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      <item>
        <title>Motivated Belief: John Polkinghorne on the Resurrection, Part 3</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/motivated&#45;belief&#45;john&#45;polkinghorne&#45;on&#45;the&#45;resurrection&#45;part&#45;3?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/motivated&#45;belief&#45;john&#45;polkinghorne&#45;on&#45;the&#45;resurrection&#45;part&#45;3?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The real problem of belief in miracle is properly a theological issue, not a scientific one, since claims of unique historical occurrences lie outside science’s competence to adjudicate. All it can do is reinforce the commonsense recognition that something like a resurrection does not usually happen. The real challenge to belief in miracle lies elsewhere.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>This third excerpt from John Polkinghorne’s chapter on “Motivated Belief” is about Jesus. He also sets readers up for a subsequent discussion of the Resurrection (which I will present in the next column), with a brief consideration of what he calls “the <em>theological</em> problem of miracle” (my italics). Just one caveat: everything he talks about in this excerpt—and in the next one about the Resurrection—has been discussed at great length by many authors for many, many years. No one, not even a writer as eloquent and learned as Polkinghorne, can adequately summarize the complexity and wide range of that conversation in just a few pages. Polkinghorne himself has said more about this general topic elsewhere, and others have said a great deal more about it. These excerpts should be understood simply as short, accessible introductions to the attitudes and instincts of a “bottom-up thinker” on this crucial topic.</p>

<p>My editorial policy for these excerpts is explained at the bottom of this post.</p>

<h3>Motivated Belief (part 3)</h3>

<p>Jesus had a comparatively short public ministry, but it had enormous local impact, drawing crowds who were anxious to hear his words and who often sought the healing ministry that he exercised. Then, on a last visit to Jerusalem, it all seemed to fall apart. The authorities, civil (Roman) and religious (Jewish) acting together, moved in to avoid trouble. Jesus was arrested and hastily executed, suffering the painful and shameful fate of crucifixion, the kind of death reserved for slaves and rebels and seen by pious Jews as being a sign of God’s rejection (“any one hung on a tree is under God’s curse,” Deuteronomy 21:23). Except for a few staunch women, his followers ran away, overcome by despair and disappointment. From the place of execution there came the cry “My God, my God, why have you forsaken me?” (Matthew 27:46; Mark 15:34).</p>

<p class="caption-left"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/giotto_di_bondone_2.jpg" /><br />
Giotto di Bondone, <em>The Arrest of Christ</em> (Kiss of Judas)<br />(ca. 1304-06), fresco, Cappella Scrovegni, Padua</p>

<p>On the face of it, Jesus’s death seems a moment of pathetic failure, the final disillusionment of the followers of a rejected man whose grand pretensions had suddenly and definitively been found wanting. If that really was the end of the story of Jesus, I believe that most of us would never have heard of him. At best he would have seemed to be no better than other first-century messianic pretenders whose causes also finally failed. So the first remarkable thing about Jesus is that he is known to all of us. We need to look closer into the New Testament to find out why, against all reasonable expectation, his story continued beyond his death.</p>

<p>Amid the variety of its component writings, there are certain common themes that recur in the New Testament. Three of the most important themes are:</p>

<p><strong>(1)</strong> All the [biblical] writers believe that the story of Jesus continued because God raised him from the dead on the third day after his crucifixion. We shall have to pay further attention to this extraordinary claim, but the existence of the New Testament, and the character of its contents, are unintelligible without the recognition that this is what its writers are affirming.</p>

