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        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/Blog/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/Biblical Interpretation,Human Origins?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
    <description>This is a custom feed of BioLogos resources. Make a new feed at http://biologos.org/resources/find</description>
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    <dc:rights>Copyright 2013</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2013-05-18T14:19:06-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
      <item>
        <title>Comparing Interpretations of Genesis 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/comparing&#45;interpretations&#45;of&#45;genesis&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/comparing&#45;interpretations&#45;of&#45;genesis&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>For concordists, the temptation is to interpret every Bible verse to match the current scientific picture.  For non&#45;concordists, the temptation is to interpret every Bible verse that appears to disagree with science as figurative.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Summary of Several Interpretations of Genesis 1</h3>

<p>In <em>concordist</em> interpretations, God made the earth using the sequence of events described in Genesis 1. In <em>non-concordist</em> interpretations, God created the earth using a different timing and order of events than those described Genesis 1.</p>

<table>
	<tbody>
		<tr>
			<th style="border: 1px solid black; text-align:center;" width="50%">Concordist Interpretations:</th>
			<th style="border: 1px solid black; text-align:center;" width="50%">Non-concordist Interpretations:</th>
		</tr>
		<tr>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Young Earth Interpretation</strong><br />
			Creation occurred about 6,000 years ago, during six 24-hour days, in the order described. A scientific study of the earth should confirm this.</td>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Proclamation Day Interpretation</strong><br />
			The days of Genesis 1 took place in God’s throne room, wherein God proclaimed each step of creation. The throne-room days are not related to days or time periods on earth.</td>
		</tr>
		<tr>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Gap Interpretation</strong><br />
			Earth was created long ago (Gen 1:1), became “formless and empty” (Gen 1:2), and was restored about 6,000 years ago during six 24-hour days.</td>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Creation Poem Interpretation</strong><br />
			The number and ordering of the “days” of Genesis 1 are chosen for poetic and thematic reasons rather than historical reasons.</td>
		</tr>
		<tr>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Day-Age Interpretation</strong><br />
			Creation occurred over billions of years. Each “day” of Genesis 1 corresponds to a long epoch. Events occurred in the order given in the text, but stretched out over a longer time period.</td>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Kingdom and Temple Interpretations</strong><br />
			As the great King, God gives humans dominion as in a “land grant” covenant. Alternatively, God inaugurates the cosmos as his temple. In both cases, the text is not focused on the physical universe.</td>
		</tr>
		<tr>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Appearance of Age Interpretation</strong><br />
			Creation occurred about 6,000 years ago during six 24-hour days, but it was created to look like it had a long history of billions of years.</td>
			<td style="border: 1px solid black; padding: 5px 5px 5px 5px;"><strong>Ancient Near Eastern Cosmology Interpretation</strong><br />
			Genesis 1 matches the physical picture of the world believed in Ancient Near East religions, but presents a dramatically different theological picture, proclaiming one God as creator of all rather than many gods.</td>
		</tr>
	</tbody>
</table>

<p>How should Christians go about choosing among all of these interpretations? Such a decision should be based on consistent principles and prayerful reflection, not just on “what sounds good.” Here are our own conclusions.</p>

<h3>Weaknesses in Concordist and Non-Concordist Interpretations</h3>

<p>Both concordist and non-concordist interpretations of Genesis 1 arise from good motives, a desire to show that the Bible does not conflict with nature’s testimony. &nbsp;But both types of interpretations have their pitfalls.</p>

<p>For concordists, the temptation is to interpret every Bible verse to match the current scientific picture. The meanings of particular phrases can be bent out of shape to match a particular scientific finding. For example, Hebrew words that literally meant <em>birds</em> or <em>plants</em> to the original audience are redefined to meet some modern scientific category such as insects or single-celled organisms, just to make the order of events line up. By focusing on trying to match the details of the ancient text to twenty-first century knowledge, the concordist may miss meanings in the passage that were clear in the original cultural context, including important spiritual insights. Moreover, concordists can be forced to regularly change and update their interpretations as modern scientific knowledge grows and changes. For instance, the Gap Interpretation twisted the meaning of Genesis 1:2 outside its original intent; later it failed to match new scientific evidence.</p>

<p>For non-concordists the temptation is to interpret every Bible verse that appears to disagree with science as figurative without first studying the text. By interpreting a text that was intended tobe understood literally as metaphoric, they may bend the meanings of particular phrases to refer to purely spiritual ideas and ignore the historical meanings they had in the original cultural context. At one extreme non-concordists can apply the same strategy to all Bible passages and even interpret Jesus’ miracles and resurrection as spiritual symbols simply because they think that miracles are scientifically impossible.</p>

<p>For both concordists and non-concordists the temptation is to let science drive the interpretation of Scripture more than it should. When an apparent conflict arises between science and a biblical text, it can and should motivate us to consider a biblical passage more closely. The scientifically discerned testimony from God’s book of nature can even be a useful tool for deciding between two or more biblical interpretations that are otherwise equally valid. But the interpretations themselves are not <em>determined</em> by science; they must be driven by theological considerationsand be consistent with the rest of Scripture.</p>

<p>To avoid these risks we need to look at what the best biblical scholarship has to say about the passage rather than at how it fitswith science. Finally, we must take care that the desire to resolve conflicts does not distract us from the main message God has forus in the text. Our primary calling as Christians is to live our lives according to the clear messages of God’s Word; it is a lesser calling to debate the subtleties of interpretation of less clear passages.</p>

<h3>Genesis 1 in Its Original Context</h3>

<p>To choose among the various interpretations, we recommend using a consistent approach based on the principles of biblical interpretation discussed in chapter 4.&nbsp; The first principle, that each passage should be interpreted in light of the rest of the Bible, provides some guidance. For instance, the Bible’s teaching on God’s truthfulness and his glory displayed in creation might lead us away from the Appearance of Age Interpretation.&nbsp; The differences between the Genesis 1 and Genesis 2 accounts might point toward a non-concordist interpretation.</p>

<p>The second principle of interpretation gives more direction. It reminds us <em>first</em> to work out what the passage meant in its original literary, cultural, and historical context, and <em>then</em> figure out what meaning it has for us today. How do the various interpretations fit this principle? Of the four <em>concordist</em> interpretations discussed in chapter 5, the Young Earth Interpretation seems to come closest to what ancient peoples would have heard in the text. The Gap and Day-Age concordist views would have baffled the original audience, since these ancients would have had no concept of geological ages; if they could not fathom time periods of millions or billions of years, the text must have meant something different to them.</p>

<p>Of the four <em>non-concordist</em> interpretations of Genesis discussed in this chapter, the Proclamation Day Interpretation, while it has some basis in the text, seems least likely to be the meaning heard by the original audience. The proclamations are implemented as soon as God says them, and there is no reference to a different timing or sequence of events in terrestrial time. In our view a combination of the Ancient Near East Cosmology, Kingdom and Covenant, and Creation Poem Interpretations come closest to what the original audience would have heard. The differences between the Genesis text and the pagan stories highlight the sovereignty of God and the goodness of creation. The elegant poetic structure and inspired phrases reinforce the theological messages of the Kingdom and Temple interpretations.</p>

<h3>Genesis 1 for Modern Readers</h3>

<p>With a better understanding of what the original audience heard,we have insight into God’s message for them and thus for us. <em>If God’s purposes in Genesis 1 did not include teaching scientific facts to the Israelites, then we should not look here for scientific information about the age or development of the world.</em> For modern readers, as for the original audience, the message of Genesis 1 is its powerful theological truths. God does not use theBible to teach us the physical processes he uses to make the rainfall or the earth orbit the sun or to form the mountains. Instead, in a beautifully crafted and impressively short text, God teaches us all about</p>

<ul>
<li>his sovereignty.</li>
<li>the goodness of creation.</li>
<li>the honored status of humankind as his image bearers.</li>
</ul>

<p>God has given us a text that speaks of the physical world in simple terms, based on how it appears, in order that all peoplemight understand it. &nbsp;The common language of this text has made it accessible to people of many times and cultures, aiding the communication ofthe gospel around the world.</p>

<p>Does a non-concordist interpretation of Genesis 1 mean that we have sacrificed a literal understanding of the gospel? No. TheGospels were surely heard by their first audience as historical eyewitness accounts by the disciples, and everything about the emphasis and tone in those books indicates that Jesus’ resurrection and miracles are essential events in the story. That is how we should read the Gospel stories still today. In Genesis 1, on theother hand, the first listeners heard nothing new about the physical universe; all the emphasis was on <em>who</em> created the world and humanity and <em>why</em> they were created.</p>

<p>What does this mean for science? It means that Genesis 1 is not a science textbook. The text was never intended to teach scientificinformation about the structure, age, or natural history of the world. Thus, comparing Genesis 1 to modern science is likecomparing apples to oranges. Or perhaps more accurately, comparing Genesis 1 to modern science is like comparing Psalm 93:1 (“The world is firmly established; it cannot be moved”) to modern astronomy. Genesis is neither in agreement nor in conflict with the sequence of events found by astronomy and geology.</p>

<p>As scientific knowledge increases and changes over the centuries, its understanding of the physical structure and historyof the earth will change. But through all of those centuries the theological truths of Genesis 1 remain the same: there is one sovereign God who makes light from darkness, creates an ordered world from chaos, and fills an empty world with good creatures. Humans need not fear the capricious whims of a pantheon ofgods but can instead trust in the one true God who made us in his image and declares us “very good.”</p>

<p class="intro">For more discussion of Biblical interpretation, see chapters 4, 5, and 6 of&nbsp;<em>Origins</em>. Next week, we'll look at an excerpt on astronomy and the age of the universe.</p>

<p><strong>Excerpt from Chapters 5 and 6 of&nbsp;<em>Origins: Christian Perspectives on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design</em>&nbsp;(Grand Rapids, MI: Faith Alive Christian Resources), 2011. Reprinted with permission. To order purchase a copy of the book or e-book, please call 1-800-333-8300&nbsp;or visit our website&nbsp;<a href="http://www.faithaliveresources.org">www.faithaliveresources.org</a>.</strong></p>

<p><strong>Want a free copy of&nbsp;<em>Origins</em>?&nbsp; For a limited time,&nbsp;<a href="/donate/origins">donations of $50 or more will receive a &nbsp;copy of the book!</a>&nbsp;Plus, from now through April, your gift will be doubled thanks to a matching grant from a generous donor. You can learn more&nbsp;<a href="/donate">here</a>.</strong></p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 12 Apr 13 08:00:15 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Deborah Haarsma, Haarsma, Loren</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 12, 2013 08:00</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Take Scripture Seriously</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/take&#45;scripture&#45;seriously?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/take&#45;scripture&#45;seriously?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>I had spent so much time using the Bible as evidence to prove my point that I hadn&apos;t bothered to consider its intended purpose. It was as if I had been given a nice new pair of shoes, but instead of wearing them and letting them take me where I needed to go, I had been using them to kill bugs, prop open doors, and fix wobbly table legs.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>I was a junior in college when I heard those words spoken by my favorite professor in a class on some of my favorite books of the Bible, and I was instantly offended. I didn't take Scripture seriously? How anyone could say such a thing was beyond me. This man clearly knew nothing about me. Come to think of it, neither do you.</p>

<p>I was raised in a Christian home, where the Bible was a part of daily life. My family was very committed (probably overcommitted) to our local church, my father read the Bible aloud every night, and in a given year I probably went to half a dozen Bible-centered events. The only test I ever failed was in 7th grade.Every question on the test was about evolution, and every answer I gave was from the Bible. I wasn't a scientist but knew what Scripture said was sufficient for me.</p>

<p>By the time I graduated high school, I had memorized more Scripture than most people do in a lifetime, and along the way I had read dozens, probably hundreds, of books about spiritual warfare, the end times, and the mountains of evidence which proved the Genesis creation account was absolute fact. And in my sophomore year of college, I had made the ultimate sacrifice: I had given up on my intended lucrative career in psychiatry to pursue the thankless, penniless life of a minister, because I was certain that's what God was calling me to do.</p>

<p>So there I sat in a class on the prophets, giving a brilliant (in my estimation) explanation of how Daniel's 70th week and Revelation fit together, when my professor leveled that unforgivable charge, "You don't take Scripture seriously." Perhaps you can understand now why the very thought offended me. He asked me to turn to 2 Timothy 3 and read verses 16 and 17. I did him one better and quoted them without hesitation.</p>

<p><em>"All Scripture is God-breathed and is useful for teaching, rebuking, correcting and training in righteousness, so that the man of God may be thoroughly equipped for every good work."</em></p>

<p>He was not impressed by my instant recall, and pressed on making his point.</p>

<p>"Can you tell me where in the Bible it says Scripture is useful for telling the future?"</p>

<p>I could not.</p>

<p>"Where does it say Scripture is a primer on the end times?"</p>

<p>It doesn't.</p>

<p>"How about Math, or history, or geography, or science?"</p>

<p>No, I didn't know those passages either. He continued.</p>

<p>"The problem, Shea, is that you are asking Scripture questions it's not meant to answer, and not bothering with the questions it does. How does your analysis of these prophecies equip people to do good works? How does it teach, rebuke, correct, or train them in such a way that they can be righteous? If your interpretations can't do any of these things, then what's the point in having them?"</p>

<p>I couldn't bring myself to say it at the time, but my professor was completely right. I had spent so much time using the Bible as evidence to prove my point that I hadn't bothered to consider its intended purpose. It was as if I had been given a nice new pair of shoes, but instead of wearing them and letting them take me where I needed to go, I had been using them to kill bugs, prop open doors, and fix wobbly table legs. Shoes can be made to do all of those things, but that's not their purpose. There are other items out there that do those jobs a whole lot better. I hated to admit it, but I knew that I had to reconsider everything I thought I knew about Scripture.</p>

<p>So I began studying in earnest once more, but this time instead of trying to gather facts and evidence, I would ask myself "what is there about this passage that helps me to be prepared for good works?" Sometimes it changed my understanding a little, sometimes a lot, and sometimes not at all. But when I finally decided to tackle Genesis, everything changed. I half-read, half-remembered the seven day creation account. As I read, asking how this passage fulfilled the purpose of Scripture, I was amazed. This was the story about a God who cared about everything in the universe. It was a story about a God who looks at the world, at living things, and even at humans, and calls them "good." But they weren't just good. Those humans were a reflection of who God was. They bore in themselves an image of the Divine. It was a beautiful, intimate story about God's special love for and relationship with humans, which included me. It was then that I realized I could no longer read this, one of the greatest love poems ever written, as though it were a list of facts whose only use was to prove others wrong.</p>

<p>I am still not a scientist. I have read a lot on the subject, but I can't really tell you with absolute certainty the age of the earth or the timeline of how humans came into being. What I can tell you is what I learned the hard way: to really take Scripture seriously, we have to let Scripture do what it was meant to do. Scientists may find indisputable evidence tomorrow that this or that story in the Bible didn't happen exactly as written, but that won't matter one bit for those who take Scripture seriously. We need not plug our ears or drown out the voice of the scientists because we know the right question to ask of Scripture, and it is not, "Is that exactly the way it happened?" Scientists will do what they do best, proving and disproving this or that theory. We will be able to accept that with ease because we take Scripture, and its purpose, seriously.</p>
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        <pubDate>Tue, 26 Mar 13 09:58:04 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Shea Zellweger</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 26, 2013 09:58</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Humanity as and in Creation</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/humanity&#45;as&#45;and&#45;in&#45;creation?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/humanity&#45;as&#45;and&#45;in&#45;creation?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Christian theology asserts that humans are spiritual creatures, a unity of body and spirit or “soul,” integrated, not reducible downwards to mere matter or upwards to mere spirit.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The second chapter of Genesis offers an enduring image for the creation of humanity: “the LORD God formed a man from the dust of the ground and breathed into his nostrils the breath of life, and the man became a living being.”</p>

<p>What does it mean for humanity to be created “from the dust of the ground?”</p>

<p>In many ancient Mesopotamian creation stories, human beings were depicted as deriving from some physical part of the gods. Often this was the result of conflict: humans arose from the blood, flesh or tears of gods slain by other gods. Humans created in this fashion were supposed to serve the gods by performing menial work that the gods had tired of doing themselves. The lot of humanity, then, was one of violence and servitude.</p>

<p>In the Israelite creation stories reflected in Genesis 1 and 2, however, humans are made from the ordinary material of creation: “dust.” Humans are made of earth-stuff, not god-stuff.</p>

<p>At first glance, it may seem that this lowers the status of the human creature. We might ask the question raised by Eliphaz in the book of Job:</p>

<blockquote><p>Can a mortal be more righteous than God?<br />
Can even a strong man be more pure than his Maker?<br />
If God places no trust in his servants,<br />
if he charges his angels with error,<br />
how much more those who live in houses of clay,<br />
whose foundations are in the dust, who are crushed more readily than a moth! (Job 4:17-19)</p>
</blockquote>

<p>Indeed, our humble origins ought to remind us of the fragility of our lives. As the Psalmist says,</p>

<blockquote><p>You turn people back to dust, saying, “Return to dust, you mortals.”<br />
A thousand years in your sight<br />
are like a day that has just gone by,<br />
or like a watch in the night.<br />
Yet you sweep people away in the sleep of death—<br />
they are like the new grass of the morning:<br />
In the morning it springs up new,<br />
but by evening it is dry and withered.</p>
</blockquote>

<p>The elements of which our bodies are made are ordinary and abundant. Science tells us that approximately ninety-three per cent of the mass in a living human body is comprised of elements first formed through nuclear fusion in the hearts of stars. Through almost unimaginably vast and ancient cycles of stellar formation and supernova explosions, this “stardust” of elements has been spread throughout the universe. It is as though God scattered the stars across space and time to seed the universe for life, including your life and mine. And we are thereby inseparably connected to each other, to the air we breathe, to the ground we tread, to all the creatures that fill the skies and crawl upon the earth and teem in the seas, to the depths of all the heavens. We are not transcendent of creation. We are creatures.</p>

