How Should BioLogos Respond to Dr. Albert Mohler’s Critique: Pete’s Response
"The BioLogos Forum" frequently features essays from The BioLogos Foundation's leaders and Senior Fellows. Please note the views expressed here are those of the author, not necessarily of The BioLogos Foundation. You can read more about what we believe here.
Today's entry was written by Pete Enns. Pete Enns is a former Senior Fellow of Biblical Studies for The BioLogos Foundation and author of several books and commentaries, including the popular Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and the Problem of the Old Testament, which looks at three questions raised by biblical scholars that seem to threaten traditional views of Scripture.
Today's blog follows Darrel Falk's and Karl Giberson's previous posts (here and here) about Albert Mohler's recent critique of the BioLogos Foundation. Dr. Mohler's speech may be found here. We have produced a transcript of the speech, which can be read here.
Dear Dr. Mohler,
I watched your articulate presentation “Why Does the Universe Look So Old?” and along with Dr. Giberson, I have some questions. For me, those questions concern how you approach biblical interpretation.
Along with Giberson, my main question is why make “a theological mountain out of an exegetical molehill.” Although I disagree with a literal reading of Genesis 1, I have no personal qualms with those who think differently; indeed there are a number of variant readings I am fine with. But you attach great significance to this issue in ways that most Christians do not, and along the way, I think you miss some important aspects of Genesis 1. I, and perhaps others, would appreciate some clarification to help us see where you are coming from.
I focus my questions by citing a small portion of your presentation. The parts that raised questions for me are in bold type.
“I want to invite you to turn with me to Genesis chapter one. We dare not seek to answer this question without first looking to the Word of God.… What we have here in Genesis 1:1 – 2:3 is a sequential pattern of creation, a straightforward plan. A direct reading of the text would indicate to us seven 24-hour days, six 24-hour days of creative activity and a final day of divine rest. This was the untroubled consensus of the Christian church until early in the 19th century. It was not absolutely unanimous. It was not always without controversy. But it was the overwhelming, untroubled consensus of the church, until the dawn of the 19th century.”
“A direct reading of the text"
You seem to say here that a “direct reading” of Genesis 1:1-2:3 leads naturally to a literal reading. It is not clear to me what you mean by “direct reading.” As you know, there are many places in the Bible where a “direct” reading actually requires a non-literal interpretation. For example, God is spirit and does not have hands or lungs, yet in Genesis 2 God “forms” Adam from the dust (like a potter) and “breathes” into him.
I understand that a literal reading of Genesis 1 is driven by a desire to read Scripture with respect. We have no disagreement on the motive. But I am suggesting that we show the most respect for Scripture by listening closely to what it is saying, how it is said, and how an ancient audience would have understood it.
This is the hard work of biblical interpretation, and once we have done that work we will be in a better position to make some decisions about what is literal (e.g., the cross and resurrection), what is clearly symbolic (e.g., parables), and what is not entirely clear either way and requires more work to think through. Discernment and patience have always been part of a healthy approach to biblical interpretation. It is not an indication of wavering commitment, but precisely the opposite: an indication that the Bible is worthy of such careful attention.
One reason I and others do not accept a literal interpretation of Genesis 1 is that the text itself points us in a symbolic direction. In fact, insisting on “total literalism” can cause big problems for readers of Genesis.
Here are three examples from Genesis 1 and then one related issue from elsewhere in the Old Testament.
- Verses 1-2 assume the pre-existence of a watery chaos.1 The spirit of God (v. 2) hovers over this pre-existent “deep” and the first day of creation begins the process where God brings order to this chaos.
Many faithful Christians understand verses 1-2 this way, and they feel that they are honoring God’s Word by doing so. Lying behind this conviction is the principle of grammatical-historical exegesis, where the historical context of a text frames the kinds of questions one asks of it.
Taming chaos is not the way modern readers think of creation, but it is one way that ancients thought of it. We know this from other creation texts from the ancient world, one of which you mention in your presentation (the Babylonian creation story Enuma Elish). I feel I am honoring the Bible as God’s Word by learning as much as I can about the ancient context in which Genesis was written. Then I can begin to listen to how Genesis 1 would have been understood by these ancient Israelites, the very people to whom it was written. I do not think I am honoring Scripture by expecting it to reflect modern questions that were simply not on the mind of ancient Israelites.
It seems to me that you may be expecting Genesis 1 to do something it was not intended to do, namely reflect factual information that would answer the sorts of questions we have today. I, and many others, feel that expecting the Bible to reflect the world in which it was written is the proper way to account for why Genesis 1 looks the way it does.