<p><strong>(2)</strong> In wrestling with what they believe to be their experience of the risen Christ, the writers are driven, in their different ways, to speak of Jesus in a quite extraordinary manner. They know that he was a man living in Palestine in their own times, yet in the accounts they give they often seem driven to employ not only obvious human categories, but also to use language that is only appropriate to deity. The Pauline epistles are probably of the earliest Christian writings known to us, certainly antedating the gospels. Already Jesus of Nazareth is being referred to in remarkable terms. Paul begins almost all his letters with some such phrase as “Grace to you and peace from God our Father and the Lord Jesus Christ” (Romans 1:7; 1 Corinthians 1:3; and so on). Not only is Jesus being bracketed with God in a manner that would, for example, have been inappropriate for a pious Jew to use in relation to Moses, the servant of God, but he is also accorded the title “Lord.” While this word (<em>kyrios</em>) had a widespread secular usage amounting to no more than politeness of address, its Hebrew counterpart, <em>adonai</em>, also had a special Jewish religious usage as an acceptable circumlocution in place of the unutterable divine name, YHWH, a particular significance which the religious context of Paul’s greeting could scarcely fail to invoke. The gospel of John portrays Jesus as claiming unity with God (John 10:30, words uttered in a situation where the hostile crowd are shown as having no difficulty in detecting what they see as the blasphemous implication), and it assigns to Jesus the use of images (the bread of life, the true vine, and so on) which carry implications of more than human status. The Writer to the Hebrews proclaims that “in these last days [God] has spoken to us by a Son, whom he appointed the heir of all things and through whom he also created the worlds” (Hebrews 1:2). Examples could easily be multiplied.</p>

<p>It is clear that when it comes to Jesus, the New Testament writers cannot rest content with the standard Jewish repertoire for speaking of people with special gifts from God—the categories of prophet, teacher, healer—but, against all their instincts as monotheistic Jews, they are driven to use divine-sounding language about him. Remember that they are referring to a near contemporary, and not to some shadowy figure of a legendary past. The New Testament very seldom out and out calls Jesus God (the confession of Thomas in John 20:28 is perhaps the clearest example), but its pages manifest a continual tension between the use of human and divine manners of speaking about him. The problem thus posed is unresolved in the New Testament itself, but succeeding Christian generations had to address it and eventually the Church was led to the distinctive and extraordinary doctrinal concept of the incarnation, the affirmation of the presence of deity in the life of this first-century Jew, who truly was the Son of God.</p>

<p><strong>(3) </strong>Coupled with this recourse to divine language, and fuelling its fire, was a firm conviction among those first-generation Christians that the risen Christ had brought into their lives a new and transforming experience of saving power. Paul wrote to the Corinthians, “if anyone is in Christ, there is a new creation: everything old has passed away; see everything has become new!” (2 Corinthians 5:17). I believe that an adequate Christology (a true understanding of the nature of Jesus) must satisfy the criterion of affording an adequate soteriology (a true understanding of the power of Christ in human lives, to which the Church has continued to give its testimony down through the centuries). The doctrine of the incarnation implies that in the Word made flesh a unique bridge was established between the created life of humanity and the uncreated life of God, and in this meeting of divine power and human nature there lies a way of understanding the fulfillment of the soteriological criterion.</p>

<p class="caption-center"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/giotto_di_bondone_3.jpg" />​<br />
Giotto di Bondone, <em>Resurrection</em> (Do not Touch Me) (ca. 1304-06), fresco, Cappella Scrovegni, Padua</p>

<p>These three lines of testimony need to be presented for consideration by anyone seeking to understand the significance that Jesus of Nazareth holds for Christian belief. In the context of science the discussion of the persuasiveness of that belief cannot be conducted satisfactorily without a detailed engagement with these claims. The task is indispensable to honest enquiry and it is made all the more important today by the fact that many people seem to have so little knowledge of what the New Testament actually says.</p>

<p>The pivot on which the claim of a unique and transcendent significance for Jesus must turn is clearly the resurrection. If in fact he was raised from the dead to a new and unending life of glory, then it is indeed credible that he has an altogether unique status and role in salvation history. If, sadly, his life ended in failure and his body was left to molder in the grave, then he seems at best little different from many other prophetic figures who have suffered martyrdom for holding fast to the integrity of their beliefs. The quest for motivated Christian faith has to begin by focusing on the question of the resurrection. I believe that it would be a serious apologetic mistake if Christian theology thought that operating in the context of science should somehow discourage it from laying proper emphasis on the essential centrality of Christ’s resurrection, however counterintuitive that belief may seem in the light of mundane expectation.</p>

