Bible Chat: Family Life Podcast

If God Knew We’d Fall, Why Create Us At All?

David Mcmullen Season 1 Episode 27

A simple question knocked us back on our heels: if God knew Adam and Eve would fall, why create a world where failure was possible? We follow that question into Eden, past the tree, and into the heart of what love requires. If obedience without freedom is just programming, then the garden was never a trap; it was the stage where trust could be chosen, not forced. That choice dignifies us, and it explains why a God of love would risk our no for the sake of a meaningful yes.

We map the story the Bible actually tells: creation, fall, redemption, restoration, and the new creation. Long before “let there be light,” the Lamb was “slain from the foundation of the world,” which means redemption was baked into the plan, not hacked in after the fact. Where sin increased, grace abounded even more. Without sin we wouldn’t know forgiveness or the rescue of a Savior who steps into time, carries a cross, and opens a path home. The cross isn’t evidence that the plan failed; it’s proof that love would rather bleed than abandon.

Along the way, we unpack six clear reasons the risk was worth it: God wants lovers, not robots; the possibility of sin is the price of real relationship; trust sits at the center of Eden’s test; redemption was planned from the start; grace turns our worst places into altars of mercy; and the ending outshines the beginning. Innocence was good, but redeemed love will be better. “Behold, I make all things new” isn’t a wish—it's the Author’s promise.

If this conversation stirred your heart or clarified your thinking, share it with a friend, hit follow, and leave a review so more people can find the show. Tell us: which of the six reasons resonated most with you?

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