Nevertheless, the Fall is the silent hypothesis of the whole Biblical doctrine of sin and redemption; it does not rest only on a few vague passages, but forms an indispensable element in the revelation of salvation. The whole contemplation of man and humanity, of Nature and history, of ethical and physical evil, of redemption and the way in which to obtain it, is connected in Scripture with a Fall, such as
Ge 3 relates to us. Sin, for example, is common to all men (
1Ki 8:46;
Ps 14:3;
130:3;
143:2), and to every man from his conception (
Ge 6:5;
8:21;
Job 14:4;
Ps 51:7). It arouses God's anger and deserves all kinds of punishment, not only of an ethical but of a physical nature (
Ge 3:14-19;
4:14;
6:7,
13;
11:8;
Le 26:14 f;
De 28:15;
Ps 90:7, etc.); the whole of Scripture proceeds from the thought that sin and death are connected in the closest degree, as are also obedience and life. In the new heaven and new earth all suffering ceases with sin (
Re 21:4). Therefore redemption is possible only in the way of forgiveness (
Ps 32:1;
Isa 43:25, etc.), and circumcision of the heart (
De 10:16;
30:16;
Jer 4:4), and this includes, further, life, joy, peace, salvation. When Paul in
Ro 5:12;
1Co 15:22 indicates Adam as the origin of sin and death, and Christ as the source of righteousness and life, he develops no ideas which are contrary to the organism of revelation or which might be neglected without loss; he merely combines and formulates the data which are explicitly or silently contained in it.