<p>Yet we are creatures into which God breathed the “breath of life.” We are stardust and more than stardust. We are not reducible to our constituent chemicals. A “man” or a “woman” is not just a gooey sack of water, carbon and trace elements. Hydrogen, oxygen and carbon are not aware of their own existence. These elements cannot reason or pray or love or write poems. Conjunctions of these elements cannot carry any persistent identity across time. They do not exercise will or intentionality or agency. They are not “selves.”</p>

<p>Most of the cells in a human body are in constant flux: aging, dividing, dying, being replaced. The surface layer of human skin is renewed completely about every two weeks. An adult’s skeleton is entirely remade over approximately ten year periods. It may be that only the neurons of the cerebral cortex and a few other types of cells persist throughout the lifetime of a human body. And eventually, it all does return to “dust.”</p>

<p>Yet we think of ourselves as persisting over time, as comprising an “identity,” a “self.” Perhaps the cerebral cortex provides the stable biological platform for identity and selfhood, but something new emerges from the chemical-electrical soup, new patterns of organization, a different level of causation. We can even make choices that reshape ourselves, both physically and psychologically. The very wiring of our brains changes when we make conscious choices. Mind is both shaped by matter and supervenes on matter.</p>

<p>Materialists who wish to collapse all of human identity into brain chemistry overstep the bounds of “science.” A fundamental principle of scientific practice is testability: is it possible to demonstrate empirically whether a proposition is false ? As Saint Augustine observed many centuries ago, the fact that I acknowledge I could be “wrong” about something means that I am a “self” who is capable of making real choices about things that are in fact true or false. “<em>Si fallor, sum</em>” Augustine said – if I can doubt, if I can be wrong, then I must exist. One who is a true materialist “all the way down” cannot test his or her materialism. There is no possibility of “being” right or wrong, indeed no possibility of “being” – there is nothing but chemistry.</p>

<p>Spiritualists who wish to degrade matter in favor of the soul or spirit likewise are not expressing a Christian anthropology. Indeed, one of the first heresies that encountered the early Christian church was Gnosticism. A core belief of Gnosticism was that matter, including the human body, was essentially evil. Salvation for the Gnostics involved the soul’s escape from the prison of embodiment and materiality. The Gnostics treated the body either with disdain – engaging in extreme ascetic practices – or with antinomian abandon – engaging in extreme sexual license. Either way, their practices were rooted in the belief that matter and the body were unimportant. It’s easy to see how this view continually creeps into both our popular culture and our Church cultures.</p>

<p>Christian theology asserts that humans are spiritual creatures, a unity of body and spirit or “soul,” integrated, not reducible downwards to mere matter or upwards to mere spirit. Perhaps there is no better way to bring these themes together than with a Psalm — here is Eugene Peterson’s paraphrase of Psalm 139 in The Message:</p>

<blockquote><p>God, investigate my life; get all the facts firsthand.<br />
I’m an open book to you;<br />
even from a distance, you know what I’m thinking.<br />
You know when I leave and when I get back;<br />
I’m never out of your sight.<br />
You know everything I’m going to say<br />
before I start the first sentence.<br />
I look behind me and you’re there,<br />
then up ahead and you’re there, too—<br />
your reassuring presence, coming and going.<br />
This is too much, too wonderful—<br />
I can’t take it all in!</p>

<p>Is there any place I can go to avoid your Spirit?<br />
to be out of your sight?<br />
If I climb to the sky, you’re there!<br />
If I go underground, you’re there!<br />
If I flew on morning’s wings<br />
to the far western horizon,<br />
You’d find me in a minute—<br />
you’re already there waiting!<br />
Then I said to myself, “Oh, he even sees me in the dark!<br />
At night I’m immersed in the light!”<br />
It’s a fact: darkness isn’t dark to you;<br />
night and day, darkness and light, they’re all the same to you.</p>

<p>Oh yes, you shaped me first inside, then out;<br />
you formed me in my mother’s womb.<br />
I thank you, High God—you’re breathtaking!<br />
Body and soul, I am marvelously made!<br />
I worship in adoration—what a creation!<br />
You know me inside and out,<br />
you know every bone in my body;<br />
You know exactly how I was made, bit by bit,<br />
how I was sculpted from nothing into something.<br />
Like an open book, you watched me grow from conception to birth;<br />
all the stages of my life were spread out before you,<br />
The days of my life all prepared<br />
before I’d even lived one day.</p>
</blockquote>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 01 Mar 13 07:00:07 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Opderbeck</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 01, 2013 07:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Evolution and Christian Faith Grantees Announced</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;and&#45;christian&#45;faith&#45;grantees&#45;announced?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/evolution&#45;and&#45;christian&#45;faith&#45;grantees&#45;announced?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Congratulations to the 37 winners of the Evolution &amp; Christian Faith (ECF) grants competition! ECF is a new BioLogos program designed to support projects and network&#45;building among scholars, church leaders, and parachurch organizations.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Congratulations to the 37 winners of the Evolution &amp; Christian Faith (ECF) grants competition!&nbsp; ECF is a new BioLogos program designed to support projects and network-building among scholars, church leaders, and parachurch organizations. Each project takes a different approach to address theological and philosophical questions commonly voiced by Christians about evolutionary creation. ECF places a premium on scholarship with high “translational” potential—that which leaves the academy and makes an impact on the church. The program runs through August 2015.</p>

<p>Grantees will benefit from in-person interaction through a series of summer workshops in 2013, 2014, and 2015. These meetings will not only foster a broader knowledge base, but will build a sustained network of scholars and church leaders, both young and seasoned, who are serious about addressing the concerns of the church about evolution. Also in 2015, in connection with the third summer workshop, BioLogos will host a large conference open to scientists, scholars, and church leaders from around the world.</p>

<h3>ECF History</h3>

<p>In January 2012, BioLogos was awarded a multi-million dollar grant from the John Templeton Foundation to fund the work of scholars and church leaders on evolution and Christian faith. In spring 2012 we worked hard to get the word out. You may have seen announcements on the BioLogos website, in our newsletters, on the Books &amp; Culture, Leadership Journal, or First Things websites, on your professional society’s listserv, or perhaps on your friend’s blog.</p>

<p>The response was overwhelming: we received 225 letters of intent for a total request of $21 million—about seven times the amount we had to offer. We needed to invite the most promising applicants to submit a full proposal, but recognizing the projects with highest potential would require broad expertise. From the beginning, we envisioned that a panel of scientists, pastors, and scholars would oversee the application and review process as well as play key advisory roles throughout the project. A team of eight highly qualified individuals came on board in the early months of the project. They reviewed each proposal and together recommended that BioLogos invite 86 applicants to submit full applications.</p>

<p>The deadline for submissions was October 1, 2012. As in the previous round, the ECF panel evaluated each proposal. In addition, we asked 55 other experts to participate, so that each proposal received 3-4 scores. Criteria for the decision included significance of topic, project design, creativity and innovation, long-term impact potential, feasibility, and budget.</p>

<p>The panel then met together November 29-30, 2012, to make the final funding decisions. In the end, they recommended that BioLogos give 37 awards, ranging from $23,000 to $300,000. BioLogos staff notified applicants of their awards on December 14, 2013.</p>

<h3>The Grantees</h3>

<p>As part of our objective to create a network of scholars and leaders, we awarded grants to organizations across the U.S. and the world. Thirty of the 37 grantees are domestic; seven are international, hailing from Canada, France, Great Britain, Netherlands, and Spain.</p>

<p>Two-thirds of the accepted projects will be led by teams—some with three or more Project Leaders. We expect that the teamwork and time spent together at our summer workshops will be the start of a long-lasting network of people dedicated to helping the church think carefully about origins.</p>

<p>Applicants chose to apply under one of three program tracks: interdisciplinary scholarship (Track 1), intra-disciplinary scholarship (Track 2), and translational projects (Track 3). Track 1 projects focus on both the collaboration between individuals in different disciplines and the development of projects at the interface of different content areas. Track 2 projects focus on work done within a specific discipline. Track 3 focuses on projects that encourage Christians, especially those within more conservative traditions, to engage in meaningful and productive dialogue to reduce tensions between mainstream science and the Christian faith. The numbers of grantees in Tracks 1, 2, and 3 are 6, 8, and 23, respectively.</p>

<p>Many of the scholarly projects tackle questions about Adam and Eve, the Fall, human identity, and Original Sin—some of the most critical interpretive issues for evangelical theology.&nbsp; Some examples:&nbsp;</p>

<ul>
<li><p>Theologian Oliver Crisp of Fuller Seminary will take an analytic theology approach to ask to what extent a theological account of the origin of human sin depends upon the evolution of modern humans from one and only one ancestral pair—especially if that pair does not appear to correspond to what we would think of as modern human beings.&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><p>Pastor Michael Gulker and philosopher James Smith, leading a large team from The Colossian Forum, ask a related question: if humanity emerged from non-human primates—as genetic, biological, and archaeological evidence seems to suggest—then what are the implications for Christian theology’s traditional account of origins, including both the origin of humanity and the origin of sin?&nbsp;</p>
</li>
<li><p>Biologist Dennis Venema of Trinity Western University and New Testament scholar Scot McKnight of Northern Seminary will write a book on the evidence for evolution and population genetics, with informed theological reflection on how these issues interact with orthodox Christianity.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Biologist David Wilcox of Eastern University will develop an updated model of human identity which reflects the complex recent scientific advances in genetics and paleoanthropology and yet is sensitive to theological concerns.&nbsp;&nbsp;</p>
</li>
</ul>

<p>These are just a few of the scholarly awards; check out the <a href="/ecf/grantees">Grantees page</a> for full descriptions of all Track 1 and Track 2 projects.</p>

<p>All projects have translational potential, but Track 3 projects are designed to meet the needs of a particular constituency within the evangelical church. These projects run the gamut from ethics to education to media production to ministry resources. &nbsp;Some examples include:</p>

<ul>
<li><p>Theologian Lee Camp of Lipscomb University will produce “The Questions in Monkey Town,” an episode of Tokens, a live variety show that features musical performances, comedic sketches, brief interpretive monologues, and dialog with authors and scholars. The episode will be performed and filmed on the site of the famous Scopes Trial in Dayton, Tennessee.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Chaplain Joshua Hayashi and Educator Diane Sweeney of the Punahou School in Hawaii will lead a team to produce multimedia curricula aimed at helping high school students connect with their biology curricula and, at the same time, deepen their Christian faith.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Physics teacher and pastor Benoît Hébert of Science et Foi Chrétienne in France will lead an international, multi-denominational team of French speaking Evangelical scientists, pastors and church leaders to produce a large number of resources on evolutionary creation.</p>
</li>
<li><p>Pastor Seung-Hwan Kim of Grace Truth Community Church, a Southern Baptist church in Cambridge, Massachusetts, will produce teaching and preaching materials about evolution for church leaders.</p>
</li>
<li><p>President Gregory Wolfe and Director of Resource Development for IMAGE will gather artists and writers of faith whose work explores the dialogue between evolutionary science and faith practice, convening a conversation between them and scientists, theologians, and church leaders in private and public conferences.</p>
</li>
</ul>

<p>Again, this is just a taste of the diversity of Track 3 projects. Read more about each project on the <a href="/ecf/grantees">Grantees page</a>. You can look forward to an incredible variety of resources coming out of the ECF program, many of which will be featured right here on the BioLogos Forum.</p>
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        <pubDate>Wed, 13 Feb 13 05:25:03 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Kathryn Applegate</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 13, 2013 05:25</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Series: The Human Fossil Record</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/human&#45;fossil&#45;record?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/human&#45;fossil&#45;record?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, James Kidder provides an intriguing study on transitional fossils and the evolutionary history of modern humans.  He begins by discussing the fossil record, explaining how new forms are classified. He then explains the physically distinguishing trait of humankind—bipedalism.  From the discovery of Ardipithecus, the earliest known hominin, to the australopithecines, the most prolific hominin, Kidder focuses on the discovery, the anatomy, and the interpretation of these ancestral remains.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This blog was originally posted on December 10, 2010. We think it was an important one.  Note though that it was posted shortly before the discovery of <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/a-geneticists-journey.html" target="_blank">Denisovans.</a>  So now one more red bar needs be added to the figure above.</p>

<h3>Transitional Fossils</h3>

<p>Some time ago, the Discovery Institute’s Casey Luskin <a href="http://www.evolutionnews.org/2010/03/smithsonians_new_human_origins033371.html" target="_blank">commented</a> on the human origins exhibit at the Smithsonian Institution, suggesting that palaeoanthropologists use evolutionary theory to describe the progression of the human lineage even when they don’t have transitional fossils with which to work.  He writes:</p>

<blockquote><p>What's ironic, however, is that if you ask the question How Do We Know Humans Evolved? the answer you’re given is, “Fossils like the ones shown in our Human Fossils Gallery provide evidence that modern humans evolved from earlier humans.” So whether you find fossils or you don’t, that’s evidence for evolution.</p></blockquote>

<p>Indeed, it has become an article of faith for those espousing both the young earth creation (hereafter YEC) model and many who hold to the intelligent design model that transitional fossils do not exist and therefore evolution has not taken place.  Support for this position usually entails attacking the weak areas of the fossil record, where burial processes have left us little with which to work, or the creation of straw men arguments in which transitional fossils are defined in such a way that none could ever be found.  Often this centers on the concept of “missing link,” a term that is habitually used in the popular press and young earth creation and intelligent design literature when referring to fossil remains but which has little to no meaning for biologists or palaeontologists.  As Ahlberg and Clack (Ahlberg and Clack 2006) write:</p>

<div class="see-also" id="phylo" style="display:none;">Phylogenetics is the study of evolutionary relatedness among organisms.</div>

<blockquote><p>But the concept has become freighted with unfounded notions of evolutionary ‘progress’ and with a mistaken emphasis on the single intermediate fossil as the key to understanding evolutionary transitions. Much of the importance of transitional fossils actually lies in how they resemble and differ from their nearest neighbours in the <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('phylo');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('phylo');">phylogenetic</a> tree, and in the picture of change that emerges from this pattern.</p></blockquote>

<p>Contrary to common misconceptions, the fossil record does not record one single lineage for any family of organisms but rather a series of branches, with many related species coexisting synchronously.  Darwin hypothesized that the evolutionary record reflected this bushiness and drew such a diagram in his journal.    At the time, though, he had little in the way of fossil evidence to back up this position.  Much has changed since his day.</p>  

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kidder_Figure_1.jpg"></p>

<p>An analogy for understanding this “bushiness” was best described by Prothero and Buell (Prothero and Buell 2007).  They suggest that the reader consider his or her own genealogy.  You and your siblings are the direct descendents of your parents and, while you are similar to them, each of you has different characteristics not shared with them as well as characteristics that you do share.  Your parents have siblings as well (your aunts and uncles), and your grandparents are their last common ancestors. These siblings have their own children (your cousins), who have different and similar traits relative to their parents.  They are broadly recognizable as being related to you (“oh, I see you have Aunt Edna’s nose”) but three or four generations out, they will become less and less so.  These are the “nearest neighbours” that Ahlberg and Clack describe. In this analogy, each of these cousins represents a transitional form from what was (your grandparents) to what <em>will be</em> down the road.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kidder_figure_3.jpg"></p>

<p>For example, no one would confuse a frog with a salamander but if you trace the fossil record of each back in time, eventually you encounter a fossil, <em>Gerobatrachus hottoni</em> which was recently discovered (Anderson et al. 2008) that is best described as a “frogamander,” having the basal characteristics of both frogs and salamanders. Had we seen such an animal at the time, it is likely we would not have found it remarkable because it would have resembled the species around it.  One lineage eventually diverged into frogs, salamanders and other amphibians.  Most (just like Darwin proposed in his tree diagram with the little hatch marks at the tip of many branches) went extinct.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kidder_Figure_2.jpg"></p>

<h3>Taxonomy and the Beginnings of Human Origins</h3>

<p>All life is classified based on a system devised by Carolus Linneaus in 1735 in his remarkable work <em>Systema Naturae</em>.  This system gives all recognized species an individual place based on a system of hierarchy. The study of classification is known as taxonomy.  A taxonomic ranking for humans would be this:</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kidder_figure_5.jpg"></p>

<p>When a fossil is excavated, the first thing that the palaeontologist does is make a taxonomic assessment of where it fits in a sequence of known fossils.  Traits that are shared with other like species or genera are referred to as primitive traits.  Examples of this in humans are five fingers and the presence of three arm bones.  We share this with all mammals.  Traits that are new or are not shared with other like species are referred to as derived traits.  Examples of this in humans are the skeletal changes in the pelvis and the foot to allow for walking upright.  We do not share these with any other primates.</p>

<p>Transitional fossils in the human fossil record are distinguished at both the genus and species level.  This group includes the extinct genera <em>Ardipithecus</em> and <em>Australopithecus</em> and the current genus <em>Homo</em>.  All species except <em>Homo sapiens</em> are extinct.  Much of the recent study of early humans focuses on the transition from <em>Ardipithecus</em> (‘Ardi’) to <em>Australopithecus</em> (‘Lucy’ and similar fossils) and from <em>Australopithecus</em> to <em>Homo</em>, the genus that led eventually to us.  While each of the australopithecine species identified in the fossil record has derived characteristics that separate them from their ancestors and from each other, only one led to the genus <em>Homo</em>.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kidder_Figure_4.jpg"></p>

