Introduction
Young Earth Creationists (YECs) often argue that secularists have embraced humanism and atheism, exchanging the worship of God for the worship of nature. The charge is meant to expose idolatry, yet the irony is that YEC theology itself gives nature a starring role in the drama of sin and redemption.
For YEC leaders, the state of the natural world—animal death, predation, disease, and natural disasters—becomes a macabre exhibition of humanity’s fall. Adam’s disobedience is imagined to have reshaped the entire created order, extending his headship beyond humanity to encompass every living thing. That claim sets the stage for their most distinctive teaching: that animal death and natural disorder are the direct consequences of Adam’s sin.
YEC’s Nature‑Centric Theology
Answers in Genesis: “God created the world ‘very good,’ and a very good world would not include animal death.” (1)
Creation Ministries International: “Biblical creationists teach the historic Christian view that all kinds of death, corruption, decay, etc. (anything less than ‘Very Good’ according to God) are ultimately a result of God’s just punishment for the sin of Adam in the Garden. Prior to the Fall and the Curse, this creation existed in a state which exactly matched God’s original will. One may call this ‘paradise’. This idyllic state would have been pervasive across all of creation, and all domains; there would have been no corruption or death in the animal kingdoms just as there was none for mankind.” (2)
Institute for Creation Research: “Both pre-Fall humans and animals were vegetarian… A vegetarian diet makes perfect sense in a world without death.” (3)
Christian Research Institute: “Young-earth creationists maintain that all death—including animal death—is a function of the fall.” (4)
This rhetoric makes Adam the steward whose failure plunged all creation into suffering. Yet Scripture never describes Adam as the representative head of animals or nature. Instead, Paul consistently ties Adam’s sin to human death and Christ’s resurrection:
Romans 5:12: “Therefore, just as sin entered the world through one man, and death through sin, in this way death spread to all people, because all sinned.”
1 Corinthians 15:21–22: “Since death came through a man, the resurrection of the dead also comes through a man. For just as in Adam all die, so also in Christ all will be made alive.”
The focus of these passages is unmistakably human. To extend Adam’s headship to animals and ecosystems is to impose a theological burden Scripture never places there. Additionally, this way of defining evil as suffering is not biblical but modern. As John Walton explains:
“Our modern Western system of ideas, which historians and philosophers call humanism, is based on the belief that human happiness constitutes the highest value and therefore the highest good. Happiness in turn is generally defined in terms of an absence of pain, such that our word evil is synonymous with human suffering. … The cognitive environment of the ancient Near East, however, did not hold human happiness as the highest ideal. Their highest ideal is probably best described by our English word order. For ancient Near Easterners, a thing was good not based on the extent to which it produced human pleasure or alleviated human suffering, but to the extent to which it was functioning as it was intended to. … This was part of the cognitive environment of the ancient world and was what ancient writers meant when they used the word that translators render in English as good.”
—John H. Walton, The Lost World of the Israelite Conquest, pp. 21–22
Thus, YECs condemn secularists for “worshiping the earth,” yet their own theology elevates creaturely suffering as the ultimate measure of sin’s consequences. Scripture, by contrast, defines “good” in terms of covenantal order and divine purpose, with Adam as the representative head of humanity and Christ as the redeemer of mankind. As the Apostle Paul wrote:
“For the wages of sin is death, but the gift of God is eternal life in Christ Jesus our Lord” (Romans 6:23).
Christ redeems humanity, not the birds, the bees, and the trees. Creation shares in renewal (Romans 8:19–22), but resurrection belongs to those in Christ. Rather than pointing to animal death or natural disasters as the measure of sin’s horror, Scripture directs us to the cross.
“But God proves his own love for us in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us” (Romans 5:8).
This is the true picture of sin’s gravity and God’s grace—not lions hunting gazelles or natural disasters ravaging the earth. The cross shows us both the seriousness of sin and the hope of forgiveness.
To make animal death the central picture of sin is to obscure the cross, where God Himself bore human sin. The true measure of sin’s gravity, therefore, is not predation or decay, but the crucifixion—God Himself dying for the sins of humanity.
Eschatology: Backward or Forward?
As argued previously in The New Creation: Fulfilment of Redemption, Not a Return to Eden YEC eschatology often envisions the New Creation as a restoration of Edenic perfection. This backward‑facing view aligns closely with Adventist theology. In the words of the Prophetess Ellen G. White:
“In the final restitution, when there shall be ‘a new heaven and a new earth,’ it is to be restored more gloriously adorned than at the beginning.” (5)
By contrast, Revelation 21–22 describes a forward‑moving consummation:
“There will no longer be any curse. The throne of God and of the Lamb will be in the city, and his servants will worship him” (Revelation 22:3).
The emphasis is covenantal union and worship, not a biological reset of Eden. The New Creation is not Eden revisited—it is Eden transcended, the fulfillment of God’s redemptive plan.
Conclusion
At first glance, YECism appears to defend Genesis chronology. In reality, its center is theodicy. The irony is that their system turns nature into the focal point of sin and redemption, rather than humanity. By insisting that Adam’s failure brought animal death, predation, and disaster into the world, they shift the focus away from humanity’s covenantal rebellion and onto the mechanics of creation itself.
When examined closely, the movement is less about Genesis chronology or flood geology than it is about theodicy. The claim that no creature died before Adam’s sin is the keystone; everything else—six‑day creation, a young earth, global flood—exists to defend that premise. Their theology is built around explaining suffering, and in doing so, it equates pain with evil and makes Adam responsible for everything.
This reveals a deep irony. YECs accuse secularists of worshiping nature, yet their own theology is driven by a nature‑centric defense of God’s goodness. Creaturely suffering and natural disasters become the ultimate measure of sin, while the biblical narrative locates the true tragedy in humanity’s estrangement from God. Scripture directs our gaze not to the mortality of animals but to the cross, where Christ bore human guilt and secured reconciliation.
The biblical vision of redemption is not Eden restored but Eden surpassed. The New Creation is the fulfillment of God’s purpose: covenantal order established for all time, divine presence fully realized, and humanity living in unbroken fellowship with its Creator. In the end, YECism’s fixation on animal death exposes its real nature—a modern theodicy that misplaces the gospel’s center. The true measure of sin is not decay in the natural order but the crucifixion itself, where God entered human death to bring about eternal life.


