Some people think the Bible justifies their racist attitudes. Yet when we examine what the Bible says about the origin of different people groups, we find a different story. Its easy to see that people come in all shapes and sizes. Some are short, some are tall, some have red hair, some have brown hair, some have big noses . . . well, you get the idea. Its an amazing variety of people.
Despite this variety, we tend to group people according to one or more physical features they share in common. These groups are often called races, and the features that define them, racial characteristics.
Many people treat others differently, depending on these supposed racial characteristics. They believe those differences are more than just skin deep and have implications for their value as human beings, and even their place on the evolutionary ladder. Is that justifiable? How many races of people are there? How did they come to be, and do these differences justify prejudice?
A Biblical Basis Gods Word settles this issue. There is only one race of people. This is clear from the history found in Genesis.
In the beginning God created the first man, Adam. Then He created the first woman, Eve, from the mans side. Adam and Eve were our original parents, made in the image of God. All humans can be traced back to these two people. This is made abundantly clear in Genesis 3:20, where Adam said that Eve was the mother of all living.
So, if we are all descendants of Adam and Eve, we should all look pretty much the same, right? How can we explain all the differences in people?
The Tower of Babel Genesis 11 describes a time when humans rebelled against God by settling at Babel and refusing to spread out in the world. Because of this, God confused their language, and groups of people separated and moved away from one another.
AS A CONSEQUENCE OF BABEL, THE PEOPLE GROUPS BECAME GENETICALLY ISOLATED. As a consequence of Babel, the people groups could not easily mix. They became genetically isolated, meaning that they married and had offspring primarily within their particular group. As the years passed, each group developed its own culture and ways of doing things. Genetically isolated, certain physical traits became more prominent in each group. These ethnic characteristics are wrongly considered racial characteristics; but there really is only one race, the human race. All of these people were simply people.
Skin Color Lets use skin color to illustrate the process.
The pigment primarily responsible for everyones skin color is melanin. Ultimately, everyone has the same skin colorwe just have varying skin tones. The two forms of melanin are eumelanin (brown to black) and pheomelanin (red to yellow). Their proportion determines skin tone.
So what would cause some people to have very dark skin while others skin is lighter? Where they live makes a difference. For example, darker skin on people living in regions near the equator protects them from intense sunlight, reducing their risk of skin cancer. People in higher latitudes where there is less intense sunlight need lighter skin to produce vitamin D efficiently. In each case those who had the characteristics conducive to living in the region stayed and reproduced. Those who didnt either moved on or died out.
Over many generations, these favorable characteristics would be carried forward in the gene pool, and the less favorable characteristics would tend to fall away. Thus, genetic variability in isolated populations gradually decreases. So today people with very dark skin usually have children with dark skin and people with very light skin usually have light-skinned children.
However, people with middle brown skin often have children with a much wider range of skin tones. Why? Because these middle brown people groups still have significant genetic variability with regard to skin tone.
Based on our understanding of the inheritance of skin tone, we strongly suspect Adam and Eve were middle brown. This would give the widest range of skin tones in their offspring, from very light to very dark.