<p>In future posts, I will describe the evidence for human evolution and why this evidence is compelling.  It suggests that we have had a long, varied history filled with great leaps of change, crushing defeat, and eventual expansion into all areas of the globe.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p>Ahlberg, P. & J. Clack (2006) A firm step from water to land. <em>Nature</em>, 440.</p>
<p>Anderson, J. S., R. R. Reisz, D. Scott, N. B. Frobisch & S. S. Sumida (2008) A stem batrachian from the Early Permian of Texas and the origin of frogs and salamanders. <em>Nature</em>, 453, 515-518.</p>
<p>Prothero, D. & C. Buell. 2007. <em>Evolution: What the fossils say and why it matters</em>. Columbia Univ Pr.</p>
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        <pubDate>Mon, 21 Jan 13 06:35:46 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>James Kidder</dc:creator>
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        <title>Surprised by Jack: C.S. Lewis on Mere Christianity, the Bible, and Evolutionary Science, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/surprised&#45;by&#45;jack&#45;cs&#45;lewis&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/surprised&#45;by&#45;jack&#45;cs&#45;lewis&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>I would like to look at three areas relevant to faith and science discussions where Lewis’s stated views might be surprising for his American Evangelical admirers</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>“All reality is iconoclastic.”<sup>1</sup> When C.S. Lewis—or ‘Jack’ as his friends called him—penned that line in 1961, he was writing about God’s proclivity for repeatedly smashing our inevitably half-baked notions about Him.  But much the same can be said for what reality does to our own cultural icons as well. And, if nothing else, Lewis himself has become a cultural icon for many American evangelicals, identified by many as the 20th century’s Christian intellectual <em>par excellence</em>.</p>

<p>With his compelling personal story of becoming England’s “most reluctant convert,” his towering intellect, and his inimitable eloquence, American evangelicals’ lionization of Lewis is certainly understandable.<sup>2</sup> But when we attempt to lionize people we often ironically end up taming them, paring their claws so that our heroes and our preconceptions can safely cohabitate in our imaginations.  But Lewis is no safer a lion than Aslan, and he will not go quietly into our tidy evangelical boxes.  To be frank, American Evangelicalism’s infatuation with Lewis is in many respects somewhat odd.  For here is a pathologically populist movement with a penchant for Big Tent Revivalism, an obsession with liturgical innovation, a deep-seated suspicion of ecclesiastical tradition, and a raw nerve about the doctrine of justification, falling head-over-heels for a tweed-jacketed, Anglo-Catholic Oxford don—a curmudgeonly liturgical traditionalist who was fuzzy on the atonement, a believer in purgatory, and, as we shall see, whose views on Scripture, Genesis, and evolution position him well outside of American Evangelicalism’s standard theological paradigms.  All of that is to say that Lewis was not “just like us”—<em>any</em> of us—and if we would do him justice, we must be prepared to be <em>surprised</em> by Jack.</p>

<p>In what follows, I would like to look at three areas relevant to faith and science discussions where Lewis’s stated views might be surprising for his American Evangelical admirers—namely, his views on Scripture generally and Genesis in particular, his views on Adam and the doctrine of the Fall, and his views on evolutionary science and the myth of ‘Evolutionism.’</p>

<h3>Reflections on the Scriptures: Lewis on the Bible, Myth, & Fact </h3>

<p>Lewis derived his theological understanding of the Bible from his reading of Scripture, his intimate knowledge of the Church Fathers and the Medieval Doctors, and also from his awareness of modern biblical scholarship.  While Lewis was regularly critical of Modernist biblical scholarship’s naturalistic dismissal of the miraculous, its pedantry, literary tin-ear, and over-eagerness to conflate Jesus’ story with the stories of pagan mythologies (he had precious little patience for Rudolf Bultmann, for instance ), he was not at all given to the knee-jerk reactionary Fundamentalism which has held so much sway in American Evangelical culture.  In fact, Lewis incorporated many of the more well-supported conclusions of modern biblical criticism into his theology of Scripture, not least critical opinions about the historicity of much of the Old Testament.  In good Anglican fashion, Lewis creatively drew upon the deep resources of the Church’s grand Tradition in order to think through the contemporary problems posed by modern critical scholarship.  Here I wish to focus on three features of Lewis’s theological conception of Scripture—his understanding of the Bible as being <strong>incarnational</strong> and <strong>sacramental</strong> in character, and <strong>Christotelic</strong> in focus—before turning to his theological reading of Genesis 1-3.<sup>4</sup></p>

<h3>Inspiration and Incarnation</h3>

<p>According to Lewis, the Bible is both a vessel of the divine Word and also a profoundly human collection of documents. In his longest, most substantive piece on Scripture, chapter XI of <em>Reflections on the Psalms</em>, Lewis frames a thoroughly incarnational understanding of the Bible:</p>

<blockquote>The human qualities of the raw materials show through.  Naïvety, error, contradiction, even (as in the cursing Psalms) wickedness are not removed.  The total result is not “the Word of God” in the sense that every passage, in itself, gives impeccable science or history.  It carries the Word of God; and we (under grace, with attention to tradition and to interpreters wiser than ourselves, and with the use of such intelligence and learning as we may have) receive that word from it not by using it as an encyclopedia or an encyclical but by steeping ourselves in its tone or temper and so learning its overall message.<sup>5</sup></blockquote>

<p>Lewis’s reference to “[the] human qualities” of the Bible’s “raw materials” is suggestive.  As Peter Enns puts it in his book <em>Inspiration & Incarnation: Evangelicals and the Problem of the Old Testament</em>, the Incarnation of the Son and the inspiration of Scripture are “analogous.”<sup>6</sup>  Lewis clearly agrees.  He goes on in the chapter to articulate a theology of Scripture precisely in incarnational terms:</p>

<blockquote>For we are taught that the Incarnation itself proceeded “not by the conversion of the godhead into flesh, but by taking of (the) manhood into God”; in it human life becomes the vehicle of Divine life.  If the Scriptures proceed not by conversion of God’s word into literature but by taking up of a literature to be the vehicle of God’s word, this is not anomalous.<sup>7</sup></blockquote>

<p>According to Lewis, the means whereby God gives us Scripture is not by faxing us transcripts of inner-Trinitarian dialogue direct from Heaven, but rather, on analogy with the Incarnation, by taking up very human literature and utilizing it to communicate His Divine life to us.  </p>

<p>“We might have expected, we may think we should have preferred, an unrefracted light giving us ultimate truth in systematic form—something we could have tabulated and memorised and relied on like the multiplication table.”<sup>8</sup>  But God has instead deigned to give us a very human book, just as He deigned to send us a fully human Savior.  Lewis makes this point most poignantly in his Introduction to J.B. Phillips’s <em>Letters to Young Churches</em> where he writes:</p>

<blockquote>The same divine humility which decreed that God should become a baby at a peasant-woman’s breast, and later an arrested field-preacher in the hands of the Roman police, decreed also that He should be preached in a vulgar, prosaic and unliterary language.  If you can stomach the one, you can stomach the other.  The Incarnation is in that sense an irreverent doctrine: Christianity, in that sense, an incurably irreverent religion.  When we expect that it should have come before the World in all the beauty that we now feel in the Authorised Version we are as wide of the mark as the Jews were in expecting that the Messiah would come as a great earthly King.<sup>9</sup></blockquote>

<p>For Lewis, God’s work in the inspiration of Scripture not only communicates but also <em>emulates</em> God’s humble, self-effacing work in the Incarnation.  If the heart of Christianity, “an incurably irreverent religion,” should be the Incarnation, “an irreverent doctrine,” then it ought to come as no surprise that that doctrine should be most fundamentally communicated via an irreverent book. </p>

<p>A corollary of Lewis’ incarnational and sacramental view of Scripture is that when it comes to studying the Scriptures we must be prepared to be surprised.  Lewis warns against “the Fundamentalist’s” procedure of attempting to frame our ideas of Scripture <em>a priori</em>, deducing parameters for what the Scriptures can and cannot be from our preconceptions about God.  Lewis thinks such an approach to be a nonstarter:</p>

<blockquote>[There] is one argument which we should beware of using…: God must have done what is best, this is best, therefore God has done this.  For we are mortals and do not know what is best for us, and it is dangerous to prescribe what God must have done–especially when we cannot, for the life of us, see that He has after all done it.<sup>10</sup></blockquote>

<p>Instead, says Lewis, we should take a humble, a posteriori approach, looking and seeing just what kind of book it is that God has actually given us before making grand doctrinal declarations.  “To a human mind,” Lewis recognizes, an incarnational Bible “seems, no doubt, an untidy and leaky vehicle.”<sup>11</sup>  But it appears that this is what God has given us, and we must trust that God knows what He is doing.  As Lewis says, “Since this is what God has done, this, we must conclude, was best.”<sup>12</sup></p>


<h3>Myth Became Fact</h3>
<p>For Lewis, the Word is also like the sacrament. Just as ordinary water, bread, and wine are taken up into and become conduits for and communicators of the Divine life that we so desperately need, so, also, all-too-ordinary human writings are taken up into and become conduits for and communicators of the Divine life and word.  In Lewis’s view, we must receive the Divine word by approaching Scripture in a sacramental manner.  We “receive that word,” as Lewis says, again, “not by using [Scripture] as an encyclopedia or an encyclical but by steeping ourselves in its tone or temper and so learning its overall message.”<sup>13</sup> For Lewis, at least when it comes to the Old Testament, receiving the Word means more than simply paying critical attention to the surface meaning of the text, the <em>sensus literalis</em>.  Instead, we must press beyond the surface to the <em>sensus plenior</em>, to the “second sense” of the Old Testament, namely, Christ Himself.  “It is Christ Himself, not the Bible, who is the true word of God,” Lewis once wrote in a private letter.  “The Bible, read in the right spirit and with the guidance of good teachers, will bring us to Him.”<sup>14</sup> While such Christological <em>sensus plenior</em> interpretation may have fallen out of favor with many Protestants (to say nothing of thoroughgoing Modernist historical-critics), Lewis believes that “[we] are committed to it in principle by Our Lord Himself.”<sup>15</sup> Citing Jesus’ words to His disciples on the road to Emmaus, Lewis argues that Christ “accepted—indeed He claimed to be—the second meaning of Scripture.”  Citing a litany of Dominical sayings and New Testament texts, Lewis is clear that Christ is mysteriously the true spiritual center, climax, coherence, sum, and substance of the Old Testament Scriptures.<sup>16</sup></p>

<p>Lewis stands in good company in thinking along these lines.  The “good teachers” from which Lewis learned this hermeneutic are undoubtedly Aquinas, Bernard of Clairveaux, Augustine, Origen, and Irenaeus, not to mention the Apostles and Christ Himself.  In short, Lewis is standing within the mainstream tradition of pre-Reformation theological interpretation.  But Lewis is not simply striking a traditionalist posture.  Like a scribe trained for the Kingdom, he is prepared to bring forth treasures new and old.  By positioning himself within the grand tradition of pre-modern theological interpretation, Lewis frees himself to follow his highly-attuned modern literary-critical instincts regarding the historicity of much of the Old Testament while simultaneously upholding both a robust belief in the historicity of the Incarnation and a vital theological hermeneutic.    He writes:</p>

<blockquote>The earliest stratum of the Old Testament contains many truths in a form which I take to be legendary, or even mythical—hanging in the clouds, but gradually the truth condenses, becomes more and more historical.  From things like Noah’s Ark or the sun standing still upon Ajalon, you come down to the court memoirs of King David.  Finally you reach the New Testament and history reigns supreme, and the Truth is incarnate.  And “incarnate” here is more than a metaphor.  It is not an accidental resemblance that what, from the point of view of being, is stated in the form “God became Man,” should involve, from the point of view of human knowledge, the statement “Myth became Fact.”<sup>17</sup></blockquote>

<p>He sets up the above paragraph by saying, “[The Christian story] is like watching something come gradually into focus; first it hangs in the clouds of myth and ritual, vast and vague, then it condenses, grows hard and in a sense small, as a historical event in first century Palestine.”<sup>18</sup> Apart from the Incarnation, then, much of the Old Testament would be but “myth,” “ritual,” and “legend.”  These elements of the Old Testament only become tangible historical “Fact,” for Lewis, in the person and work of Christ.</p><br></br>

<p class="intro">Next time, Williams looks at how this understanding of Scripture framed Lewis' reading of Genesis 1-3.</p>


<h3>Note</h3>
<p class="date">1. C.S. Lewis, <em>A Grief Observed</em>, (San Francisco: Harper Collins, 2001), 66<br />
2. See Smietana, Bob, “C.S. Lewis Superstar: How a reserved British intellectual with a checkered pedigree became a rockstar for evangelicals,” <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/december/9.28.html">http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/december/9.28.html</a><br />
3. “Through what strange process has this learned German gone in order to make himself blind to what all men except him see?,” wrote Lewis in “Modern Theology and Biblical Criticism,” in Walter Hooper, ed., <em>Christian Reflections</em> (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1995), 156<br />
4. I owe the word “christotelic” to my teachers at Westminster.  See especially the discussion in Peter Enns’ <em>Inspiration and Incarnation: Evangelicals and the Problem of the Old Testament</em>, (Grand Rapids: Baker Academic, 2005)<br />
5. Lewis, <em>Reflections on the Psalms</em>, (San Diego: Harcourt Inc., 1986), 111-12<br />
6. See note xii above.<br />
7. Lewis, <em>Reflections on the Psalms</em>, 116<br />
8. Ibid, 112<br />
9. Lewis, “Modern Translations,” in <em>God in the Dock</em>, (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1970), 230<br />
10. Lewis, <em>Reflections on the Psalms</em>, 112<br />
11. Ibid<br />
12. Ibid, 113<br />
13. Ibid, 112<br />
14. Lewis in a letter, 8 November, 1952, in W.H. Lewis, ed., <em>Letters of C.S. Lewis</em>, (New York: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1966), 247 cited in Martindale and Root, <em>The Quotable Lewis</em>, 72<br />
15. Lewis, <em>Reflections on the Psalms</em>, 117<br />
16. Ibid, 117-19<br />
17. Lewis, “Is Theology Poetry?,” in <em>The Weight of Glory and Other Essays</em>, (New York: Harper Collins, 2001), 129<br />
18. Ibid</p>

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        <pubDate>Tue, 11 Dec 12 06:04:48 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Williams</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Pre&#45;Modern Readings on Genesis 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/pre&#45;modern&#45;readings&#45;on&#45;genesis&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/pre&#45;modern&#45;readings&#45;on&#45;genesis&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Many people assume that until Darwin came along, devout Christians everywhere read and understood Genesis in the same way. But Dr. Pak points out that some of the most revered figures in Christian history&#45;&#45;Origen, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin&#45;&#45;offered insightful but distinctive interpretations of the text that are often overlooked today. First presented at a symposium in Raleigh, NC, Dr. Pak&apos;s paper is presented here as a three part series.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Introduction</h3>

<p>To say, “I believe in the Church” is to embrace and live into a reality that precedes us, encompasses us, and continues beyond us.   Indeed, if we are to truly be the Church in the present, I believe that it is incumbent on us to listen to those who have gone before us, and recognize that our own “here and now” is not the whole of the Christian story. Moreover, paying attention to the voices in the history of the Church can reveal to us our own contemporary blindfolds and assumptions, and might even enable us to approach Scripture with fresh eyes.</p>

<p>As a case in point, over the next three posts I’d like to walk us through a number of what I call “pre-modern” church fathers’ readings of Genesis 1 so that we might hear how Christians have read this text across the last 1600 years.  For, while exploring the history of interpretation of any biblical text can teach us several important things, the biblical account of creation in Genesis 1 is a particularly instructive case.</p>

<p>Many, many Christian readers interpreted Genesis 1 during the early, medieval and Reformation eras of the church, but my survey focuses on the accounts given by Origen, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin.  Every one of these church fathers held to at least two strong, shared assumptions: first and foremost, they all believed Scripture is the inspired Word of God—an infallible revelation given by God to reveal God and God’s truths for the church. I will return to this point later to show that what these readers meant by “infallible” is not necessarily the same as what many modern readers mean today, but the fathers’ firm conviction in the absolute trustworthiness of the biblical text is something contemporary evangelicals have in common with our predecessors in the faith. Secondly, they all asserted that any good reading of Scripture has the ultimate goal of <em>edifying the Church</em>. A faithful reading is performed in, with and for the Church, for the Church’s strengthening and/or repentance.</p>

<p>Beyond these two essential points about the text itself, all five of these church fathers focused upon several shared theological teachings in their readings of Genesis 1:</p>

<ul><li>First, the world is created. In other words, the world is not eternal; it has a beginning and an end.</li>
<li>Second, God created the world.</li>
<li>Third, God created the world <em>from nothing</em>. This is the Christian doctrine of creation <em>ex nihilo</em>.</li>
<li>Fourth, the Creator is also Trinity: Father, Son, and Holy Spirit.</li></ul> 

<p>The first three of these beliefs—the world is created, God created the world, and God created the world from nothing—set up a clear distinction between God the Creator and created creatures who depend upon God for their creation—that is, the supreme distinction between Creator and creature. This distinction is necessary to demonstrate that only God is God; there is no other God. There is no room for the world or anything else to claim existence outside of or beyond God. God is the beginning of all existence.
</p>

<p>Finally, the church fathers’ agreement that Genesis 1 teaches us about God’s Trinitarian nature of Father, Son, and Holy Spirit gives us a sense of the complete and self-sufficient yet still relational quality of the Creator. In sum, Origen, Augustine, Aquinas, Luther, and Calvin agreed that the account of creation in Genesis 1 tells us in some kind of literal way how the world came to exist, but equally that Gen 1 is intended to teach us these key <em>theological</em> truths.</p>

<h3>An infinite source of wisdom</h3>


<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/origen.jpg" alt="" height="343" width="220"  /></p>