It is a big problem not only scientifically but theologically to insist on a literal “watery chaos” that was just “there” when God began creating. Reading Genesis 1 with ancient eyes helps us past this. Do you see a problem with reading the Bible the way I have outlined here? Do you think there is value in allowing the original context in which the Bible was written help guide your interpretation? - A related issue is the “firmament” mentioned in vv. 6-8. This was understood by Israelites and throughout much of Christian history as some sort of solid dome.2 As Genesis 1:7 tells us, the function of the firmament was to hold back the “water above.” Along with the “watery chaos,” this is part of the Bible’s ancient Near Eastern worldview. Indeed, some of the better modern translations of the Bible use the English word “dome” or “vault” here.
It seems to me that insisting on a literal reading of Genesis 1 would require one to accept that a firmament of some sort holds back a body of water. But here, too, reading Genesis 1 with ancient eyes helps us to see things differently. Picturing the heavens the way we see in Genesis 1 is also reflected in other ancient creation stories. Allowing those extra-biblical texts to help us understand what “firmament” means is not to devalue Scripture or place it “under” non-biblical texts, which seems to be your concern. It is merely information to help us make informed decisions about what to expect from the Bible. It is no different than when the NIV Study Bible provides notes on historical context to help us understand what a passage means to say. Extra-biblical information is not the “authority” but an important partner in interpretation.
God speaks to his people in ways they are able to understand. He “comes down to their level,” or as John Calvin put it, God “lisps” so that humans can understand. This, it seems to me, is the best way to show respect for Scripture. So, again, what objection do you have to reading Genesis 1 this way? Does it not show respect for God while also avoiding the unnecessary conflict between science and the Bible that a literal reading creates? - A lot of interpreters throughout Christian history have taken Genesis 1 figuratively because of days 1-3. These are called “days” with “evening and morning,” yet the sun was not created until day 4. Many have concluded that a truly “literal” day, with evening and morning, requires a sun, and so these days are not meant to be understood literally.
I realize you may disagree here, and maybe you have a way of seeing literal days where there is no sun. I disagree strongly but that would not lead me to question your commitment to the Gospel. Reading the days figuratively is not an act of spiritual rebellion, which you seem to suggest. It is a result of taking the text very seriously and faithfully, trying to discern from the text itself how best to read it. - Outside of Genesis 1 there are several passages in the Old Testament where creation involves God defeating a primordial sea monster of some sort: Job 26:12-13; Psalm 74:13-14; 89:10; 104:26; Isaiah 51:9. Do you feel that these passages require the same literal reading as Genesis? Or would you suggest that we should make reasonable distinctions in the Bible about what can be taken literally and when? This seems to be the very thing you are warning us against in your presentation.
If you are able to argue that these passages should be read figuratively, would you also be willing to hear the same kinds of arguments from your brothers and sisters about Genesis 1?
The Bible is made up of all sorts of ways of communicating truth, and literalness is one of them and should not be brushed aside. We are not suggesting such a thing. But the Bible also speaks in metaphors and symbols. Often times those metaphors and symbols reflect the worldview of the ancient context of the Bible. I strongly believe that taking all of this into account is more faithful to the Bible than insisting on a literal interpretation.
Many committed Christians, past and present, do not find a literal reading of Genesis 1 persuasive. I hope that at least you would agree that their point of view is worthy of respect, not warning.
"The overwhelming untroubled consensus of the church"
Dr. Mohler, you state that a strictly literal reading of Genesis finds overwhelming support in the history of the church. On one level, I agree with you. Until the rise of modern science, Christian interpreters did not have the options before them that we do today: literal, day-age, framework view, etc., all things you are well aware of. There was more unanimity because there were fewer choices.
But you assume that this diversity is a problem that must be resisted. You seem to expect the church today to maintain vigorously a position on Genesis 1 that was formulated before the evidence for an old earth came to light, as far back as the 17th century (not the 19th century as you say in your presentation). Are you suggesting it is always wrong to adjust how we read portions of the Bible in view of scientific evidence?
Many scholars have noted the similarity between the discussion over the age of the earth and heliocentricity in Galileo’s day. See, for example, Karl Giberson’s recent post. As scientific evidence became clear, it led the church to accept that the biblical geocentric model of the cosmos simply reflected their ancient point of view. This did not lead to an abandonment of the Bible as God’s Word, but only readjusting expectations of what we have the right to find there. I know you accept heliocentricity, but it is not clear to me what your reasoning process is. The biblical authors, along with all ancient peoples, assumed the earth was stationary and that the sun moved. Would that not require us to do likewise?
