General anthropology deals with the study of the human
experience. Eriksen (2017) describes the discipline as “a comparative study of
humans, their societies, and their cultural worlds” (p. 3). As well, general anthropology seeks to
understand who/what is man apart from God and ignores the implications of the
Fall of Man (Gen. 3). In contrast, theological anthropology explores the
entirety of the human experience, “with all its complexities and ambiguities,”
and “is viewed from the standpoint of
the biblical story, which is both the story of sin and the story of glory and
the glory of divine salvation” (Cameron, 2005, p. 54).