<p>One of the key issues debated amongst these early readers of Genesis 1 was a question of methodology: <em>how</em> should one read the text? The pre-modern Church held firmly to the belief of both the divine inspiration of Scripture and Scripture as an <em>infinite</em> source of God’s wisdom, revelation and teaching. This meant that the pre-modern Church believed that there was not just one singular correct meaning of a biblical text, but that there were many possible faithful readings of any given text.</p>

<p>Such an assertion involved the belief that since God is infinite, so also is God’s Word infinite. To assume that there is only one singular correct meaning of Scripture is in essence to “box God in” or offend the absolute sovereignty of God—namely, limiting what God may teach or say through God’s own very Word. Hence, from very early on in the Church’s history, the church held that Scripture has literal and spiritual meanings. The late-2nd / early 3rd-century church father Origen, for one, was a keen proponent of the spiritual reading of Scripture. He maintained that Genesis 1 has both a literal meaning and a spiritual or allegorical meaning. He wrote, “There is certainly no question about the literal meaning, for these things are clearly said to have been created by God,” but then he continued, “but it is also profitable to relate this text in a spiritual sense.”<sup>1</sup> </p>

<p>The spiritual meaning of the text, according to Origen, is that the creation account is not simply about how the world was created, but it also sets forth the Christian’s journey in faith from infancy to maturity. Or, put another way, the days of creation are an illustration of the ethical journey of Christians toward righteousness. Thus according to Origen, for example, the separation of waters from the dry land (in verse 9) points to the call for the Christian to seek heavenly things rather than earthly things.<sup>2</sup>  Though they may be literally the creation of the sun, moon and stars, the lights in verse 14’s “Let there be lights” spiritually signify Christ and his Church—Christ who is the “light of the world” and the church who has been called to reflect this light into the world (John 8:12).<sup>3</sup>  Hence, though Origen affirmed the literal reading of this text as teaching that God created the world, the weight of his focus fell upon reading Genesis 1 as a road map for the Christian’s journey in righteousness towards becoming more Christ-like.</p>

<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Augustine.jpg" alt="" height="288" width="384"  /></p>

<p>The renowned late 4th/early 5th-century church father Augustine also believed in reading Genesis both literally and spiritually, though he placed more emphasis on the literal reading than did Origen. Augustine commented on Genesis 1 several times, including <em>Against the Manichees</em> and <em>A Literal Interpretation of Genesis</em>. In the both of these accounts, his primary intention was to set forth that the world is created by God out of nothing—hence light vs. dark or good vs. evil cannot be rightly believed to be dualistic entities.  In fact, God is the only Supreme Being, and God created everything else out of nothing—not out of God’s self (which leads to pantheism or pan-entheism), nor out of something else existing alongside God (which would lead to dualism or the belief that there are two or more equal entities that can claim to be gods). All of these theological teachings were set forth to deliberately counter the heretical teachings of the Manicheans in Augustine’s day. Hence, one might argue that Augustine’s “literal” reading of Genesis was very much focused upon certain <em>theological</em> teachings of Genesis 1.<sup>4</sup></p> 

<p>But Augustine did not stop there. He also provided a number of ways in which the literal words of Genesis 1 may point to a spiritual meaning. For example, Augustine writes that the 7 days of creation represent the 7 ages of the world. Moreover, Augustine—much like Origen—also read the 7 days of creation in terms of the Christian’s spiritual journey in faith. Thus, Day 1 is the light of faith, day 2 is a time of learning and discernment; day 3 is the separation of heavenly and earthly things; day 4 is development in spiritual knowledge; day 5 involves good works; day 6 is being made in the image of God to gain mastery over carnal desires, and day 7 is a day of perpetual rest.<sup>5</sup></p>

<p>Key theologians of the early church (such as Origen and Augustine, as we’ve discussed) read Scripture with multiple senses and meanings—with a literal sense and multiple spiritual senses. However, not all fully agreed with this methodology. Though most all would certainly hold to multiple senses of Scripture, some readers insisted upon a more profound attention to the literal sense, and the use of the literal sense to help restrain or hold in check the possible spiritual readings. Such 3rd- and 4th-century Church fathers, as St. Basil the Great, John Chrysostom, St. Ambrose, and Theodore of Mopsuestia insisted upon a much more restrained literal reading of Genesis 1.<sup>6</sup></p>

<p>Yet even those who insist upon a more literal—or more historical—interpretation of Genesis 1 still contended that the primary purpose of any reading was to edify the Church, which entails setting forth the key theological teachings of Genesis 1, rather than focus on the material specifics.  Again, such teachings include that the world is created, that God create the world out of nothing, and that the creation account demonstrates the great order and harmony of creation as a testimony of the God’s glory, beauty, and goodness.<sup>7</sup></p>

<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/john_calvin.jpg" alt="" height="299" width="220"  /></p>

<p>More than one thousand years later, 16th-century Protestant Reformers Martin Luther and John Calvin strongly argued for a literal reading of Genesis 1 over and against an allegorical one. Luther wrote, “God’s purpose is to teach us not about allegorical creatures and an allegorical world, but about real creatures and a visible world apprehended by the senses.”<sup>8</sup>  Calvin maintained, “For to my mind this is a certain principle, that what is here treated is the visible form of the world.”<sup>9</sup></p>

<p>Yet Luther and Calvin also insisted that the central purpose of Genesis 1 is to set forth the <em>theological</em> teachings that the world is created, that God created the world out of nothing, and that creation demonstrates God’s providence, divine purpose, goodness and benevolence.<sup>10</sup>  While these historical readers do not all agree on whether Genesis 1 should be read allegorically, what becomes crystal clear is that for all of these interpreters, in one way or another, a “literal” reading of Genesis 1 retains as its focus the <em>theological</em> teachings of the text.   In our next installment, we’ll look briefly at some of the difficulties our expositors perceived in Genesis 1 when they did attempt to read it literally.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1. Origen, <em>Homilies on Genesis</em>, 60.<br />
2. Origen, 49, 50.<br />
3. Origen, 53-55.<br />
4. Augustine, <em>Against the Manichees</em>, 57, 58 and <em>Genesi ad litteram</em>, 145-46.<br />
5. Augustine, <em>Against the Manichees</em>, 83-88, 89-90. The seven ages are the following: Day 1 = the infancy of the world that stretched from Adam to Noah; Day 2 = childhood, stretching from Noah to Abraham; Day 3 = adolescence, encompassing the biblical history from Abraham to David; Day 4 = the age of youth, from David to the Babylonian captivity; Day 5 = youth to old age, stretching from the Babylonian Exile to the first advent of Christ; Day 6 = old age, the coming of Christ until the 2nd coming; and Day 7 = on the even and including the 2nd coming of Christ.<br />
6. St. Basil the Great, <em>Hexameron</em> 9.1.<br />
7. Ibid, 7.6, 1.7-9, 1.2-4.<br />
8. LW 1:5.<br />
9. John Calvin, <em>Commentary on Genesis</em>, 79.<br />
10. LW 1:3, 4, 10, 18, 36, 39, 47, 49. Calvin, <em>Commentary on Genesis</em>, 70, 89, 80-82, 88.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 11 Oct 12 07:00:30 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Sujin Pak</dc:creator>
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        <title>Denisovans, Humans and the Chromosome 2 Fusion</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/denisovans&#45;humans&#45;and&#45;the&#45;chromosome&#45;2&#45;fusion?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/denisovans&#45;humans&#45;and&#45;the&#45;chromosome&#45;2&#45;fusion?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The Denisovans, an extinct hominid group that interbred with modern humans, made the news again lately with the publication of a more detailed study of their genome. One of the many interesting findings was that the Denisovans share the same chromosome 2 fusion that modern humans have.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<br> </br><p>The Denisovans, an extinct hominid group that interbred with modern humans, made the news again lately with the publication of a more detailed study of their genome. One of the many interesting findings was that the Denisovans share the same chromosome 2 fusion that modern humans have. In this post, I review what we know about the origins of human chromosome 2, and then discuss the new Denisovan findings and their implications. </p>

<h3>The origins of human chromosome 2: a brief review</h3>
<p>Though I have discussed the evidence for a fusion event leading to human chromosome 2 before, perhaps a brief review of the evidence is in order. The human genome is made up of 23 pairs of chromosomes (for a total of 46 chromosomes). This makes us something of an oddity among living great apes, all the rest of whom  have 24 pairs of chromosomes (for a total of 48). Given that there are many independent lines of evidence that support the conclusion that we share a common ancestor with other great apes, this poses something of a conundrum: how is it that our species arrived at this specific chromosome number? If we were to represent this “problem” on a phylogeny, or tree of relatedness, it would look something like this (not to scale):</p>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/denisovans_fig_1.jpg" alt="" height="357" width="434"  /></p>
 
<p>Our closest living relatives, chimpanzees and bonobos, both have 48 chromosomes, as do all other great apes such as gorillas and orangutans. This pattern has one of two explanations, one of which is much more likely than the other. Either the common ancestor to these species had 48 chromosomes, and there was an event that reduced that number to 46 specifically on the lineage leading to humans (option A), or the common ancestor species had 46 chromosomes, and there were independent, repeated events that increased chromosome number in all other great ape species (option B). We can compare these options by placing the required event(s) on the phylogeny (again, not to scale): </p>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/denisovans_fig_2.jpg" alt="" height="300" width="570"  /></p>
 
<p>It should be obvious that the option that requires the fewest events is the more likely one – in this case option A with an event that reduces chromosome number in the lineage leading to humans. The other option, that of repeated, independent events to increase chromosome number, remains a formal, but unlikely, possibility. Events that reduce chromosome number are not frequent occurrences, so Option A is more likely than Option B.</p>

<p>We can also find further support for Option A, because it predicts a specific type of event, namely one that reduces chromosome number. Since <em>loss</em> of a large amount of chromosomal material is almost always detrimental, we need an event that reduces chromosome number without losing information. One way for this to happen is for two chromosomes to fuse together and become one. Initially, this event would produce an individual with 47 chromosomes, where two different chromosomes get stuck together. Contrary to what is often assumed, this individual would be fertile and able to interbreed with the others in his or her population (who continue to have 48 chromosomes). In a small population, over time, two relatives who both have one copy of the fusion chromosome may mate and produce some progeny with two copies of the fused chromosome, or the first individuals with 46 chromosomes. Since either a 48-pair set or a 46-pair set is preferable for ease of cell division, this population will either eventually get rid of the fusion variant (the most likely outcome), or by chance will switch over completely to the “new” form, with everyone bearing 46 chromosome pairs. While not overly likely, this type of event is not especially rare in mammals, and we have observed this sort of thing happening within recorded human history in other species.  Some mammalian species even maintain distinct populations in the wild with differing chromosome numbers due to fusions, and these populations retain the ability to interbreed. </p>

<p>Further evidence for a fusion event in the lineage leading to modern humans comes from comparing <em>synteny</em>, or gene locations and orders on chromosomes within modern great apes – an issue we have discussed <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/signature-in-the-synteny">here</a> before.  In brief, what we see in human chromosome 2 is exactly what we would predict for a fusion event. When compared to other great apes, we see the genes on human chromosome 2 match up, in order, with two smaller ape chromosomes. We also see that sequences used at the tips of chromosomes are present at the proposed fusion site, and that human chromosome 2 has not one but two sites for the cell cytoskeleton to attach to for cell division – but that one of the sites is mutated and not functional, though it lines up precisely with the location of this site on the appropriate ape chromosome. Together, this evidence consistently supports both common ancestry for humans and great apes, and specifically that the difference we see in our chromosome numbers arose due to a single fusion event. I briefly discussed this evidence in my <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/the-sorrows-and-joys-of-teaching-evolution">last post</a> where I describe how I teach some of this material and the compelling impact it has on students exploring the evolution question for the first time. </p>

<h3>Enter the Denisovans</h3>
<p>With that as background, we are now prepared to appreciate a new finding that comes from genomics work done on the Denisovan hominids, an archaic species that is more closely related to Neanderthals than to us, but that nonetheless interbred with some anatomically modern humans as they migrated out of Africa and populated the globe. (For those not familiar with the Denisovans, or the evidence for our interbreeding with them, both Darrel Falk and I have written on this previously, <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/a-geneticists-journey">here</a> and <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/understanding-evolution-neanderthals-denisovans-and-human-speciation">here</a>). Recently, a more detailed understanding of the Denisovan genome <a href="http://www.nature.com/news/new-dna-analysis-shows-ancient-humans-interbred-with-denisovans-1.11331">was published</a>, and nested in the new information is the discovery that the Denisovans share the 46 chromosome set with the same fusion that <a href="http://johnhawks.net/weblog/reviews/denisova/denisova-chromosome-2-2012.html">we have</a>. This strongly supports the hypothesis that the fusion event predates the separation of our species. If we were to represent this on a phylogeny, we can now place this event with more accuracy than before (as before, the phylogeny is not to scale): </p>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/denisovans_fig_3.jpg" alt="" height="452" width="513"  /></p>
 
<p>Despite this new information, one obvious question remains. Did the Neanderthals also have the 46-pair set? From looking at the phylogeny above, we can see that the most likely answer is that they did, since the fact that the Denisovans had it strongly implies that the last common ancestor of humans and Neanderthals / Denisovans had it as well, and the Neanderthal-Denisovan split comes later. While the Denisovan DNA samples are of high enough quality to make this assessment, we do not yet have Neanderthal DNA of high enough quality to do the same analysis with current methods (though one additional feature of the new work on the Denisovan genome is developing more sensitive DNA sequencing techniques that may resolve this question in the future).</p>

<p>In other words, this fusion seems to be an ancient one, predating our species by several hundred thousand years. Present estimates of the last common ancestor between humans and Neanderthals / Denisovans  range at about 800,000 years ago.</p>

<h3>Implications for understanding our “becoming human”</h3>
<p>The main implication from this work is that it places the fusion event well before the advent of our species. I’ve often chatted informally with Christians about evolution, and at times some have thought that this fusion event was what “started” our species, or made our species unable to interbreed with other groups. Some have even suggested that perhaps the fusion event was what produced the first human (i.e. Adam). </p>

<p>Note that thinking this way suggests a misunderstanding of how chromosome fusions occur and what effect they have on their hosts. A fusion does not precipitate a speciation event, but rather the individual with the fusion remains a part of his or her population, and able to interbreed, even if with reduced fertility. Also, there is no necessary biological effect or change that the fusion produces on the appearance of the organism.  These misunderstandings aside, however,what this new evidence shows is that this fusion event took place long before modern humans arose at around 200,000 years ago. Indeed, the 800,000 years ago date for the last human - Denisovan common ancestor means that this is the most recent date possible for the fusion. While it is an interesting piece of our evolutionary history, it doesn’t seem to have much to do with how we came to acquire the traits that set us apart from, and ultimately outcompete, other similar species.</p> 
<br> </br>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 06 Sep 12 13:07:21 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
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        <title>Being Human (Infographic)</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/being&#45;human&#45;infographic?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/being&#45;human&#45;infographic?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The BioLogos Forum is pleased to present this infographic about the current anthropological understanding of human evolution, which takes into account research into both physiological and cultural developments among our ancient ancestors.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Human-Evolution-Infograpic_full.png"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Human-Evolution-Infograpic_570.png" alt="" height="1008" width="570"  /></a>
<p><strong>(Click Image for Full Resolution)</strong></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 30 Jul 12 10:06:50 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
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        <title>Hominids Lived Millions of Years Ago, but How Can We Tell? (Videocast)</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/hominids&#45;videocast?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/hominids&#45;videocast?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>This BioLogos videocast addresses the age of recently discovered hominid fossils and how scientists are able to obtain those dates.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Today we present the fifth entry in our on-going BioLogos videocast series. The latest episode addresses the age of recently discovered hominid fossils and how scientists are able to obtain those dates. The script was written by biology student Joy Walters, with help from BioLogos president Darrel Falk.</p>

<p>For more, be sure to read our FAQs <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/ages-of-the-earth-and-universe">How are the ages of the Earth and universe calculated?</a> and <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/what-scientific-evidence-do-we-have-about-the-first-humans">What scientific evidence do we have about the first humans?</a>, as well as our recent infographic <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/how-do-we-know-the-earth-is-old-infographic">How Do We Know the Earth is Old?</a>.</p>

<h3>Author's Note from Joy Walters</h3>
<p>As I mentioned in my first post, I grew up skeptical of the whole idea of evolution. One contributor to my disbelief was the lengthy timescale for the “tree of life” that was presented with the theory. I would hear, for example, that dinosaurs lived hundreds of millions of years ago, but there was no explanation of why this was true; it was just given as a fact. No one explained the methods of dating, and so I thought biologists simply estimated the ages of species to fit their preconceived notions of how long it would take for one species to emerge from another. It also seemed like the ages were periodically revised and extended farther back in time, and I figured scientists needed to manipulate numbers to make evolution plausible. This, in my mind, made the theory both unbelievable and dismissible.</p>

<p>Once I learned about the techniques used to date fossils, I realized that my first impressions were wrong; the ancient ages of species are scientific determinations rather than scholarly conjectures. However, I have found in recent conversations that Christians remain skeptical of old ages and the evolutionary time scale. For this reason, I wanted the videocast to address the process of fossil dating (what the methods are and why they are accurate) while focusing on cases where hominid fossils were discovered and dated using these very methods. My hope is that Believers would be informed about the evidence for human evolution and its scientific grounding.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 26 Jul 12 05:00:03 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Joy Walters</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: The Meaning of mîn in the Hebrew Old Testament</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;meaning&#45;of&#45;min&#45;in&#45;the&#45;hebrew&#45;old&#45;testament?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;meaning&#45;of&#45;min&#45;in&#45;the&#45;hebrew&#45;old&#45;testament?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The related ideas of the “fixity of species” and “natural kinds” have been prominent in the science and faith conversation. Some Christians take Genesis to mean that God created (bara) fixed species (mîn). But does the text truly indicate such a concept? Biblical scholar Dr. Richard Hess looks at the Biblical context and meaning of the Hebrew mîn, and suggests that when Christians use it to frame our understanding of the entire created order, we may be asking too much of this single word.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The role of a single word in Christian doctrine can sometimes make all the difference in the world.  In the first millennium the Church divided between Eastern and Western Christianity over whether the Latin <em>filioque</em>, describing how the Holy Spirit proceeds from the Father “and from the Son,” should be included in the Creed.  Five hundred years ago the Protestant Reformation was launched in no small measure due to the issue of how “faith” (Greek New Testament <em>pistis</em>) should be understood.  </p>

