fall of man
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fall of man
Summary
fall of man is a myth[1]. It draws 1,677 Wikipedia views per month (myth category, ranking #5 of 23).[2]
Key Facts
- fall of man's religion is recorded as Christianity[3].
- fall of man's religion is recorded as Image of God[4].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as myth[5].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as artistic theme[6].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as Bible story[7].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as change[8].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as cognition[9].
- fall of man's instance of is recorded as incident[10].
- fall of man's main regulatory text is recorded as Genesis 3:4[11].
- fall of man's based on is recorded as Genesis 3[12].
- fall of man's based on is recorded as Book of Genesis[13].
- fall of man is a type of disobedience[14].
- fall of man is part of Christian mythology[15].
- fall of man's Commons category is recorded as Temptation of Adam and Eve[16].
- fall of man's foundational text is recorded as Genesis 1:26[17].
- fall of man's said to be the same as is recorded as original sin[18].
- A participant in fall of man was Adam and Eve[19].
- A participant in fall of man was Serpent of Eden[20].
- fall of man's has cause is recorded as commandment[21].
- fall of man's has cause is recorded as cunning[22].
- fall of man's described at URL is recorded as http://божественныйпринцип.рф/Grehopadenie.html[23].
- fall of man's described by source is recorded as The Nuttall Encyclopædia[24].
- fall of man's described by source is recorded as Jewish Encyclopedia of Brockhaus and Efron[25].
- fall of man's described by source is recorded as Brockhaus and Efron Encyclopedic Dictionary[26].
- fall of man's described by source is recorded as New World Encyclopedia[27].
Body
Publication
fall of man is part of Christian mythology[15].
Cultural Impact
Things named for fall of man include supralapsarianism[28], a Logical order of God's decree[29] and infralapsarianism[30], a Logical order of God's decree[31].
Why It Matters
fall of man draws 1,677 Wikipedia views per month (myth category, ranking #5 of 23).[2] It has Wikipedia articles in 27 language editions, a strong signal of global cultural recognition.[32] It is known by 41 alternative names across languages and contexts.[33]
Entities named for it include supralapsarianism[28], a Logical order of God's decree[29] and infralapsarianism[30], a Logical order of God's decree[31].