One of the underlying dangers of making the Genesis account “myth” is not only that it adds the idea that there are falsehoods within Scripture, but also makes the argument that there are lessons that are to be learned from those narratives baseless. To say that the Bible is making an argument against sin and for the need of the Law based on the narrative accounts of creation, the fall, the Nephilim, and the flood, but to then say those things never happened is to say there is not real warning in the stories. If the events never took place and they are simple “myths” that teach lessons, then there is no real danger in sin because the warning is based upon results that have not happened. In other words, the very reason/proof of the need to obey the Scripture, the narrated warnings, are not valid. To make the argument that one must do one thing, or the result will be another, is only valid if there is proof that the result follows the action.