<p>This essay considers the meaning of another small word, but not one in Latin or Greek.  This word appears in the Hebrew language in which the Old Testament was written.  It is the word pronounced, <em>mîn</em>, that can be rhymed with “green.”  In Modern Israeli Hebrew the word has taken on the meaning of “species.”  This is also the traditional way in which is it translated in the Old Testament of Genesis 1.  It appears in Genesis 1:11, 12, 21, 24, and 25.  A survey of a variety of English translations (King James Version, New American Bible, New Revised Standard Version, English Standard Version, and New International Version) reveal that the translation “kind” or “kinds” is used.  </p>

<p>Can we be more specific?  Does the word imply a zoological classification such as the term “species” would in scientific discussions of the animal and vegetable kingdoms?  It is always dangerous to apply modern concepts to ancient literature.  The use of classificatory schemes provides a good example.  The application of categories of knowledge in pre-Aristotelian writings invites misunderstanding as the means of viewing the world and its elements differed from the way we look at things today.  This does not mean that communication is impossible; only that we need to remain especially cautious not to import our understanding of matters onto the ancient worldview of writers without approaching these questions carefully and critically.</p>

<p>In terms of ancient (or modern) literature, a word is best understood according to its usage in the writings in which it occurs.  This suggests that context determines meaning.  This is especially true where it appears multiple times in the same type of literature written from the same culture and general time period.  The study of context is the primary determinant for understanding the definition of a word. </p> 

<p>Secondarily, one may consider related words in the same literature.  Because a Semitic language such as Hebrew is based on roots (usually of three consonants) that each generate verbs, nouns, and other particles of speech, words formed from the same root may provide additional understanding of the term we are considering.</p>

<p>The third area for study is where the same word occurs in comparative literature coming from similar, though not identical (which we consider in the first category), cultures and times.  The Old Testament was written in Hebrew but we do not have much additional Hebrew writing preserved for us from the time when this part of the Bible was written.  However, there are closely related Semitic languages that possess a wealth of literature and may contain our word in their writings.  If so, it would be good to check this and see if there is a relationship there.  At the same time, later Hebrew, written by Jewish scholars, may also use this word.  It is of value to compare the usage here.  This part of the study can confirm and refine our understanding of <em>mîn</em>, but it should not overturn clear contextual indications from the Old Testament usage itself.</p>

<p>Finally, we should note that, in the Old Testament, <em>mîn</em> does not appear by itself.  Every one of its occurrences forms part of the same prepositional phrase.  Thus our work is not complete when we have identified the contextual and comparative meaning of the word.  Instead, we need to examine the usage of the term within this prepositional phrase.  Such expressions can sometimes alter the meaning of the term.  This is especially true in idioms, but also occurs in other common expressions.  </p>

<h3>Old Testament Context of <em>mîn</em></h3>

<p>The Hebrew term, <em>mîn</em>, occurs 31 times in the Old Testament.  These occurrences are found in four contexts:  the creation story of Genesis 1 (vv. 11, 12, 21, 24, and 25), the flood story (Genesis 6:20; 7:14), the lists of clean and unclean animals in Leviticus 11 (vv. 14, 15, 16, 19, 22, and 29) and Deuteronomy 14 (vv. 13, 14, 15, and 18), and the single occurrence in the prophet Ezekiel’s vision of the future river that will flow from the Jerusalem temple to the Dead Sea (Ezekiel 47:10).</p>  

<p>The usage in Genesis 1:11 and 12 associates <em>mîn</em> with vegetation, especially those plants and trees that have seeds and bear fruit.  These will form the basis for the food to be eaten by people, birds, and land animals in Genesis 1:29-30.  There is no specification of <em>mîn</em> in terms of species or any more specific category than edible plants and fruit trees.  </p>

<p>The same seems to be true in Genesis 1:21, where <em>mîn</em> appears alongside large and small sea creatures and birds with wings.  The second and third days of creation in Genesis 1 describe God’s demarcation of three domains of the physical world:  the sky, the seas, and the dry ground.  On days five and six God fills these areas with life, with living creatures.  For the sky and sea, the creatures are defined according to their general means of locomotion and not in any other way.  Modern zoological classifications use criteria in addition to locomotion.  Thus there are few clues that would connect <em>mîn</em> with any modern classification system.</p>

<p>The appearance of our term in Genesis 1:24 and 25 brings us to the fifth day when God fills the dry land with life.  Here God creates three categories:  livestock, wild animals, and creatures that crawl along the ground.  In v. 24 the general category of all living animals on the ground is described with <em>mîn</em>; whereas in v. 25 each of these three categories receives this term.  Thus the term can be used of more general and more specific “kinds” of animals within the same grouping.  </p>

<p>The term recurs in Genesis 6:20 and 7:14, where it modifies individually the bird, the wild animal of the land, and the creature that crawls along the ground.  In Genesis 7:14 livestock is added to those in the ark.  It also is modified by <em>mîn</em>.  Here the categories of animals resemble those in Genesis 1.  From these “kinds” would come all the species that are found in nature.  This confirms the broad usage of <em>mîn</em> but does not add new information.</p>

<p>The usage of <em>mîn</em> also occurs in the listing of unclean animals.  It occurs in a list in Leviticus 11:14, 15, 16, 19, and 22; which closely follows the list in Deuteronomy 14:13, 14, 15, and 18.  Only Leviticus 11:22 is separate.  This list includes specific names of small wild animals, various birds, and insects (Leviticus 11:22).  Although there is discussion and dispute regarding the specific identification of various of these animals, it is clear that they form subcategories of those types to whom the term <em>mîn</em> was applied in Genesis 1, 6, and 7.  The resulting picture is thus that <em>mîn</em> applies to a variety of animal categories, both those more general and those more specific.  While particular species may be described in Leviticus and Deuteronomy, that is certainly not the case in Genesis, where the categories of living creatures are much broader.</p>

<p>The remaining text with <em>mîn</em> is Ezekiel 47:10.   Here the fresh water that will pour from the temple into the Dead Sea forms a natural habitat for fish that are <em>mîn</em> and are compared with those fish found in the Mediterranean Sea.  As in Genesis 1:21, the picture is one of general creatures of the sea, rather than what anyone might identify as a particular species.  Indeed, if the translation of the phrase in which <em>mîn</em> occurs is understood (following the New International Version) as, “The fish will be of many kinds,” then this could envision various species.  However, such an interpretation is not explicit from the text itself.  </p>

<p>Our survey of the usage of the term in biblical Hebrew suggests that it may describe all types of plants and animals, and this may include <em>mîn</em> in the broadest categories of living creatures: green plants with seed, fruit trees, birds, sea creatures, fish, wild land animals, domestic animals, and creatures that creep along the ground.  It may also include specific categories as enumerated in Leviticus 11 and Deuteronomy 14.  Thus <em>mîn</em> does refer to various kinds of living creatures without a predisposition as to how large a category is intended.   Only context can tell us that.  The term is applied only to living creatures as described in the Bible.  It is never applied to people, abstract concepts, or nonliving objects.</p>

<p class="intro">In Part 2, Dr. Hess expands his analysis in by exploring closely related words in the Old Testament and by comparing how <em>mîn</em> is used in literature coming from similar cultures and times.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 22 Jul 12 10:42:49 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Richard Hess</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Science and the Bible: Concordism</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;concordism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Davis identifies core tenets or assumptions about the view of concordism, beginning with propositions about the Bible before concluding with a short historical commentary.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The word “concordism” is found in neither <a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com">Merriam Webster</a> nor the <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em>, yet it’s often used in contemporary works dealing with origins. Derived from the word “concord,” meaning a state of harmony, “concordism” has been used sparingly in English for more than a century. However, its prominence today comes from a thoroughly scholarly book written shortly after World War Two by the late Baptist theologian <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Ramm">Bernard Ramm</a>, <em>The Christian View of Science and Scripture</em> (1954). As Ramm defined it, concordism “seeks a harmony of the geologic record and the days of Genesis,” by which he really meant an old-earth creationist approach. </p>

<p>I am using the term in the same sense. Like Ramm, I don’t regard theistic evolution as a concordist view, even though some TE proponents like to say that evolution can be “harmonized” with Genesis. At the same time, Ramm completely rejected Price’s recent creation and Flood Geology, and he obviously did not consider that view to be a type of concordism either. Why not? On first glance, the YEC view might seem to fall within Ramm’s definition of concordism, and the authors of <a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/origins">one of the books</a> recommended in the first column in this series classify it as a type of concordism. However, the harmony sought by YEC proponents comes at the cost of entirely rejecting the <em>standard</em> geologic record, which they replace with Flood Geology. That isn’t what Ramm had in mind by seeking a “harmony.”</p>

<p>Often the concordist view is called “progressive creation,” another term that Ramm used with much approval: “<em>We believe that the fundamental pattern of creation is progressive creation</em>,” he wrote prominently in italics. Indeed, it is sometimes assumed that Ramm invented both terms, “concordism” and “progressive creation,” when in fact he did no such thing. If anything, the latter term is even older than the former, having been used to refer to an OEC interpretation of natural history for about two centuries. The first American author to use it may have been <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Benjamin_Silliman">Benjamin Silliman</a>, an evangelical who was appointed the first professor of natural history at Yale by another evangelical, Yale’s president <a href="http://college.cengage.com/english/lauter/heath/4e/students/author_pages/eighteenth/dwight_ti.html">Timothy Dwight</a>. Silliman was the single most influential figure in American science during the nineteenth century. In his <em>Outline of the Course of Geological Lectures Given in Yale College</em> (1829), Silliman spoke of “the progressive creation, life, death and sepulture [fossilization], of animals and plants.” On another occasion he noted how the Bible describes “a successive creation of plants and animals, ending with man,” and that geology “proves this history to be true.”</p>

<p>Clearly, then, the concordist or progressive creationist view has been around for a long time. Let’s examine its main components.</p>

<h3>Core Tenets or Assumptions of Concordism</h3>

<p><strong>(1)	The Bible and science (mainly geology and astronomy) are <em>BOTH</em> reliable sources of knowledge about the origin of the earth and the universe. God has written two “books” for our instruction, the book of nature and the book of scripture. Since God is the author of both “books,” they must agree when properly interpreted.</strong></p>

<p>If this strikes you as worded deliberately to sound like <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/galileo-and-other-good-books-about-science-and-the-bible">Galileo</a>, you’re right—but only because so many proponents of the concordist view also have Galileo very much in their minds. The basic scheme is neatly depicted in this diagram:</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/z-levels.gif" alt="" height="325" width="358" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>Recall Galileo’s belief that the book of nature, written in the divine and unambiguous language of mathematics, should be used to help interpret the book of scripture, written in the richer but more ambiguous language spoken by the ordinary persons for whom its vital message of salvation was intended. When they accept the evidence for an ancient earth, Silliman and many other evangelical scholars right down to our own day believe they have merely applied Galileo’s logic to a different set of biblical texts. </p>

<p><strong>(2)	Scientific evidence, when properly interpreted, is consistent with the Bible, when properly interpreted. </strong></p>

<p>Galileo again: because both “books” are written by the same Author, they must agree. As he said in his <a href="http://www.disf.org/en/documentation/03-Galileo_Cristina.asp">Letter to Christina</a>, “the holy Bible can never speak untruth—whenever its true meaning is understood. But I believe nobody will deny that it is often very abstruse, and may say things which are quite different from what its bare words signify. Hence in expounding the Bible if one were always to confine oneself to the unadorned grammatical meaning, one might fall into error.” </p>

<p>What about those who interpret the book of nature? Can they ever be mistaken? Should they ever yield to those who interpret the book of scripture? Evolution was not the source of Galileo’s concerns, but concordists today would give the nod to scripture mainly when it comes to evolution—especially human evolution. Regardless of how much evolution they accept for other organisms, concordists hold strongly to the separate creation of Adam and Eve as the first human beings. They believe that Genesis 1 was intended to be at least broadly historical, even though it does not provide detailed scientific information.</p>

<p>Mainstream conclusions in geology and cosmology, however, are almost always accepted; indeed, <a href="http://www.reasons.org/articles/big-bang---the-bible-taught-it-first">Hugh Ross</a> and some other <a href="http://www.bibleandscience.com/science/images/showmegod.jpg">OECs</a> not only accept the “big bang” theory of the universe, they actively promote it as central to Christian apologetics, because it presents us with a universe that is not eternal and that appears to be exquisitely designed as a home for living creatures, including ourselves. </p>

<p><strong>(3) The Bible does <em>NOT</em> tell us the age of the earth.</strong></p>

<p>Two main concordist approaches to resolving the tension between Genesis and scientific dating of the earth have been popular since the mid-nineteenth century: the “day-age theory,” which still has numerous advocates (including Ross), and the “gap theory,” which is now nearly extinct. One hundred years ago, however, the gap theory was probably the more popular option among conservative Protestants, and it remained so until the 1960s and 1970s, when the rapid spread of Scientific Creationism all but relegated the gap view to the dust bin.</p>

<h4>The Gap Theory</h4>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/timeline.gif" alt="" height="230" width="568" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;"  />

<p>The gap theory posits a “gap” of untold length between “the beginning” of Genesis 1:1 and the first “day” of creation, starting with Genesis 1:3; the formless void of Gen 1:2 corresponds to this “gap.” Verse 1 refers to the original creation of the earth and the universe “in the beginning,” not to world as we now find it. The fossils represent creatures that populated the original creation. <em>Current</em> living creatures come from a second creation, after the “gap,” when God made them in six literal days, culminating in the creation of Adam and Eve just a few thousand years ago.</p>

<p>Although the creation of humanity matches the traditional biblical chronology—a major reason for the popularity of the gap theory in its heyday—the original creation cannot be dated from the Bible. Whether it happened 100 million years ago (as scientists thought around 1900) or billions of years ago (as scientists thought for much of the twentieth century), does not matter one bit to the Bible. Geologists can say whatever they wish about the age of the earth. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Scofield_Reference_Bible">Scofield Reference Bible</a>, originally published by Oxford University Press in 1909, taught the gap theory to generations of conservative Protestants in the English speaking world. The headings alone indicate Scofield’s endorsement of the gap theory, and he waited no longer than the second footnote to spell it out: “The first creative act refers to the dateless past, and gives scope for all the geologic ages.” (NOTE: the date “B.C. 4004" in the middle column refers to the start of the six days, not to “the beginning.” I’ll elaborate on that date in part two of this column.)</p>
 
<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/scofield_page.jpg" alt="" height="507" width="570" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>As Scofield’s third note shows, the gap theory was usually placed within an elaborate theological structure about the fall of Satan and the angels, based on certain prophetic texts (see below). A full discussion would take us far afield, but something should be said about how gap theorists interpret Genesis 1:2, the crucial verse for their model. Scofield sticks with the King James Version, “the earth was without form, and void,” doing the exegetical work in his notes, but others like to <a href="http://www.bibleword.org/genesis1.html">render it</a> as, “the earth <strong><em>became</em></strong> a waste place,”, drawing out the implication (in their view) that God destroyed the original creation, laying waste to it in an act of judgment, leaving us with fossils of the pre-Adamic world. </p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/gap_image.gif" alt="" height="468" width="458" style="display:block; margin-left:auto;margin-right:auto;" />

<p>In some versions of the gap view, the original creation included pre-Adamite people—that is, humans who were not descended from Adam and Eve. This idea that took many forms, some with racist overtones. Perhaps this strikes you as a bit surprising, but in the mid-nineteenth century it was a commonplace conception among Protestants, and not <a href="http://www.newadvent.org/cathen/12370a.htm">unknown to Catholics either</a>. A prominent example would be <em><a href="http://archive.org/details/preadamiteearthc187000harr">The Pre-Adamite Earth: A Contribution to Theological Science</a></em> (1846), a very popular book by the English Congregational minister John Harris. Historian David Livingstone has written the definitive history of this fascinating idea. For more, see <a href="http://rorotoko.com/interview/20090206_livingstone_david_adam_ancestors_race_religion_politics_human_orig/?page=1">this interview</a>, but there is no substitute for reading the book itself! Let me make an invitation: who wants to borrow a copy and provide their own commentary here? </p>

<p>In all versions of the gap theory, however, fossils are vestiges of the pre-Adamic world, produced when it was destroyed; they are not a record of evolutionary history. All modern animals and many plants were created recently, in six literal days. Despite what YECs often say, there is just no way to see the gap theory as an “evolutionist” interpretation of Genesis!</p>

<h4>The "Day-Age" Theory</h4>
<p>The day-age theory takes the “days” in Genesis 1 as periods of indefinite length, such that neither the age of the earth nor the duration of any particular period in creation history can be determined from the Bible. The basis for this view is that the Hebrew word “yom” (day) can also mean an indefinite period of time. According to Hugh Ross, the leading advocate of progressive creation today, if the Hebrews had wanted to refer to a long period of indefinite length, they would have used the word “yom.” Thus, he claims to be giving a <em>literal</em> interpretation when he upholds the day-age view.</p>