<p>As a preliminary one must first face the general issue of miracle. It was as clear in the first century as it is today, that it is wholly contrary to any reasonable natural expectation that a man should be resurrected within history. While there were parties in first-century Judaism which expected a general resurrection at the end of history [for example, <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pharisees#The_afterlife">the Pharisees</a>], none expected the resurrection of a specific person to take place within history, even if there was some hope that a prophetic figure, such as Elijah, might have been stored up in heaven in order to be returned for a further spell of earthly life at some critical juncture in Jewish history. It is important here to recognize the distinction between resuscitation and resurrection. The former applies to someone like Lazarus, who is portrayed in John’s gospel as being called out of the tomb after an apparent death (John 11), but who was undoubtedly expected by all to die again in due course. Resuscitation is only a temporary reprieve from mortality. Resurrection, on the other hand, implies a transition from this mortal life to a new form of glorified life, lived without end in the presence of God. Resurrection is a permanent victory over mortality. The possibility of resurrection lies wholly outside the context of scientific explanation. If the resurrection of Jesus happened, it could only have been through a special exercise of divine power. In short, resurrection is, in the strict sense of the word, a miracle.</p>

<p>The real problem of belief in miracle is properly a theological issue, not a scientific one, since claims of unique historical occurrences lie outside science’s competence to adjudicate. All it can do is reinforce the commonsense recognition that something like a resurrection does not usually happen. The real challenge to belief in miracle lies elsewhere. It is theologically inconceivable that God should act capriciously as a kind of celestial conjurer, doing a turn today that God did not think of doing yesterday and won’t be bothered to do tomorrow. The theological problem of miracle is that of discerning divine consistency in the face of a claim of radically novel action. How that consistency is understood depends upon a proper understanding of what is involved in speaking of God in personal terms. I have already said that divine action is not to be assimilated to a kind of impersonal and unchanging process, similar to that which characterizes the law of gravity. If personal language is to mean anything when used about God, it must imply a divine freedom to respond in particular and different ways to particular and different situations, including even the rational possibility of unprecedented action in unprecedented circumstances.</p>

<p>Once again we encounter the unavoidable necessity of hermeneutic circularity. Of course, persons are not normally resurrected in history, but if there is something truly unique about Jesus (the Son of God), then his story could conceivably have included unique events. Equally, if he was resurrected, this was surely a sign that he indeed did have an altogether unique status. However, if he was just another prophet, then the story of his resurrection is likely to be no more than a touching legend. Both possibilities have to be considered. To believe in the resurrection rightly requires significant motivating evidence, a question to which we shall turn shortly, but its possibility should not be ruled out absolutely from the beginning, before even considering what evidence there might be for this counterintuitive belief. Moreover, it is important to note that the Christian understanding of Christ’s resurrection is that it occurred within history as the unique seed event from which a resurrected destiny for all people will come about beyond history (“for as all die in Adam, so all will be made alive in Christ”; 1 Corinthians 15:22). In this sense, what Christian theology sees as unique about the resurrection is its timing, rather than its occurrence. Further consideration will be given to this point in the succeeding chapter.</p>

<p class="caption-right"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/giotto_di_bondone_4.jpg" /><br />
​Giotto di Bondone, <em>The Last Judgment </em>(detail, ca. 1304-06),<br />fresco, Cappella Scrovegni, Padua</p>

<p>[The succeeding chapter, which will not be part of this series, deals with <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Christian_eschatology">eschatology</a>. Polkinghorne’s reference in the penultimate sentence to the unique timing of the resurrection can be fleshed out by quoting from the chapter on eschatology: “The eschatological destinies of human beings and of the whole universe lie together in the world of God’s new creation. &lt;SNIP&gt; In Christian thinking, the seed event from which this new creation has already begun to grow is the resurrection of Christ. His tomb was empty because the matter of his corpse had been transmuted into the ‘matter’ of the new creation, to become his risen and glorified body in which he appeared to the first witnesses.” In other words, the resurrected Jesus is “the first fruits of them that sleep,” in the glorious words of 1 Corinthians 15:20.]</p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>

<p>In about two weeks, we will see how Polkinghorne brings his search for “motivated belief” to bear on the biblical narratives about the Resurrection.</p>

<h3>References and Credits</h3>

<p>Excerpts from John Polkinghorne, <a href="http://yalepress.yale.edu/book.asp?isbn=9780300149333"><em>Theology in the Context of Science</em></a> (2009), copyright Yale University Press, are reproduced by permission of <a href="http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/">Yale University Press</a>. We gratefully acknowledge their cooperation in bringing this material to our readers.</p>