I would be interested in hearing more about why you wouldn’t feel the same way about a Young Earth as you do about geocentricism. You do not accept the scientific data that points to an actual old earth but only an apparently old earth. But from what I can tell, you don’t argue for a solar system where the sun only appears to be at the center. Why do you allow some scientific evidence to adjust our understanding of the Bible and not others?
I also do not agree with you that before the 17th century there was as much of an “overwhelming untroubled consensus” as you suggest. For example, in the first few centuries of the Christian era we see a lot of very informed discussion about how to handle Genesis 1 (as well as Genesis 2-3).3 I appreciate your qualifier: you acknowledge that there was some diversity on how to handle Genesis. Still, you leave the impression that the history of the church has essentially interpreted Genesis as literally as you do.
But my main concern here is not to point out the church’s diversity on interpreting Genesis 1. Rather, I am concerned that you make it such a matter of orthodoxy. As you know, St. Augustine did not hold to a literal six-day creation, but an instantaneous creation. Oddly enough, this fits much better with the modern notion of a Big Bang, but that was not on his radar screen. He was actually influenced by Greek philosophy, and so his view did not gain a lot of acceptance thereafter. Christians have disagreed with Augustine, but it is hard to find someone who would warn others about him because of his views on Genesis 1. It was not a theological hill to die on.
Also, although you are a Southern Baptist, I know you have great respect for the Reformed tradition. It is true that from Calvin, to the Westminster Assembly, to 19th century Princeton, and the Dutch Reformed tradition, many (not all) Reformed theologians understood the days of Genesis 1 to be “natural” days. But even then, they did not make it a point of Christian orthodoxy, as you seem to do. A present-day example is the Presbyterian Church of America, a denomination you know well. This conservative denomination follows the Reformed tradition in not making the days of creation a matter of orthodoxy but leaving the matter open to individual conscience.
Flexibility of views and generosity of spirit concerning Genesis 1 are hardly unusual among committed Christians. It is not a slippery slope to unbelief but a humble way forward to discern what it means to read God’s Word faithfully. I do not think such flexibility or generosity are a mistake, as you seem to argue. Would you not, along with many thoughtful Christian thinkers of the past, allow diverse points of view to sit side-by-side for the benefit of Christian unity?
Notes
- In his excellent commentary on Genesis, John Walton of Wheaton College lays out this entire issue very clearly and accessibly (Genesis [NIVAC, Grand Rapids: Zondervan, 2001), pp. 67-78.
- Walton, Genesis, 110-13.
- Recently, Greek Orthodox theologian Peter C. Bounteneff has outlined this diversity among the second century apologists, Origen, and the Cappadocians in Beginnings: Ancient Christian Readings of the Biblical Creation Narratives (Baker, 2008).
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July 15th 2010
R Hampton @22005
Well said. All truth is God’s truth but sometimes (always?) my perception of it is rather flawed.
Reply to this commentDave W
July 16th 2010
TomH - #21769: “I would say that, on the day after the sun was created, “evening and morning” also equaled “a 24 hour period of time.”
The evidence is that the days were shorter in the past. The moon’s tidal influence has slowed the planet’s rate of rotation. About a half-billion years ago it was probably more like a 22-hour day.
Reply to this commentJuly 16th 2010
#3 in Dr. Enn’s response is not compelling for the following reason: God is fully capable of measuring a unit of 1 day without a sun. This argument employs hair splitting technicalities to squirm out of a common sense reading of the text. That isn’t good exegesis, by any objective measure.
Reply to this commentI’d actually be inclined to believe the day-age concept if it weren’t for this kind of argumentation. I’d also be more inclined towards the day-age perspective if Moses had ever used the term “yamin” or “yom” to refer to “eons”. He always referred to it in terms of an actual, ordinary day.
July 21st 2010
What I am missing in this article or Giberson’s response is dealing head on with the main objection Mohler raised. While I appreciate Enns trying to use Scripture (as you will get nowhere in discussions with people like Mohler if you don’t know and use your Bible) my struggle is that all the responses seem to be focused on why BL folks don’t like what Mohler said about Gen 1. Please respond to the main point of his argument which is that the OE position in any of its forms causes exegetical and theological gymnastics NOT just with Genesis but The Gospels and Romans (and I would argue Revelation as well). Can you explain how if following the commonly accepted scientific interpretation of the data in the case of creation is right, we can still hold to a virgin birth and two natures in one person (since like begets like and the genetics of conception are very well established)? When in the end Mohler chalks it up to things only the AoD knows, I think what he is getting at is we cannot exhaustively detail how the supernatural and natural world relate with science only, Scripture only, or both, but what He has given us is sufficient and true and the rest we will have to wait and ask Him in person.