<p>Numerous varieties of the day-age view have been proposed since the eighteenth century, too many to review here. They all teach that the major kinds of plants and animals were created separately, over the eons of earth history; the fossil record shows reliably which came earlier and which came later. Thus, the creation was accomplished “progressively,” as Silliman held in 1829 and Ross holds today. Ross thinks God performed <em>millions</em> of acts of special creation, but concordists differ substantially among themselves on the magnitude of the number for this.</p>

<p>Concordists mostly agree, however, that the first true humans were Adam and Eve, and that they were created <em>ex nihilo</em>—but, how recently were they created? Can the biblical 6,000 years be stretched far enough to encompass fossils of modern humans (<em>homo sapiens sapiens</em>) dating back perhaps to nearly 200,000 years? Can the biblical picture of Adam’s children living amidst cities and agriculture be reconciled with extensive evidence of humans who lived long before either existed? I’m no anthropologist, but anyone can see the relevance of such questions for this position. </p>

<p><strong>(4) The Flood was a real historical event, but it was not responsible for producing the fossils; rather, fossils are relics of organisms that were mainly here before humans.</strong></p>

<p>The last of the four basic assumptions shared by concordists is that they reject Flood Geology and accept the <a href="http://ebeltz.net/firstfam/geocolum.html">standard geologic column</a>. <a href="http://www.reasons.org/articles/exploring-the-extent-of-the-flood-part-one">Hugh Ross</a> and some others believe that the flood was <strong><em>geographically localized</em></strong>, covering part of the ancient Near East but not the whole globe. This is called the “local flood” view. Biblical scholar Paul Seely <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/the-flood-not-global-barely-local-mostly-theological">briefly assesses this view</a> in light of current knowledge here, but a full discussion of the issues goes well beyond of the scope of this online course. Anyone with appropriate expertise is invited to place comments below. The main point is that the flood has no <strong><em>geological</em></strong> significance for concordists, whether or not it was geographically “local.” </p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>Our look at concordism concludes on July 3 with some conclusions about the OEC view and further historical comments. I’ll pay attention to your comments in the meantime.</p><br> </br>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 12 05:00:05 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>What scientific evidence do we have about the first humans?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/questions/what&#45;scientific&#45;evidence&#45;do&#45;we&#45;have&#45;about&#45;the&#45;first&#45;humans?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
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        <description>In recent decades, scientists have discovered more about the beginnings of humanity.  The fossil record shows a gradual transition over 5 million years ago from chimpanzee&#45;size creatures to hominids with larger brains who walked on two legs.   Later hominids used fire and stone tools and had brains as large as modern humans.  Fossils of homo sapiens in east Africa date back nearly 200,000 years.  Humans developed hearths for fire, stone points for spears and arrows, and cave paintings by 30,000 years ago.   By 10,000 years ago, humans had spread throughout the globe.   Genetic studies support the same picture.  Humans share more DNA with chimpanzees than with any other animal, suggesting that humans and chimps share a relatively recent common ancestor.  Also, the same defective genes appear in both humans and chimps, at the same locations in the genome—an observation difficult to explain except by common ancestry. Genetics also tells us that the human population today descended from more than two people. Evolution happens not to individuals but to populations, and the amount of genetic diversity in the gene pool today suggests that the human population was never smaller than several thousand individuals.  Yet all humans, of all races, are descended from this group.  Humanity is one family.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<em>Coming Soon</em>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 12 Jul 12 14:34:24 -0700</pubDate>
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        <title>Series: But Does it Move? John Lennox on Science and the Bible</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/but&#45;does&#45;it&#45;move&#45;john&#45;lennox&#45;on&#45;science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/but&#45;does&#45;it&#45;move&#45;john&#45;lennox&#45;on&#45;science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Taken from Chapter 2 of John Lennox&apos;s book Seven Days That Divide The World, this three part series looks at scripture interpretation. Lennox looks especially at the Galileo controversy regarding the movement of the Earth and why our own interpretations do not necessarily call into question the authority of the Scripture.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>How Should We Understand the Bible?</h3>

<p>The issue at stake in the Galileo controversy is, of course, how the Bible should be interpreted. So let us think about some general principles of interpretation before we apply them to the moving-earth controversy.</p>

<p>The first obvious, yet important thing to say about the Bible is that it is literature. In fact, it is a whole library of books: some of them history, some poetry, some in the form of letters, and so on, very different in content and style. In approaching literature in general, the first question to ask is, how does the author who wrote it wish it to be understood? For instance, the author of a mathematics textbook does not intend it to be understood as poetry; Shakespeare does not intend us to understand his plays as exact history, and so on.</p>

<p>Next, one should <em>in the first instance</em> be guided by the natural understanding of a passage, sentence, word, or phrase in its context, historically, culturally, and linguistically. The Reformers emphasized this in their reaction against the kind of interpretation that (to cite an ancient example) took the four rivers mentioned in Genesis 2—the Pishon, Gihon, Tigris, and Euphrates—to represent the body, soul, spirit, and mind, respectively. By contrast with this “allegorical” method of interpretation, the Reformers adopted an approach described by the <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em> in its definition of <em>literal</em>: “that sense or interpretation (of a text) which is obtained by taking its words in their natural or customary meaning, and applying the ordinary rules of grammar; opposed to <em>mystical, allegorical</em>, etc.,” and “hence, by extension, … the primary sense of a word, or … the sense expressed by the actual wording of a passage, as distinguished from any metaphorical or merely suggested meaning.”<sup>1</sup>  Of course, there is nothing new in this way of understanding literature: it is what all of us use every day in our reading and conversation, without even thinking about it.</p>

<p>The importance of considering the natural understanding of a passage is clear, when it comes to the basic teaching of the Christian faith. The crucial thing about Christianity’s fundamental doctrines is that they are first and foremost to be understood in their natural, primary sense. The cross of Christ is not a metaphor. It involved an actual death. The resurrection is not an allegory. It was a physical event: a “standing up again”<sup>2</sup> of a body that had died.</p>

<p>But this basic principle needs to be qualified. For instance, when we are dealing with a text that was produced in a culture distant from our own both in time and in geography, what we think the natural meaning is may not have been the natural meaning for those to whom the text was originally addressed. We shall consider this issue in due course.</p>

<p>At this stage we make a few general remarks about the way in which we use language. Some of us will be familiar with what I am about to say, but many of us may not have thought much about <em>how</em> we use language—we are too busy using it to bother. However, it will help us greatly if we spend just a little time thinking about this matter.</p>

<p>Firstly, there can be more than one natural reading of a word or phrase. For example, in Genesis 1 there are several instances of this. The word “earth” is first used for the planet, and then a little later for the dry land as distinct from the sea. Both times the word <em>earth</em> is clearly meant literally, but the two meanings are different, as is clear from their context.</p>

<p>Next, in many places a literal understanding will not work. Let’s take first an example from everyday speech. We all understand what a person means when they say, “The car was flying down the road.” The car and the road are very literal, but “flying” is a metaphor. However, we also are well aware that the metaphor “flying” stands for something very real that could be expressed more literally as “driving fast.” Just because a sentence contains a metaphor, it doesn’t mean that it is not referring to something real.</p>

<p>For a biblical example, take Jesus’ statement, “I am the door” (John 10:9). It is clearly not meant to be understood in the primary, literal sense of a door made of wood. It is meant metaphorically. But notice again that the metaphor stands for something real: Jesus is a real doorway into an actual, and therefore very literal, experience of salvation and eternal life. We should also note that the reason why we do not take this statement literally has to do with our experience of the world. We know about doors, and our experience of them helps us decide that Jesus is using a metaphor. We shall return to this point later.</p>

<p>Furthermore, it is impossible, as C. S. Lewis pointed out, to speak of things beyond our immediate senses without using metaphor. Scientists, therefore, use metaphor all the time. They talk about light particles and wave packets of energy; but they don’t intend you to imagine light as literal tiny balls, or energy as literal waves on the sea. Yet in each case the metaphor is describing something real—literal, if you like—at a higher level.</p>

<p>To make things more complicated, but also more interesting, sometimes both a primary and a metaphorical sense can occur together. Take the ascension of Christ, for example. In its primary sense it refers to the literal, vertical ascent of Jesus into the sky that was physically observed by the disciples.<sup>3</sup>  However, there is more to it than that. The literal upward movement carries a deeper meaning—he ascended to the throne of God. For instance, when we say that Queen Elizabeth II ascended the throne of England in 1952, we do not simply mean that she got up onto an ornate chair in Westminster Abbey. She did that, of course; but that (literal) getting up on the chair was at the same time a metaphor for her (literal) assumption of real power over her people. Similarly, the (literal) ascension of Christ is a metaphor of his (literal) assumption of universal authority.</p>

<p>In each of these examples we see how the word <em>literal</em> can turn out to be inadequate and even misleading, since there can be different levels of literality. It is therefore common nowadays to reserve the word <em>literalistic</em> for an adherence to the basic, primary meaning of a word or expression, and <em>literal</em> for the natural reading as intended by the author or speaker. Thus, reading the phrase “the car was flying down the road” in a literalistic way would mean understanding the car to be actually flying. Reading it literally—that is, in the natural sense—would mean that the car was going very fast. However, this usage of <em>literal</em> is not agreed by all, which often leads to confusion. We must, therefore, be careful with our use of <em>literal</em>.</p>

<p>I recall once talking about the Genesis creation narrative with a well-known astrophysicist, who suggested to me that it was primitive to believe the Bible. To illustrate a point, I wrote on his blackboard: “And God said, let there be light. And there was light.” He said: “That sounds really primitive. You don’t really believe it, do you? It suggests that God has a physical voice box and speaks like we do.” In other words, my colleague was taking the word “said” in its primary, natural, human sense—he was taking it literalistically. I laughed, and told him that it was now he who was being primitive. Of course God, who is spirit, doesn’t have a physical voice box, but he can communicate. In other words, the expression “And God said” denotes real, literal communication, but we do not have the slightest idea as to how it is done.</p>

<p>The word <em>said</em> means something different for God than it does for us,<sup>4</sup> but the two usages are sufficiently related for one word to do both jobs effectively. The reason I was amused when my astrophysicist friend made his remarks is that, as I reminded him, scientists use metaphors all the time without batting an eyelid. They, of all people, should not complain when the Bible uses them.</p>

<p>As a general point, it is worth recalling a perceptive remark made by Henri Blocher: “Human speech rarely remains at the zero-point of plain prose, which communicates in the simplest and most direct manner, using words in their ordinary sense.”<sup>5</sup>  What Blocher means is that we all use metaphors in our ordinary conversation. How colourless life would be without them.</p>

<p>There is more that could be said about the use of language, but perhaps we now have enough to grasp the basic idea. And I am sure the last thing the reader wants is for this book to turn into a lengthy lesson in English grammar!</p>

<p>It would be a pity if, in a desire (rightly) to treat the Bible as more than a book, we ended up treating it as less than a book by not permitting it the range and use of language, order, and figures of speech that are (or ought to be) familiar to us from our ordinary experience of conversation and reading.</p>

<p>If we take this into account, the answer to the question, “At what level should a text be read?” is often obvious. We take the natural, primary meaning; and if that doesn’t make sense, we go for the next level. For example, Jesus’ statements “I am the door” (John 10:9) and “I am the bread of life” (John 6:48). But there are instances where the answer does not seem to be so obvious, in the sense that believers in all ages who are fully convinced of the authority of Scripture come to different interpretations. What should we do in such a situation? That was the hot-button question in the time of Galileo.</p> 

<p class="intro">In part 2, Dr. Lennox applies these lessons to the historical controversy about whether the earth moves and what the Bible has to say (or not say) about it.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1. This is often called “the literal method.” We shall discuss the use of the word literal below.<br>
2. This is the meaning of the Greek word anastasis, used in the New Testament for “resurrection.”<br>
3. See Acts 1, written, it should be observed, by the historian Luke, who, as a doctor, had the nearest approximation to a scientific education of any of the New Testament writers. For Luke’s appreciation of the questions arising in connection with science and miracle, see David W. Gooding, According to Luke (Leicester, UK: Inter-Varsity, 1987), 37ff. For a scientific viewpoint see John C. Lennox, God’s Undertaker: Has Science Buried God? (Oxford: Lion Hudson, 2009), chap. 12.<br>
4. Indeed, when God speaks to certain people in the Bible, he uses human language, though how he does so is, of course, unknown to us. One might go further and say that God’s speech is the primary kind and that human speech is derivative—in the sense that we are made in God’s image.<br>
 5. Henri Blocher, In the Beginning (Leicester, UK: Inter-Varsity, 1984), 18.</p>

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        <pubDate>Fri, 06 Jul 12 12:53:58 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>John Lennox</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: The Genesis of Everything</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;genesis&#45;of&#45;everything?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;genesis&#45;of&#45;everything?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Theologian, historian and Christian apologist Dr. John P. Dickson addresses the history and interpretation of Genesis 1. Making no claims about human biological origins, Dickson urges us to treat the early chapters of Genesis as a literary and historical statement, and listen carefully to it on those terms.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Introduction: a heated debate</h3>

<p>It is obvious to anyone with even a cursory interest in the topic of ‘origins’ that the Bible’s opening creation account (Gen. 1:1–2:3)<sup>1</sup> has been the subject of a very heated debate in recent years between so-called ‘six-day creationists’ and those branded ‘scientific materialists’. These labels are frequently used in a pejorative sense, so let me flag that my use of these epithets is one of convenience not criticism.</p>

<p>The six-day creationists insist, largely on the basis of Genesis 1, that the universe was created in just one week about 6000 years ago and that no other interpretation of the biblical material is possible for those seeking to be faithful to Scripture as divinely inspired. The scientific materialists retort, largely on the basis of the scientific data, that such a view is patently false and that the universe is close to 14 billion years old. Therefore, the Judeo-Christian account of our origins, they say, must be dismissed as irrelevant for our day. There are, of course, innumerable ‘middle-positions’ that are less relevant to the argument of this paper.</p>

<p>In what follows, I hope to demonstrate that both sides of the debate—as they typically present themselves—make a similar mistake. They form their conclusions about the biblical account of creation in isolation from the conclusions of many mainstream contemporary biblical historians. And it is <em>as a historian</em> that I wish to address this theme.</p>

<p>Six-day creationists and scientific materialists approach the opening chapter of the Bible in a ‘literalistic’ fashion. I use the word ‘literalistic’ deliberately, as I want to distinguish between literalistic and literal. A literalistic reading takes the words of a text at face value, interpreting them with minimal attention to literary genre and historical context. A literal reading such as my own, on the other hand, gives serious consideration to both the literary style and the historical setting of a text. It tries to understand not only what is said but what is meant—i.e. what the original author intended to convey. Sometimes in literature what is <em>meant</em> and what is <em>said</em> do not have a one to one correspondence. In metaphor, for example, what is meant is greater than what is said (‘The Lord is my shepherd’, Ps. 23:1). In hyperbole what is meant is less than what is said (‘If your right hand causes you to sin, cut it off and throw it away’, Mt. 5:30). One can read such literary devices literally—trying to discern what the literature intends to convey—without reading them literalistically.</p>

<p>Both six-day creationists and scientific materialists approach Genesis 1 as if the original author had intended to narrate the mechanics of creation in historical prose. I believe this is a mistaken, literalistic reading. For over a century now, a great many biblical historians have detected in the Bible’s opening words a style other than simple prose and a purpose other than to explain how the universe was made. These two issues, genre and purpose, are critical for understanding this foundational portion of the Jewish and Christian Bible. In what follows, then, I want to unpack what many modern scholars are saying about these issues and demonstrate that, properly understood, Genesis 1 teaches nothing <em>scientifically</em> problematic for the modern enquirer. I emphasize the adverb ‘scientifically’, since there is plenty in Genesis 1 that is <em>theologically</em> and <em>existentially</em> confronting. That is the aim of the text, as I understand it.</p>

<p>But, first, an important clarification: I must emphasize that this paper assumes no particular view of human origins. The questions explored are literary and historical, not scientific. My rejection of the literalistic reading of Genesis 1 offers no direct support for old-earth, progressive creationism (or ‘theistic evolution’, as it is sometimes called), nor is it intended to do so. In fact, the case made below is consistent with virtually any scientific account of origins. To put it starkly but no less accurately, even if science ended up proving that the universe was created in six days around 6000 year ago, this happy correspondence between the scientific data and the <em>surface structure</em> of Genesis 1 would not affect my interpretation of the text at all. I would still insist that the opening chapter of the Bible does not aim to teach a particular cosmic chronology and that to suggest otherwise misconstrues the author’s original intention.</p>

<p>An analogy may help. Suppose that some clear historical evidence were discovered that around AD 29 a certain fellow from Samaria was travelling along the Jerusalem-Jericho road and came upon a Jewish man stripped of his clothes and beaten half to death. The Samaritan promptly tended to his wounds and paid two <em>denarii</em> for his care at a nearby guesthouse. Would this chance discovery—perhaps in some passing report by Josephus or Philo—have any bearing on the actual <em>point</em> being made in Jesus’ famous parable of the Good Samaritan (Luke 10:30–37) where precisely such details are narrated?  The answer is ‘No’. It would certainly be a happy coincidence if one of Jesus’ didactic illustrations turned out <em>also</em> to be a true story, but it would not alter the fact that the ‘parable’ itself—a well-known literary device of Jewish antiquity—was never intended to be heard as a historical narrative. Parables are narrative constructs with a moral or spiritual message. Whether they correspond to events in time is of no consequence. </p>

<p>The parable of the Good Samaritan, therefore, is (in theory) consistent with any view of the historicity of the story because <em>factuality</em> is not relevant to the genre. A person reading the text may, of course, believe that Jesus was telling a factual story—it may well be—but he or she could not argue that the story puts itself forward as such; it is obviously a parable (even though, interestingly, the story is not introduced as a parable in Luke’s Gospel).

