So you think the sun will never burn out? Don't want get off track here but let's consider your view.
God is love - no doubt. But He also is a God of justice and sin will be judged. That of course does necessitate destroying the earth.
But would He save the earth though? Sin not only corrupts man, it corrupted the earth. The earth is infected with this imperfection, distortion down to the cells. Everything that lives, dies because of the original sin. Now when the Millennial Kingdom comes at least animals will be in harmony. Will it be a perfect world, no. Life will last longer, but death is still there. God would have to completely redo earth. "Behold, I make all things new". This works with "all former things will pass away". So it will be a new earth without death.
Back to the Garden - it wasn't perfect when the obvious potential of evil entering it was a target temptation . GOD PUT THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD AND EVIL IN THE GARDEN AND KNEW THEY WOULD EAT OF IT. HE ALSO ALLOWED SATAN IN THERE.
We had to know evil to really appreciate and understand what good is. We could not know what mercy, forgiveness, joy, blessings, healing, hope, faith, love and anything good unless we were exposed to their opposites. We choose to do these things and that makes our actions more valuable because we do them willingly. We love God willingly. And when He blesses us, pulls us out of danger, sickness, fear and gives us comfort, healing, provisions, we cherish and appreciate it.
You said to me, "So you think the sun will never burn out?" Isn't this showing me you have no faith. What I mean is, you believe God can create possibly billions of suns but the True God can't sustain these suns from burning out because according to you the True God can create our sun but he doesn't have the power or ability to keep it from burning out. Yeah right, like I'm going to believe that just because you and others do. You keep believing that God can't keep our sun from burning out, I'll believe the truth, that God can make sure that this part of his creation, the physical universe, including our planet from destroying itself.
You also said that God is a God not only of love but of justice and sin will be judged. That of course does necessitate destroying the earth.
It's true that the True God is a God of not only love but also justice and sin will be judged but the scriptures tell us that the punishment for sin is death, but this is talking about humans born in sin, it's not talking about our planet. I've seen nothing in the scriptures that says it's necessary for our planet and the physical universe to be destroyed for justice to be attained by what Adam and Eve did when they sinned.
You said, GOD PUT THE TREE OF KNOWLEDGE OF GOOD AND EVIL IN THE GARDEN AND KNEW THEY WOULD EAT OF IT. HE ALSO ALLOWED SATAN IN THERE.
I've seen nowhere in scripture that God knew that Adam was going to eat of the forbidden tree before he even created Adam. I don't believe this because I don't believe God asks us to do the impossible. If God knew Adam was going to eat from the forbidden fruit before creating him then when God commanded Adam to not eat from the forbidden fruit, he was commanding Adam to do something that was impossible for him to obey. Once God looks into the future to see something is going to happen, like before God created Adam, then what God saw was going to happen before he created Adam, that's what is going to happen, it can't be stopped not even by mans freewill can it be stopped. So if God looked into the future before creating Adam, seeing that he would eat of the forbidden fruit, then Adam could make no choice except what choice God saw Adam make before creating him. That means you're saying by the way you believe that God commanded Adam to make an impossible choice when he commanded him to make the choice of not eating of the forbidden fruit. Like I said I don't believe God commands us to make impossible choices.
You said we had to know evil to really appreciate and understand what good is. We could not know what mercy, forgiveness, joy, blessings, healing, hope, faith, love and anything good unless we were exposed to their opposites. You are in error here. It wasn't God will for Adam to sin and die but by what you're saying here you're saying that God did want Adam to sin and die because according to you the way God created or designed us is that he wanted Adam to sin and die because that's the only way we could truly understand what good, mercy, forgiveness, joy, blessings, healing, hope, faith, love are. This is a lie. Adam knew what joy, happiness, mercy, faith, love and mercy was, simply by the evidence that God had given him life and not only life but God created him with a body that he could enjoy life abundantly. You think that Adam couldn't have known what a blessing it was, that the True God had given him life, had given him a beautiful home, satisfying work. You think that Adam couldn't have known how merciful God was by the fact that the True God had given him life. You think that the only way to have hope and faith in the True God is by being disobedient. With all the evidence around Adam, the fact he had life and the fact that the True God had given him a body to enjoy life abundantly that the True God had given him a beautiful home with plenty of food you think that Adam couldn't exercise faith in the True God because of all this evidence around him. Adam should have exercised faith by all this evidence around him of what the True God had done that whatever the True God commanded to do or not do he would know it was in his best interest to be obedient to the True God because he would understand that God knew what was good or evil for what the True God created. The True God certainly have enough evidence to Adam that he could exercise that kind of faith. Adam didn't have to be disobedient to understand what good is or to know what mercy, forgiveness, joy, blessings, healing, hope, faith, love and anything good. Adam didn't have to be unfaithful or disobedient to understand these things.
It is evident that God sets the standard as to what is good and what is bad; it is not within man’s prerogative to do so apart from God. Although Adam transgressed God’s express law, this transgression is not chargeable to Jehovah, “for with evil things [form of
ka·kosʹ] God cannot be tried nor does he himself try anyone. But each one is tried by being drawn out and enticed by his own desire.”—
Jas 1:13, 14; Ge 2:16, 17; 3:17-19