Does this statement imply that we were only potential humans before we were born, not actual human beings?

PROBLEM: According to this text, “all [human beings] sinned [in Adam].” But, we were not yet even conceived, let alone born, when Adam sinned. Therefore, we could not possibly have been actual human beings. Hence, we must have been merely potential human beings.

SOLUTION: For several reasons it is evident that this text does not prove that unborn human beings are not fully human.

Second, the fact that we were all genetically, representatively, or potentially in Adam, and therefore responsible in his sin, reveals that there is a corporateness about human nature. That is, there is a unity in humanity, so that we cannot separate off one member from another (cf. Romans 14:7), no matter where we are located.

Third, the very fact that we are all declared sinners from conception (see comments on Psalms 51:5), by virtue of being in Adam, reveals that even from the point of conception one is considered to be part of the actual human race, not merely a potential human being.

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