The point here is <em>not</em> that Genesis 1 is also a parable. Not at all. I am simply emphasizing that some parts of Scripture, rightly interpreted, commit us to no particular view of the factuality of what is described. I do not believe that Genesis 1 <em>teaches</em> a six-day creation but this is neither an endorsement of theistic evolution nor a denial of six-day creationism. It is simply a literary and historical statement. I am happy to leave the science to the scientists.</p>

<h3>Interpretation of Genesis 1 in the pre-scientific era</h3>

<p>Before I give an account of what contemporary scholars are saying about the genre and purpose of Genesis, I want to establish for readers that a <em>non</em>-literalistic interpretation of Genesis 1 is by no means a recent phenomenon. Sceptical friends have often put it to me that my interpretation of Genesis 1 is really just an act of acquiescence to the troubling conclusions of modern science: ‘It is now clear that life emerged over a period of billions of years’, they say, ‘so now you are trying to appear respectable by picking and choosing how you read the Bible.’ Richard Dawkins has echoed this criticism with great flair recently (Dawkins 2006 pp. 237–238). Interestingly, six-day creationists say the same thing. They insist that the non-literalistic reading of Genesis 1 is the result of biblical scholars losing their nerve or being taken captive to the <em>Zeitgeist</em>.</p>

<p>It is never wise to second-guess the motives of scholars on such questions but, more significantly, it is important to realize that the precedents for a non-literalistic reading of Genesis 1 can be found in the very distant past. What follows is not intended as a proof or validation of my interpretation; it is simply a counter-argument to the above suggestion. Genesis 1 was being interpreted in a non-literalistic fashion long before modern science became a ‘problem’ for some Christians.</p>

<h3>The Jewish scholar Philo</h3>

<p>The prolific Jewish scholar, Philo, who lived and worked in Alexandria in the first century (10 BC – AD 50), wrote a treatise titled <em>On the Account of the World’s Creation Given by Moses</em>. In this work, Philo says that God probably created everything simultaneously and that the reference to ‘six days’ in Genesis indicates not temporal sequence but divine orderliness (Philo 13, 28). In the introduction to the Loeb Classical Library edition of this work the translators, FH Colson and GH Whitaker summarize Philo’s rather complex and subtle view of things:</p>

<blockquote>By ‘six days’ Moses does not indicate a space of time in which the world was made, but the principles of <em>order</em> and <em>productivity</em> which governed its making [original emphasis].</blockquote>

<p>It is perhaps important to note that Philo was not marginal. He was the leading intellectual of the largest Jewish community outside of Palestine.<sup>2</sup> How widespread his views were we do not know, but his discussion of the topic reveals no hint of controversy.</p>

<h3>The Greek ‘Fathers’</h3>

<p>Philo is followed in this interpretation by the second century Christian theologian and evangelist, Clement of Alexandria (AD 150–215), for whom the six days are symbolic (Stromata VI, 16). A generation later, Origen (185-254), the most influential theologian of the third century—again, an Alexandrian—understood Days 2–6 of the Genesis account as days in time. However, he regarded Day 1 as a non-temporal day. He reasoned that without matter, which was created on the second day, there could be no time; hence, no true ‘day’.<sup>3</sup> What is interesting here is that a leading Christian scholar of antiquity was comfortable mixing concrete and metaphorical approaches to Genesis 1 (Origen in Heine 1982).</p>

<h3>The Latin Fathers and beyond</h3>

<p>Moving to Latin-speaking scholars, the fourth century Bishop of Milan, Saint Ambrose (AD 339–397), taught a fully symbolic understanding of Genesis 1.<sup>4</sup> Moreover, his greatest convert, and perhaps history’s most influential theologian, Saint Augustine, famously championed a quite sophisticated, non-literalistic reading of the text. Augustine understood the ‘days’ in Genesis 1 as successive epochs in which the substance of matter, which God had created in an instant in the distant past, was fashioned into the various forms we now recognise (Augustine 2002). Augustine’s view was endorsed by some of the biggest names in the medieval church, including the Venerable Bede in the 8th century (<em>Hexaemeron</em> 1, 1), St Albert the Great (Commentary on the Sentence 12, B, I) and the incomparable Thomas Aquinas (II Sentences 12, 3, I) in the 13th century.<sup>5</sup></p>

<p>It must be said that such views were not the majority position during this period. The literalistic reading appears to have been the dominant one from the 5th-century through to today. In her review of the interpretations of Genesis 1-2 offered by the ancient Fathers, Elizabeth Clark argues that this concrete approach to the text developed in the 5th- century partly as a response to the ascetic, anti-creation heresies of the period. Only a literalistic understanding of the Bible’s creation account, it was thought, could preserve a truly biblical doctrine of the goodness of creation (Clark 1988 pp. 99-133).</p>

<p>Be that as it may, the larger point I wish to make is that a non-literalistic interpretation of Genesis 1 is not necessarily a nervous, modern reaction to the rise of contemporary science. It is a viewpoint (even if a minority one) with a long and venerable history in both Jewish and Christian traditions.</p>

<p>Having said this, there are aspects of the modern interpretation of Genesis 1 that only became possible in the 16th–19th centuries, at precisely the time of the scientific revolution. This is no coincidence. The Renaissance and Enlightenment periods precipitated a literary revolution in parallel with the scientific one. This was a time of increasing sophistication in the historical-critical analysis of ancient texts in their original languages. Out of such analyses have come particular conclusions about the genre and purpose of Genesis chapter 1.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. Genesis 1:1–2:3 is the literary unit under discussion, even though I will frequently refer to it as ‘Genesis 1’ or the ‘opening chapter of the Bible’.<br>
2. For a concise history of the Jewish community of the intellectual centre of Alexandria (and Philo’s place in it) see Binder 1999.<br>
3. In this, Origen echoes Philo who argued similarly about Day 1 in On the creation (Philo 15, 26-27, 34-35).<br>
4. For a history of interpretation of these sections of Genesis see Genesis 1-3 in the history of exegesis: intrigue in the garden (Robbins 1988). A detailed account of patristic (both Greek and Latin) interpretations of Genesis 1 is also found in Appendix 7 of St Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologiae (Aquinas 1967 pp. 202-210).<br>
5. For Aquinas’ own careful and even comparison of Augustine’s view of creation with other ancient Fathers see Summa Theologiae Ia. 74. (Aquinas 1967 pp. 1-3) Excellent articles on the interpretation of the ‘Six Days’ (Hexaemeron) among medieval theologians are found in Appendices 8 and 9 in St Thomas Aquinas Summa Theologiae (Aquinas 1967 pp. 211-224).</p>

<p class="intro">In the next post, Dr. Dickson examines the <em>genre</em> of Genesis 1.</p>

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        <pubDate>Sat, 30 Jun 12 13:50:54 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>John P. Dickson</dc:creator>
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        <title>Science and the Bible: Scientific Creationism, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;scientific&#45;creationism&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;scientific&#45;creationism&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>This is a very sensitive matter for creationist proponents, who tend to take a dim view of any speakers or seminars (such as this series) that present alternatives without openly condemning them.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My columns so far have prepared us to examine five different approaches to science and the Bible that are currently popular among Christians. Beginning today, I’ll identify core tenets or assumptions for each of those approaches.  I’ll start with propositions about the Bible, draw some conclusions, and then conclude with a short historical commentary—sometimes taking more than one post to cover all that ground.</p>

<p>According to numerous polls in recent decades, the single most popular view among American Protestants is the one I’m calling “scientific creationism,” or “young-earth” creationism (YEC). (Data reported by <a href="http://www.lifeway.com/ArticleView?storeId=10054&catalogId=10001&langId=-1&article=Research-Poll-Pastors-oppose-evolution-split-on-earths-age">LifeWay</a> and <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/americas-view-on-evolution-and-creationism-infographic">Gallop</a> are consistent with this.) It is this type of creationism that a federal district court ruled against in <a href="http://ncse.com/creationism/legal/mclean-v-arkansas">1982</a> and the Supreme Court ruled against in <a href="http://ncse.com/creationism/legal/edwards-v-aguillard">1987</a>, and it is usually this type of creationism the people have in mind when they use the word “creationism” without a preceding adjective. </p>

<p><a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com">Merriam Webster</a> defines “scientific creationism” as “a doctrine holding that the biblical account of creation is supported by scientific evidence.” That’s a decent definition, but the date given for its first use (1979) is obviously wrong. The late Henry Morris, the leading creationist of his generation, published <a href="http://img.infibeam.com/img/8e2e61a8/032/0/9780890510032.jpg">a work with this exact title</a> in 1974, as part of  an effort he spearheaded to get creationist ideas taught in public schools, <em>without</em> referencing the Bible. It was the <em>scientific</em> evidence for creation that he focused on. For a few years, some creationist works were published in two versions, one including biblical evidence and the other without it. Morris did not actually invent the term, which had already been used by some Seventh-day Adventist and Missouri Synod Lutheran authors. However, Morris is the best known example, and even though the strategy he endorsed is no longer in use, the term has stuck.</p>

<h3>Core Tenets or Assumptions of Scientific Creationism</h3>
<em><p>(1) God was the only eye-witness of the creation, and he has told us in Genesis exactly what took place. There can be no higher authority than this. Therefore, the Bible is the only truly reliable source of knowledge about the origin of the earth and the universe. </p></em>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_YEC_cartoon_1.jpg" alt="" height="241" width="590"  />

<p>This is a very sensitive matter for creationist proponents, who tend to take a dim view of any speakers or seminars (such as this series) that present alternatives without openly condemning them (see above). Old-earth interpretations of the Bible are seen as genuinely heretical and gravely harmful to the Bible, and thus to Christianity itself. Christians simply must not “compromise” by accepting an old earth. In speaking about such views, creationists often use the words “compromise” or “accommodation” as pejorative terms, such as in this <a href="http://img.amazon.ca/images/I/51M27NJNHML._SL500_AA300_.jpg">aptly titled book</a>. Now, take a close look at the subtitle: “A Biblical and Scientific Refutation of ‘Progressive Creationism’ (Billions of Years), as Popularized by Astronomer Hugh Ross.” When you realize that Ross is a staunch anti-evolutionist who directs a very <a href="http://www.reasons.org/">conservative apologetics ministry</a>, you see what I’m getting at: he’s hardly the first target one might think of in this context, yet his ministry was specifically targeted a few years ago by Ken Ham’s creationist organization, Answers In Genesis (for example, see <a href="http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/2002/08/23/hugh-ross-expose">this post</a>).</p>

<p>Likewise, consider what Ham himself has said about William Dembski, a leading advocate of ID and a strong opponent of theistic evolution. Ham has lamented, “how disappointing it is that Dr. Dembski holds a position at one of the premier Southern Baptist seminaries in the country,” a statement that Dembski understandably takes as a thinly veiled threat to his job. <a href="http://blogs.answersingenesis.org/blogs/ken-ham/2011/07/20/radio-host-hank-hanegraaff-supports-evolutionary-old-earth-proponent/">According to Ham</a>, Dembski “is really promoting a type of ‘theistic evolution’,” an analysis that simply boggles the imagination (Dembski’s response can be found <a href="http://www.uncommondescent.com/intelligent-design/bill-dembski-on-young-vs-old-earth-creationists-and-where-he-stands/">here</a>).</p>
<em><p>(2) Scientific evidence, when properly interpreted, is consistent with a literalistic interpretation of the Bible. </p></em>

<p>Many areas of science present no challenges to creationism, for they have no direct bearing on origins. As I pointed out in <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/galileo-and-the-garden-of-eden-part-2">my last column</a>, it’s only the “historical” sciences whose methods and conclusions are not acceptable to them. An idea known as “uniformitarianism” is often singled out as the prime offender, and it is typically contrasted with biblical catastrophism (indeed this came up exactly in this way in the comments on my last column). William Whewell (the same person who coined the word “scientist”) invented the word “uniformitarianism” in the 1830s to capture the essence of Charles Lyell’s “steady state” picture of earth history—a picture abandoned long ago. As used today, it means simply that physical processes in the past were like physical processes in the present in terms of how they actually work. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Uniformitarianism">Wikipedia account</a> is pretty good. </p>

<p>The acceptance of modern uniformitarianism entails the acceptance of an old earth. This is the ultimate reason why creationists reject it. As <a href="http://nwcreation.net/videos/Refuting_Compromise.html">chemist Jonathan Sarfati has said</a>, “Since the rise of uniformitarian ‘science’, there have been many compromises of Scripture away from its original meaning. But this has had baneful effects on the authority and sufficiency of Scripture. It also undermines the sin-death causality that underlies the Gospel teaching that Jesus died for our sins.”. For creationists, it’s just a few short steps from accepting an old earth to denying the gospel.</p>

<em><p>(3) The Bible tells us that the earth and the universe cannot be more than a few thousand years old, since Adam and Eve were created 6,000-12,000 years ago and the earth is only five days older than humanity. (Terry Mortenson <a href="http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/arj/v2/n1/systematic-theology-age-of-earth">gives this</a> as the possible range for dating the creation) Mainstream science, on the other hand, puts the age of the earth at about 4.6 billion years (BY) and the age of the universe at about 13.7 BY. Obviously these figures can’t be made consistent—someone here has to be very badly mistaken.</p></em>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/hovind_workbook.jpg" alt="" height="300" width="167" style="float:right; margin:0px 0px 10px 10px;" />As part of this idea, creationists believe that the original “created kinds” of living things were all created separately, in six 24-hour days.  It should also be noted that whatever the original “kinds” were, they do not correspond closely with any specific modern biological category, such as species or genus. Dinosaurs were actually created on the same day as humans, and they co-existed with us until some point after the Flood, as depicted on the cover of a widely distributed creationist workbook (right). A great deal of adaptation has taken place within the boundaries of the “created kinds,” however, especially since the Flood. One could say with some justification and irony, then, that creationists accept a lot of <em>very rapid</em> evolution, but they strictly limit its scope in order to deny a fully evolutionary scenario.   </p>

<p>The universe was also created very quickly, starting on the first “day” in Genesis with the creation of light. Creationists believe that the big bang is a false theory that contradicts the Bible and functions as a godless alternative to the Bible—despite the fact that many other Christians believe that the big bang provides powerful evidence for theism. </p>

<em><p>(4) The Flood was responsible for producing almost all fossils, during one year of human history rather than during hundreds of millions of years of earth history before we arrived on the scene. </p></em>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_YEC_cartoon_2.jpg" alt="" height="400" width="367" style="float:left;"/>This view is called “Flood Geology”. If it is true, then the fossil record (a collective noun that has no plural form, properly speaking) is just one enormous, world-wide photograph of a single moment in time, showing which organisms perished in the Flood. On the other hand, according to the mainstream scientific view, the fossil record is an enormous collection of individual photographs, taken at millions of individual moments and places, showing which organisms have lived at those times and places. From the latter collection of photographs, one can draw an evolutionary inference, but not from the single photograph associated with the former. In short, Flood Geology utterly undermines evolution; consequently, it’s absolutely crucial to Scientific Creationism. The definitive work arguing for Scientific Creationism is called <em><a href="http://www.icr.org/article/2719/">The Genesis Flood</a></em> for a reason. (For more on the history of this influential book, see <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Genesis_Flood:_The_Biblical_Record_and_Its_Scientific_Implications">this post</a>).</p>

<em><p>(5) The fall of Adam and Eve radically altered the laws of nature, such that the pre-fall world was very different from the post-fall world in which we now live. There was <em>no death</em> among higher animals (those that feel pain and suffer) prior to the fall. There were no carnivores, no parasites, and no disease organisms. </p></em>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_YEC_cartoon_4.jpg" alt="" height="442" width="350" style="float:right; margin:0px 0px 10px 10px;"/>The issue here is not a minor one: why is there suffering and death in the world? Does it all result from the first sin? It is no accident that, when this topic was debated in America before the Civil War, it was known as “death before the fall.” The larger issue is called <em><strong><a href="http://www.britannica.com/EBchecked/topic/590596/theodicy">theodicy</a></strong></em>. For YECs, there is no more important theological issue; indeed, to a significant degree, the “young” in the YEC view derives from a strongly felt need to interpret the “good” and “very good” of the creation week in terms of an original perfection akin to the perfection of heaven. </p>

<p>Many creationists used to link the fall with the onset of the second law of thermodynamics (entropy), which they called “the law of death and decay,” but this view is now much less popular.</p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>This is enough for now. On June 5th, we will continue our study of Scientific Creationism, drawing some conclusions about the YEC view and sketching its history. In the meantime, please explore the links and share your comments.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 05 Jun 12 05:00:13 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Adam&apos;s Dream</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/adams&#45;dream2?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/adams&#45;dream2?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>While the specific “how” of our being made into the image of God will probably always remain a mystery, the Bible and creeds are clear on the “why” of our creation: we were made to worship the Lord, and be in relation with Him and each other.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Discussion about Adam as the first divine "Image-bearer" often turns on the perceived conflict between scientific evidence contradicting belief in a single biological ancestor of all living human beings and Scriptural testimony that humans were made different from the rest of the creation: we have capacity to reflect the image of God.</p>

<p>Many posts on this Forum have suggested that the cosmological narrative in Genesis 1 is best read as being primarily about God’s identity and agency, rather than about the physical make-up or material history of the natural world.  Similarly, we demonstrate our highest regard for Genesis 2’s account of the creation of Eve—the second fully human being—by looking to its meaning in terms of spiritual and interpersonal relationships, rather than genetic ones.  While the specific “how” of our being made into the image of God will probably always remain a mystery, the Bible and creeds are clear on the “why” of our creation: we were made to worship the Lord, and be in relation with Him and each other.  That intimate, conscious and deeply symbolic knowledge of our maker and fellow human beings is a profound difference that sets us apart from the other creatures.</p>