Reply to this commentJuly 21st 2010
Can you explain how if following the commonly accepted scientific interpretation of the data in the case of creation is right, we can still hold to a virgin birth and two natures in one person (since like begets like and the genetics of conception are very well established)?
What you see as f “exegetical and theological gymnastics” is simply the Truth for the Roman Catholic Church. So to answer your question, not only is it possible to hold these views, it’s a daily reality for millions. So the question you ought to ask is, why does Dr. Mohler - and others like him - ignore this obvious contradictory evidence?
Reply to this commentJuly 21st 2010
I agree that the ball of yarn is so tangled that playing with one strand sets off a chain reaction. Perhaps part of the hesitancy from YEC’s to post is that they have largely been relegated to “knuckle dragging” status by those who trumpet an Old Earth position (both inside and outside the church). Isn’t that what was recently said in a video post on this website by a seminary professor…either get on board with the OE position or risk being relegated to “cult status.” I see incredible theological problems with an OE interpretation of Genesis. Did God create man distinct from all of the animals in His own Image? Did death enter the world before the fall or as a consequence of the fall? Is it true that by one man’s sin death entered the world and thus death passed to all men? Why would Jesus establish the doctrine of marriage based on a literal Adam and Eve if He knew that Genesis 1-11 was myth? Was Peter mistaken when He said that only eight people were spared in the flood if it was only a local flood? If Genesis 1-11 is myth…what do we make of Christ as the second Adam? Many OE have acknowledged the need for a literal Adam, but this becomes very messy when you bring it to Scripture (cont’d)
Reply to this commentJuly 21st 2010
In the same verses where you have the account of Adam and Eve, you also have a talking serpent. Is that myth? Are we going to reject the talking serpent but keep Adam and Eve. Are we going to reject the tree of knowledge of good and evil and the tree of life? What exactly is true about Genesis 1-3 and what isn’t?
Also, we are constantly told that the evidence for evolution is overwhelming. Having said that, I could bring quote after quote from leading evolutionists who concede that the evidence is not as strong as the conviction. The fossil record has enormous gaps, mechanisms for change such as mutation and natural slection have not shown increases in genetic information…in fact, most of what my 16 year old sister reads in her biology book about evolution is contrary to “macro-evolution,” it results in a decrease in information. The frustrating thing is that even though this is true, and many evolutionists admit that it is true, we are still rediculed for not believing because apparently this isn’t an issue of evidence but of interpretation (and they want one without God).
Am I an intellectual midget if I reject evolution? Does anyone else see an inability to produce evidence and an agenda that dosn’t care?
Reply to this commentJuly 22nd 2010
Matt,
Many of us have been taught theology that makes it very difficult to accept the scientific findings related to an old earth and common descent. Because of those theological beliefs, we have tended to listen to those voices that butress those beliefs, while discounting or ignoring (or even demonizing) voices which threaten those beliefs.
I’m sure if you make an honest effort to engage both the scientific evidence and the scholarly challenges to some theology you might have been taught, nobody around here will consider you an “intellectual midget” for rejecting evolution.
I would recommend you really investigate the series of posts here called “Evidences for Evolution”. They can be a bit challenging for those of us with little background in science, but with a bit of effort I’m sure you can engage the evidence. You might also do a bit of reading regarding the literary genre of “myth” as well as Peter Enn’s posts applying features of that genre to Genesis.
Reply to this commentJuly 23rd 2010
I don’t mean to demonize anyone, so I apologize if the tone or content of my comment seemed in any way to do so, however I must concede that I have deep misgivings about both the “evidence” and the “agenda” that is tied up in OE ideas. First, as has been pointed out in many discussions on this website, it is not the evidence that YEC’s have problem with. We all have the same universe, the same earth, the same fossils, etc. It is the interpretation of the evidence that we disagree with. I did some general reviews of “Evidences for Evolution” and I what I see it is an “a priori” commitment to an old earth. I’m not going to argue that radiometric dating, tree rings, and other “avenues” of evidence haven’t been interpreted to support an Old Earth. I would point out however, that observational science has often contradicted these lines of evidence. Rocks of known ages have been dated to be millions of years older than they really are. Certain gases that should have escaped rocks that are millions of years old (according to scientists) are none the less present in the rocks. Numerous examples of rapidly forming fossils have been documented and rock layers that are supposed to be laid down slowly are bent…
Reply to this commentJuly 23rd 2010
The odd thing to me is that none of this “evidence” seems to cause people to question the interpretation that the earth is very old. Instead, a natural explanation for these things is sought after that can fit within an OE framework. This seems like an “a priori” commitment to an old earth interpretation, rather than an unbiased attempt to follow the “evidence” wherever it leads. To many on this website, these criticisms might seem weak, especially if you have become convinced that the “evidence” does demonstrate an OE. But, is it not conceivable that strong voices behind an OE are just as committed to their interpretation (often in spite of the evidence) as a YEC is to a “literal” interpretation of Genesis. My greatest desire is to stand before God someday and say that I always sought to “rightly divide the word of Truth.” That with prayer and dilligence, I attempted to build my thinking upon the Word of God. That is my presupposition. I concede an “a priori” commitment to the absolute truth and authority of Scripture. I just find it frustrating that many don’t recognize presuppositions and “a priori” commitments in OE thought. I will continue to read the posts you suggested. God bless.
