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ADAM
"When Adam came from the Creator's hand, he bore,
in his physical, mental, and spiritual nature, a likeness to
his Maker. "God created man in His own image"
(Genesis 1:27), and it was His purpose that the longer man
lived the more fully he should reveal this image--the more
fully reflect the glory of the Creator. All his faculties were
capable of development; their capacity and vigor were
continually to increase. Vast was the scope offered for their
exercise, glorious the field opened to their research. The
mysteries of the visible universe--the "wondrous works of
Him which is perfect in knowledge" (Job 37:16)--invited
man's study. Face-to-face, heart-to-heart communion with his
Maker was his high privilege. Had he remained loyal to God,
all this would have been his forever. Throughout eternal ages
he would have continued to gain new treasures of knowledge, to
discover fresh springs of happiness, and to obtain clearer and
yet clearer conceptions of the wisdom, the power, and the love
of God. More and more fully would he have fulfilled the object
of his creation, more and more fully have reflected the
Creator's glory." *ED.015.001
"For nearly a thousand years Adam lived among men,
a witness to the results of sin. Faithfully he sought to stem
the tide of evil. He had been commanded to instruct his
posterity in the way of the Lord; and he carefully treasured
what God had revealed to him, and repeated it to succeeding
generations. To his children and children's children, to the
ninth generation, he described man's holy and happy estate in
Paradise, and repeated the history of his fall, telling them
of the sufferings by which God had taught him the necessity of
strict adherence to His law, and explaining to them the
merciful provisions for their salvation. Yet there were but
few who gave heed to his words. Often he was met with bitter
reproaches for the sin that had brought such woe upon his
posterity. "**PP.082.002
"Adam's life was one of sorrow, humility, and contrition.
When he left Eden, the thought that he must die thrilled him
with horror. He was first made acquainted with the reality of
death in the human family when Cain, his first-born son,
became the murderer of his brother. Filled with the keenest
remorse for his own sin, and doubly bereaved in the death of
Abel and the rejection of Cain, Adam was bowed down with
anguish. He witnessed the wide-spreading corruption that was
finally to cause the destruction of the world by a flood; and
though the sentence of death pronounced upon him by His Maker
had at first appeared terrible, yet after beholding for nearly
a thousand years the results of sin, he felt that it was
merciful in God to bring to an end a life of suffering and
sorrow. "**PP.082.003
Gen 5:2
2 Male and female created he them; and blessed them, and
called their name Adam, in the day when they were created. (KJV)
Gen 5:5
5 And all the days that Adam lived were nine hundred and
thirty years: and he died. (KJV)
*Education, 1903 p.15; **Patriarchs and Prophets, 1890
p.82 To read more, check out the White
Estate.
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