<p>I have frequently argued that poets are often the most clear on some of the important issues of our faith, including this one.  Today we feature a work by Robert Siegel, who identifies the imagination as the faculty by which we recognize and name those spiritual relationships.  As he says, “It's the imagination, hence language and art, that establishes the connections”; it is the imagination that allows us to conceive of and name the links between ourselves and creation, ourselves and each other, ourselves and the Creator God.</p>

<p>Though we often focus on Adam’s naming of the animals, and then even of Eve, Siegel helps us remember that it was in <em>hearing</em> his own name that Adam’s whole humanity came into being: he experienced the richness of being called by God to bear His likeness, but also of being called to by one that was profoundly “like him.”  Put another way, we are speakers, but also equally hearers. May we, too, be awakened to ourselves and our image-bearing identity by a still, soft voice saying our name. May we, too, in gratitude and delight, call upon the name of the one, Jesus, who is both our God and our fellow man.</p>


<h3>“Adam’s Dream”</h3>
<p>by Robert Siegel</p>

<p><em>The Imagination may be compared to Adam's dream:<br />
he awoke and found it truth</em>. --Keats</p>

<p>He saw the garden spreading past the trees<br />
he'd been warned to avoid (yet keep a special eye on).<br />
He'd learned by scents, transported by the breeze,<br />
myriads of roses and how, by hand, the scion<br /><br />
of one to graft on another--and what was edible:<br />
whole families of legumes, grasses, roots,<br />
melons, peaches, apples, pears. Incredible,<br />
the variety of tastes just from the fruits!<br /><br />
But it wasn't enough. Even the breathing animals<br />
with friendly grunt or sigh, silken warm side,<br />
and large affectionate eye were not able<br />
to speak. When he named them, none replied:<br /><br />
His words fell dead on the air--though he said<br />
them everywhere, walking or running to each place:<br />
to the mountain, which echoed back the sounds he made,<br />
or the still pool, returning his own gaze.<br /><br />
But no one answered him until one night in a dream<br />
he woke and heard a soft voice speak his name.</p>

<p>“Adam’s Dream” first appeared in issue 3 of <a href="http://stonework03.blogspot.com/2005/11/stonework-issue-3.html" target="_blank">Stonework</a>, the literary journal of Houghton College. &copy; 2001 Robert Siegel</p><br> </br>

<p class="intro">Robert Siegel is the author of nine books of poetry and fiction, most recently <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1557254303/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=217145&creative=399369&creativeASIN=1557254303">A Pentecost of Finches: New and Selected Poems</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=&l=as2&o=1&a=1557254303&camp=217145&creative=399369" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. He has received prizes and awards from Poetry, Prairie Schooner, The Transatlantic Review, the Ingram Merrill Foundation, and the National Endowment for the Arts, and his poems have appeared in numerous journals and anthologies.  His fiction includes Alpha Centauri and the Whalesong trilogy, which received the Golden Archer and Matson awards.  With degrees from Wheaton, Johns Hopkins, and Harvard, Siegel has taught at Dartmouth, Princeton, and Goethe University in Frankfurt, and for twenty-three years at the University of Wisconsin-Milwaukee, where he directed the graduate creative writing program and is currently professor emeritus of English. He is married to Ann Hill Siegel, a photographer, and lives on the coast of Maine.</p><b></br>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 20 May 12 05:39:50 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
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        <title>Galileo and the Garden of Eden: The Principle of Accommodation and the Book of Genesis, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/galileo&#45;and&#45;the&#45;garden&#45;of&#45;eden&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/galileo&#45;and&#45;the&#45;garden&#45;of&#45;eden&#45;part&#45;1?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In 1615, Cardinal Bellarmine admitted that if there were “a true demonstration” of the Copernican theory, then we might need to reinterpret some biblical passages. When do we have enough evidence for a scientific conclusion to warrant a re&#45;interpretation of the Bible?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>When I introduced Galileo’s “Letter to the Grand Duchess Christina” in my last column, I focused on the letter itself and its immediate context. I left some other important aspects of this episode for another day. That day has now come.</p>
 
<p>What we will do here falls under three headings. First, we will examine what a leading Catholic theologian said about the earth’s motion and the Bible, at almost the same time when Galileo was writing his letter. Next, we will examine the attitude of a modern opponent of Galileo, in order to see why he objects to Galileo’s approach to the Bible. Finally, we will briefly look at how creationists today keep Galileo out of the garden of Eden—how they differentiate between Galileo’s use of accommodation for biblical passages about astronomy (where they generally agree with Galileo) and the adoption of a similar attitude for early Genesis (where they oppose applying Galileo’s strategy).</p>

<h3>Robert Bellarmine’s Approach to the Bible and Astronomy</h3>

<p>Early in 1615, a few months before Galileo finished his “Letter to Christina,” the Carmelite friar <a href="http://galileo.rice.edu/chr/foscarini.html">Paolo Foscarini</a> published a letter of his own about the Copernican system, whose title (translated into English) was “Letter concerning the Opinion of the Pythagoreans and Copernicus about the Mobility of the Earth and Stability of the Sun, and about the New Pythagorean System of the World.” Foscarini tried to reconcile the Bible and Copernican astronomy—the same thing Galileo did in his letter. He sent a copy of his letter to a Catholic theologian, <a href="http://galileo.rice.edu/chr/bellarmine.html">Roberto Cardinal Bellarmine</a>, an intellectual who had earned a reputation as a learned defender of the Catholic Church against various Protestant claims. Bellarmine replied both to Foscarini and to Galileo’s earlier letter to Castelli (see my previous column) in a letter he wrote to Foscarini on April 12, 1615.</p>

<p><a href="http://www.fordham.edu/halsall/mod/1615bellarmine-letter.asp">Please read that letter now</a>, before reading the rest of this column. (Note: The first sentence on this web site is entirely erroneous and should be ignored. Galileo had not yet finished his “Letter to Christina” when Bellarmine wrote to Foscarini.)</p>

<p>Let me highlight the most important parts of Bellarmine’s letter.</p>

<ul><li><p>First paragraph: Bellarmine has no objection to the Copernican hypothesis—provided that it is treated only as a purely mathematical model of the heavens that is useful for calculating where things can be seen on a given night. (This is what he means by “the appearances are saved…”) However, it must not be seen as a valid description of physical reality; that is, the earth does not <em>really</em> go around the sun, rather the sun goes around the earth. There was nothing out of the ordinary with Bellarmine’s suggestion—this is the overall attitude that astronomers had held since antiquity. It was also the attitude suggested by the anonymously written, unauthorized preface to Copernicus’ own book, <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/De_revolutionibus_orbium_coelestium">On the Revolutions of the Heavenly Spheres</a></em>. For more on that, see the section “Ad lectorem” (“to the reader”).</li>

<li><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/bellarmine.jpg" alt="" height="377" width="233"  style="margin: 5px 0px 0px 10px; float:right;"/>Second paragraph: Bellarmine makes a crucial point that can be understood only in the context of the Reformation. The <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Council_of_Trent">Council of Trent</a>, in which the Roman Catholic Church responded officially to the Protestants, forbids interpreting the Bible in ways that are not consistent with “the common agreement of the holy Fathers,” that is the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Patristics">Patristic</a> writers. In other words, if the early theologians had all held to a particular interpretation of a given biblical text, that interpretation could not be changed; it was binding on the Church henceforth—provided that it was a matter of faith, that is, a matter of theological importance to Christianity as the Roman Church understood it. That principle was intended for use against Protestant theological claims, which clearly were matters of faith, but in this instance Bellarmine applied it also to astronomy, which is not clearly a matter of faith. Bellarmine anticipated such an objection. His answer is that <em>all</em> statements in the Bible are matters of faith, in effect, because the Bible is the written words of the Holy Spirit. This reflects contemporary views of the inspiration of the Bible, as seen (for example) in Caravaggio’s painting, <em><a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/The_Inspiration_of_Saint_Matthew">The Inspiration of Saint Matthew</a></em> (1602), at right. The issue here—whether the inclusion of erroneous scientific views in the Bible (as we would judge it today) means that the Bible is not divinely inspired—is central to the whole conversation about science and the Bible. I’d like to see what you think.</li>

<li>Third paragraph: Bellarmine admits that, if there were “a true demonstration” of the Copernican theory, then we might need to reinterpret some biblical passages; but, if we can’t really prove it, then we are obligated to view it as a hypothetical mathematical model rather than a true description of physical reality. If possible, I’d like to avoid getting into the finer details of what “a true demonstration” meant, in the context of Aristotelian views of knowledge (the relevant category). It’s probably not too much of an oversimplification to say simply that Bellarmine’s view amounts to saying, “Where’s the beef?” This is also a key issue in modern debates about origins—when do we have enough evidence for a scientific conclusion (for example, the great age of the earth or the common descent of humans and other organisms) to say that a re-interpretation of the Bible is warranted? It is precisely on questions of this sort where creationists, theistic evolutionists, and most advocates of ID (those who oppose common descent) find that they disagree.</li></ul>

<p>Tomorrow—after you’ve had a chance to read Bellarmine’s letter and respond to it—we will bring the same issues down into our own day, by comparing how modern creationists (both those who reject Copernicus and those who don’t) view Galileo’s attitude toward science and the Bible.</p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 09 May 12 10:28:50 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Southern Baptist Voices: Kenneth Keathley</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;kenneth&#45;keathely?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;kenneth&#45;keathely?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The first entry in the Southern Baptist Voices series presents a unique ongoing dialogue between Kenneth Keathely, a significant voice for the Southern Baptist churches, and several BioLogos scholars. Carried out in a respectful and humble manner, Keathely simply expresses six areas in which he does not agree with the BioLogos approach to Genesis 1&#45;3. Darrel Falk, Kathryn Applegate and Deborah Haarsma then thoughtfully respond to each point in order to clarify the BioLogos’ view on each issue and, hopefully, remove any stumbling blocks.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This essay is the first in the series Southern Baptist Voices, a dialogue between Southern Baptist seminarians and representatives of the BioLogos perspective on science and Christian faith.  In this post, Part 1 of Dr. Keathley’s two-part paper, he outlines the first three of six areas of concern he has with BioLogos positions.  The remainder of his paper and a two-part BioLogos response will be posted beginning tomorrow.  For a more complete description of the project’s history and aims, please see our introduction <a href="/blog/sbv">here</a>.</p>

<p>I thank Darrel Falk for the opportunity to write this brief essay for the BioLogos website.  When Dr. Falk extended the invitation to me and other SBC seminary professors like me to write a series of essays, he knew full well that we would mostly express our concerns and disagreements with a number of BioLogos positions.  I commend Dr. Falk for his graciousness and bravery.  I intend at this time merely to introduce the topics about which my colleagues will write more extensively.</p>

<p>Professors at the six Southern Baptist seminaries subscribe to the Baptist Faith and Message (BF&M), the statement of faith adopted by the Southern Baptist Convention.  The BF&M provides a summary of Christian beliefs from a Baptist perspective, but it is conspicuously silent on three subjects: Calvinism, the nature of the millennial kingdom, and the age of the earth.  Because Southern Baptists hold to a spectrum of views on each of these hot-button items, no specific position is taken.  It is the third matter—creation, the age of the earth, and all the attendant matters, that concern us now.  The BF&M declares God to be the Creator of the Universe and describes humans as the special creation of God, but the confession has no section that deals specifically with the doctrine of Creation.</p>

<p>I think it would be safe to say that most (but not all) Southern Baptists hold to young-earth creationism (YEC).  Among the faculty of our six seminaries one would find a mix of YEC proponents and OEC (old-earth creationism) adherents.  I sometimes describe myself as a “disappointed young-earther.”  By that I mean I started out holding to the young-earth position but the shortcomings of most YEC arguments and the shenanigans of certain YEC advocates forced me to move to the OEC position.  I am not aware of any SBC seminary faculty who advocates theistic evolution or evolutionary creationism (EC).  Many (including me) are involved with or express sympathy to the intelligent design movement (ID).</p>

<p>So what are some of the concerns we have with evolutionary creationism as typically presented by the BioLogos Foundation?  Briefly, they are:</p>

<blockquote><p><strong>1.</strong> Concerns about theological method:  Christians cannot do theology in a vacuum.  Perhaps it is more accurate to say that theology is never done in a vacuum, and we should not pretend that it is.  And the BioLogos Foundation is correct in arguing that evangelicals cannot ignore the latest advances in biology, geology, and other related fields.  Our goal should be more than merely finding a way to reconcile Genesis with the latest discoveries in genetics.  Rather, our task as pastors and theologians is to present a theology of Creation that provides a solid worldview for Christians to work in the natural sciences with integrity for the glory of God.</p></blockquote>

<p>One gets the impression at times that evolutionary creationism is a theory in search of theological justification. It’s easy to see why believing scientists who hold to evolution would want to find ways that evolution could be compatible with orthodox Christian doctrine.  However, theologically speaking, the danger of the tail wagging the dog is very real.  Can one start with the Scriptures and arrive at anything resembling theistic evolution? Are we to start with a scientific conclusion and then look for biblical sanction?  I don’t think most scientists would want to do science the way evolutionary creationists seem to be asking theologians to do theology.</p>

<blockquote><p><strong>2.</strong> Genesis has only so much hermeneutical elasticity: Genre and hermeneutics (the science of interpretation) have always been difficult topics.  In the early days of the church, from Basil of Caesarea to Augustine, scholars struggled with the proper way to understand the creation account in Genesis.  Lately, however, the concordist and non-concordist approaches to the first 11 chapters of Genesis seem to be of unending and ever-increasing variety and complexity.  Theistic evolutionists have contributed to the conversation.  Certain evolutionary creationists ask us to accept more and more fanciful interpretations of Genesis.</p></blockquote>

<p>Take for example, the account of God creating Eve from Adam’s rib:</p>

<blockquote><p> “So the LORD God caused a deep sleep to fall upon the man, and while he slept took one of his ribs and closed up its place with flesh. And the rib that the LORD God had taken from the man he made into a woman and brought her to the man.”—Gen 2:21-22 (ESV)</p></blockquote>

<p>Should we understand, as some theistic evolutionists suggest, that the real message of these verses is that God gave a female hominid the same awareness of the divine that He gave to a male hominid?  Is this the intended meaning of the account?  I just don’t see how we can arrive at such an understanding with integrity.  The textual skin of Genesis 1-3 does not readily fit over an evolutionary drum.</p>

<p>Some evolutionary creationists treat the creation accounts in ways that are not far from the allegorical interpretations of Origen.  Hans Frei observed that such methods often hide an embarrassment about the biblical narrative.  They allow one to play fast and loose with the text while appearing to take the Bible seriously.  The BioLogos community has yet to convince Southern Baptist scholars that they are correctly handling the Genesis accounts.</p>

<blockquote><p><strong>3.</strong> The connection between natural history and salvation history:  This seems to be a (maybe, <strong>the</strong>) major area of disagreement between evolutionary creationists and intelligent design proponents.</p></blockquote>

<p>On the one hand, there is the modern evolutionary understanding of natural history (often called neo-Darwinism or something similar). Here is my understanding of that narrative: Certain elements of nature contained self-organizing and self-replicating properties.  These properties are able, from a natural perspective, to account for the information and complexity that were necessary for life to arise.  Once life began, random variation and natural selection are sufficient (again naturally speaking) to explain the diversity of life we see today.  Evolutionary creationists understand God to have guided and sustained the entire process by means of ordinary providence.  No direct divine activity is discernible or necessary.</p>

<p>On the other hand, the grand narrative of the Bible presents us with an account of Creation, Fall, Redemption, and eventual Consummation.  Salvation history presents God as the sovereign Lord, active in revealing and saving power.  He manifests himself throughout the Old and New Testaments in signs, wonders, and miracles, and culminates his saving work in the death and resurrection of Jesus Christ.  Ordinary providence is spiked with the mighty acts of God.</p>

<p>How does BioLogos connect the two narratives?  Are the two worldviews even compatible?  Southern Baptists affirm that ordinary providence is the way that God generally deals with His creation.  But salvation history is discontinuous.  It contains many moments in which the events that occur can be understood only as special, unique actions of God.  This is why creationists, whether they are YEC advocates, or OEC advocates, or even ID proponents, expect to find evidence of discontinuity in the natural record also.  To laymen (in scientific matters) like me, the relationship between BioLogos and ID proponents appears to be hostile.  And the debate seems to be over whether or not we should expect to find evidences of divine activity in the natural order.  The BioLogos proponents have not demonstrated how they understand the two narratives to come together.</p>

<p class="intro">Tomorrow, Dr. Keathley’s paper concludes by outlining the remaining three areas of concern many Southern Baptists have with the BioLogos approach to science and Christian faith.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 02 Mar 12 04:00:34 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Kenneth Keathley, Kathryn Applegate, Falk, Darrel, Haarsma, Deborah</dc:creator>
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        <title>Discerning Intention</title>
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        <description>In today&apos;s video, Revd. Dr. David Wenham discusses how defending the Truth of scripture doesn&apos;t always require an ultra&#45;literalistic interpretation.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/36424631?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Today's video features Revd. Dr. David Wenham, Senior Tutor in New Testament at Trinity College, Bristol, and author of several books on the New Testament, and is courtesy of filmmaker Ryan Pettey, director/editor of Satellite Pictures.</p>

<p>In today's video, Revd. Dr. David Wenham discusses how defending the Truth of scripture doesn't always require an ultra-literalistic interpretation.He sympathizes with those who fear that liberal theology gives away too much of the bible and notes that there are parts of Genesis to be taken literally, but he insists that those who seek the true meaning of scripture must respect the intention of the authors, whether we are reading the Gospels, parables, or Genesis. As he says, "Sometimes the most literal interpretation is not always the right interpretation."</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 08 Feb 12 10:04:55 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Wenham</dc:creator>
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