculative extensions beyond NT warrants.
11) Intertextual & Second-Temple Backdrop (Subordinate)
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Sirach 17:1–4: God created man from earth, gave dominion and commandments (parallels Gen 1–2).
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Wisdom of Solomon 2:23–24: God created man for immortality; death entered through the devil’s envy (cf. Rom 5).
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Jubilees 3–4: Expands Eden chronology and priestly themes.
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Life of Adam and Eve (Greek/Latin): postbiblical elaborations on repentance and mortality (use critically).
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Josephus, Ant. 1.34–49: Retelling with emphasis on God’s instruction and the serpent’s deceit.
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Targumim (Onkelos, Pseudo-Jonathan on Gen 2–3): Interpretive expansions on Eden, command, and consequences.
12) New Testament Reception
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Romans 5:12–21: Adam’s trespass brings condemnation/death; Christ’s obedience brings justification/life.
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1 Corinthians 15:21–22, 45–49: Adam/Christ contrast controls resurrection anthropology.
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1 Timothy 2:13–14: Order of creation and deception noted in ecclesial instruction (creation order undergirds applied ethics).
13) Theological Synthesis
Provisionist/Arminian + Dispensational emphases:
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Genuine contingency and responsibility: Adam freely transgresses a revealed command; corporate consequences arise via covenant headship without collapsing into necessity.
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Israel–Church distinction: Adam is the universal head; Israel’s election unfolds later; the Church’s restoration in Christ is not a replacement of Israel but the inauguration of new-creation humanity in Christ, to be consummated literally in the kingdom (1 Cor 15:24–28).
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Atonement trajectory: Protoevangelium (Gen 3:15) anticipates a historical, literal victory through the promised seed culminating in Christ.
Reformed contrast (succinct):
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Reformed theology commonly stresses federal headship and imputed guilt/corruption from Adam’s sin; Provisionist/Arminian readings emphasize corporate consequences and inherited mortality/sinward environment, with guilt attaching to personal sin while still acknowledging Adamic solidarity. Both affirm universal sin and the necessity of Christ’s righteousness.
14) Early Church Fathers (Subordinate)
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Irenaeus, Against Heresies 3.18–22: “Recapitulation” — Christ re-heads humanity, undoing Adam’s failure.
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Tertullian, De Anima/De Testimonio Animae: Adam as source of human condition; emphasizes historicity.
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Augustine, De peccatorum meritis et remissione; Contra Iulianum: seminal/federal sin. (Utilize descriptively; Scripture remains the norm within our conservative framework.)
15) Doctrinal/Thematic Index
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Imago Dei (Gen 1:26–28).
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Marriage & headship (Gen 2:24; 3:16).
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Sin, death, exile (Gen 3; Rom 5).
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Providence & promise (Gen 3:15; 4:25; 5:3).
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Christ as last Adam (1 Cor 15; Rom 5).
16) Practical Implications (Conservative Evangelical)
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Authority under God: Human dominion is delegated and accountable; vocation remains though frustrated by sin.
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Marriage: Complementary one-flesh union is creational and pre-Fall; post-Fall distortions are addressed by redemption, not abolished by culture.
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Holiness of God’s word: Life is found in trusting and obeying God’s revealed command.
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Gospel centrality: Only the last Adam can reverse sin and death; evangelism/discipleship aim at new-creation conformity to Christ.
17) Annotated Timeline (approx.)
| Era | Reference | Event | Trait Displayed | Theological Note |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| Creation week | Gen 1:26–28 | Creation of humankind in God’s image | Royal vocation | Dominion/blessing mandate |
| Eden placement | Gen 2:7–17 | Formed from dust; breathed into; probationary command | Priest-guardian | Life by obedience |
| Marriage given | Gen 2:18–25 | Woman formed; one-flesh union | Covenant unity | Creational pattern |
| Temptation & Fall | Gen 3:1–7 | Serpent deceives; transgression | Passivity; unbelief | Sin enters; shame |
| Judgment & Promise | Gen 3:8–24 | Oracles; protoevangelium; exile | Accountability | Hope through “seed” |
| Post-Eden life | Gen 4–5 | Worship, work, family, death | Perseverance in toil | Line of promise via Seth |
| NT interpretation | Rom 5; 1 Cor 15 | Adam/Christ contrast | Federal/corporate headship | Justification/resurrection |
18) Appendices (select)
A. Lexical/Grammatical (references commonly used in conservative scholarship)
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HALOT; BDB (entries ’ādām, ’ădāmâ).
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NIDOTTE/NIDNTTE (image, dust, death, Adam).
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TDOT/TDNT (as needed for ṣelem, dĕmût; Ἀδάμ).
B. Second-Temple & Rabbinic (subordinate aids)
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Sirach 17; Wisdom 2; Jubilees 3–4; Life of Adam and Eve (Greek/Latin).
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Josephus, Ant. 1.34–49.
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Targum Onkelos/Pseudo-Jonathan on Gen 2–3.
C. Conservative Evangelical Bibliography (indicative, non-exhaustive; no direct quotations used here)
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Leon Morris, The Epistle to the Romans (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1988), esp. Rom 5.
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Gordon D. Fee, The First Epistle to the Corinthians (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1987), 1 Cor 15.
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F. F. Bruce, Paul: Apostle of the Heart Set Free (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1977), Adam–Christ motifs.
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George Eldon Ladd, A Theology of the New Testament (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1993), resurrection/new creation.
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Jack Cottrell, What the Bible Says About God the Redeemer (Joplin, MO: College Press, 1987), headship and atonement.
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Robert E. Picirilli, Grace, Faith, Free Will (Nashville: Randall House, 2002), Adamic solidarity and responsibility.
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Arnold G. Fruchtenbaum, The Book of Genesis (Ariel’s Bible Commentary; San Antonio: Ariel Ministries, 2009), Eden and early patriarchal history.
(List can be expanded with page-specific citations if direct quotations are requested.)
At-a-Glance Summary (1 page)
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Name: Adam (’ādām; LXX/NT Ἀδάμ)
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Where: Gen 1–5; 1 Chr 1:1; Luke 3:38; Rom 5; 1 Cor 15; 1 Tim 2:13–14
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5 Key Traits (text-bounded):
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Royal/priestly vocation (Gen 1:26–28; 2:15)
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Covenant headship (Gen 2:16–17; Rom 5:14)
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Passivity/blame-shifting in crisis (Gen 3:6, 12, 17)
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Recipient of judgment and promise (Gen 3:15–19)
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Ancestor of the line of promise (Gen 4:25; 5:3)
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5 Key Texts: Gen 1:26–28; 2:7, 15–17; 3:15–19; Rom 5:12–21; 1 Cor 15:45–49
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3 Cautionary Notes:
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Distorting God’s word leads to death and exile (Gen 3).
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Abdicated headship damages marriage and vocation (Gen 3:16–19).
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Sin’s reach is universal; only Christ reverses it (Rom 5:18–19).
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3 Exemplary Notes:
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Embrace creational vocation under God’s word (Gen 1–2).
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Hold marriage as covenantal and creational (Gen 2:24).
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Look to the promised seed for restoration (Gen 3:15; 1 Cor 15).
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Reality Filter
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Scripture affirms Adam’s historicity and representative role. Post-biblical expansions (e.g., Life of Adam and Eve) are contextual aids, not authorities. No speculative reconstructions are adopted here. If you want direct quotations from the secondary sources above, I can provide page-specific SBL citations and integrate them as footnotes.