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The word that you refer unto was made after the males begin having children with the female helpmates the LORD had formed from the beginning of mankind on earth. More specifically, after they began taking unto themselves the daughters of the men as wives.
It was at that time that the LORD said that he wasn't going to argue with a man over his word for that he was flesh also. As such, he set man's days to 120 years. However, the interpretation that you quoted states that the LORD said human beings are mortal which is quite different than saying the days of man in the flesh are 120 years.
However, those that claim that the reference to 120 years in Genesis 6:3 is referring unto the number of years till the flood need to toss those Bibles and get the one your using, the Bible you quote completely eliminates the necessity for fabricating an explanation for the 120 years reference by removing it completely from the text. It is pretty obvious the point on the timelines was after men began multiplying, somewhere around the 9th month, or in the beginning, if you will. And yet it was before the children of those men began to have children which could be said to be as many as 16 years later.
It is extremely difficult to say that something which was said around 40 years after the beginning of life on earth had anything to do with the time till Noah who wouldn't be born for another 900 years, not 120 years.
But you are right about death, it is the cessation of life, and once life ends it no longer exists. Good thing that the flesh is animated by life and not the other way around since that would mean that when the flesh ceases to be animate, the life is dead.
It was at that time that the LORD said that he wasn't going to argue with a man over his word for that he was flesh also. As such, he set man's days to 120 years. However, the interpretation that you quoted states that the LORD said human beings are mortal which is quite different than saying the days of man in the flesh are 120 years.
However, those that claim that the reference to 120 years in Genesis 6:3 is referring unto the number of years till the flood need to toss those Bibles and get the one your using, the Bible you quote completely eliminates the necessity for fabricating an explanation for the 120 years reference by removing it completely from the text. It is pretty obvious the point on the timelines was after men began multiplying, somewhere around the 9th month, or in the beginning, if you will. And yet it was before the children of those men began to have children which could be said to be as many as 16 years later.
It is extremely difficult to say that something which was said around 40 years after the beginning of life on earth had anything to do with the time till Noah who wouldn't be born for another 900 years, not 120 years.
But you are right about death, it is the cessation of life, and once life ends it no longer exists. Good thing that the flesh is animated by life and not the other way around since that would mean that when the flesh ceases to be animate, the life is dead.