Reply to this commentJuly 23rd 2010
Sorry about the poor wording in the first response. The sentence should read “I did some general reviews of “Evidences for Evolution” and what I see is an “a priori” commitment to an old earth.
Reply to this commentJuly 23rd 2010
Matt,
I didn’t mean to imply that you had been demonizing anyone, only that it happens. You seem open to discussion.
You may or may not realize it, but the line “we all have the same facts, just different interpretations of those facts” is part of the Answers in Genesis propaganda that many of us were led to believe. What I found (as a YEC/OEC) is that the more I dug into the “facts” of YEC, the more I found obfuscation and the manu-fact-uring of friendly data.
The rocks you mention that were dated much older than they were know to be are a perfect example. YECs wanted to cast doubt on radiometric dating, so they took newly formed rocks from Mt. St. Helens and sent them in for testing using methods they knew were inappropiate for young rocks! Well, surprise, the rocks were dated much older than they were known to be and the YECs had “data” showing radiometric dating to be unreliable.
I won’t go into detail on the “overlapping dino-human footprints” that made the rounds as YEC “data” for at least a decade.
This is not to say all YEC scientists are dishonest. Some, like Todd Wood at Bryan College seem quite honest with the data even when it conflicts with his beliefs.
Reply to this commentJuly 23rd 2010
(cont.)
The reason mainstream scientists do not question an old earth at this point is that so many independent lines of evidence converge to tell the same story of an earth that is about 4.5byo. So a problem with one line of evidence should not overturn the others—rather further exploration/understanding of that evidence would be the natural response.
For a (somewhat dated) review of earth-dating issues, see http://www.talkorigins.org/faqs/faq-age-of-earth.html
Someone here can probably post something better ...
Reply to this commentJuly 24th 2010
TomH - #21982
How to read Genesis is a good question.
When I want to communicate something to a young child, I use a smaller vocabulary than when talking with a highly educated person.
We are more or less used to grappling with how much the Son gave up to be born and to learn the language(s) of his family and extended family. Learning the language(s) so that he could later teach his followers. But for many of us Evangelicals, thinking about God inspiring the writers of the Old Testament but being limited by their language and culture more or less like Jesus was limited in becoming a baby, with a brain that would not complete its growth until he was perhaps 19 years old, is a new concept.
So for me, thinking about how we communicate with our grandchildren when they are very young helps to understand how God must have limited himself to communicate to and through the writers of the Old Testament. The language and culture of the audience were limiting factors.
Reply to this commentJuly 24th 2010
(cont.)
Reply to this commentWhen reading Genesis, we want to understand God’s message. Some of the first creation account, is similar in some ways to the creation stories in nearby cultures of the same time period. God’s message is not what the Genesis account has in common with the creation stories of the other cultures, but it is the ways in which it is different from them. For example, since surrounding cultures believed in a firmament (or dome), the mention of the firmament was not God’s message, but a part of how he communicated it. Raquia (firmament) is translated as sky or expanse is some of the newer translations. This is good because when those ancients looked up at the sky, they thought they saw a solid blue dome, and when we look up we see light from the sun diffracted by the atmosphere making the sky blue. The message is about the only God and what he did. So it is easy for us to understand the message as we don’t have to consider how they thought about the sky. But understanding the actual wording of the Hebrew does help us, I think, to appreciate how God limited himself in communicating his message in Genesis One (and in the rest of the Bible).
September 22nd 2010
It is a bit amusing that the scientific consensii represented here are not at all reflective of the Einsteinian model.
According to Einstein, wherever you are in the universe, any experiment you perform will appear to indicate that you are at the center of the universe, so it is proper to say that the earth is the center of the universe as it is to say it about any arbitrary point.
Also, according to his theory the moon goes around the earth in a straight line in warped four-dimentional space, hence the surface of the earth is flat in warped four-dimensional space.
So modern physics teaches that the earth is the center and flat.
Reply to this commentPerhaps the literal is right!