<h3>Editorial Policy</h3>

<p>Most of the editing for these excerpts involves breaking longer paragraphs into multiple parts, altering the spelling and punctuation from British to American, removing the odd sentence or two—which I indicate by putting [SNIP] at the appropriate point(s)—and sometimes inserting annotations where warranted [also enclosed in square brackets] to provide background information. Polkinghorne uses footnotes a bit sparingly, and I usually find another way to include that information if it’s important for our readers.</p>
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        <pubDate>Thu, 09 May 13 08:00:44 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Does Resurrection Contradict Science?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;resurrection&#45;contradict&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;resurrection&#45;contradict&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>So what then does Resurrection mean? For Benedict it represents a new dimension of reality breaking through into human experience. It is not a violation of the old; it is the manifestation of something new.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The scientific case against resurrection is pretty straightforward: once dead you stay dead -- that's just the way it works. Coming back to life after having been dead (I mean <em>really</em> dead) would constitute a violation of natural law -- a miracle -- and miracles just don't happen. Fair enough. But in his recent book on the last days of Jesus (<em>Jesus of Nazareth Holy Week: From the Entrance Into Jerusalem to the Resurrection</em>), Joseph Ratzinger (aka Pope Benedict XVI) argues that reckoning Resurrection as resuscitation of a corpse is to misunderstand its true significance. Jesus' Resurrection, he contends, was an utterly singular event, straining the very limits of human understanding:</p>

<p>"Anyone approaching the Resurrection accounts in the belief that he knows what rising from the dead means will inevitably misunderstand those accounts and will then dismiss them as meaningless" (p. 243).</p>

<p>In fact, if Jesus' Resurrection were "merely" coming back to life in any way that we might comprehend, then it would be of little significance.</p>

<p>"Now it must be acknowledged that if in Jesus' Resurrection we were dealing simply with the miracle of a resuscitated corpse, it would ultimately be of no concern to us" (p. 243).</p>

<p>So what then does Resurrection mean? For Benedict it represents a new dimension of reality breaking through into human experience. It is not a violation of the old; it is the manifestation of something new.</p>

<p>"Jesus had not returned to a normal human life in this world like Lazarus and the others whom Jesus raised from the dead. He has entered upon a different life, a new life -- he has entered the vast breadth of God himself..." (p. 244).</p>

<p>Because it is something entirely new, it cannot represent a violation of natural law as understood by science.</p>

<p>"Naturally there can be no contradiction of clear scientific data. The Resurrection accounts certainly speak of something outside our world of experience. They speak of something new, something unprecedented -- a new dimension of reality that is revealed. What already exists is not called into question. Rather we are told that there is a further dimension, beyond what was previously known. Does that contradict science? Can there really only ever be what there has always been? Can there not be something unexpected, something unimaginable, something new? If there really is a God, is he not able to create a new dimension of human existence, a new dimension of reality altogether?" (p. 246-7)</p>

<p>Thus, in this view, Resurrection (as with all true miracles) is not contrary to science, but an indicator that science does not (yet?) describe the full expanse of reality. Indeed, some may argue that science itself contains similar "indicators." The 11 (or so) dimensional universe required by some versions of string theory, the multiverse theory of the universe where ours is but one of an infinite array of universes with variable physical laws, quantum entanglements, "spooky" action at a distance, the mysterious emergence of consciousness from inorganic matter -- all push the limits of human reason and imagination, suggesting to some that reality may be far more complex than the human mind can grasp.</p>

<p>For a moment, let us entertain the possibility that Resurrection is as Benedict interprets it: not a violation of natural law but an indicator of something beyond our scientific understanding of the universe. This has interesting implications for understanding how believers and skeptics approach the issue. If Resurrection does not violate science, then science does not necessarily constitute an impediment to accepting the reality of Resurrection. If the difference between the skeptic and believer is not science, then is it just a matter of imagination? The believer imagines greater possibilities for the universe than the non-believer. While this is possible, it seems questionable. To my knowledge, no research has found differences in imaginative abilities between religious and non-religious people. Moreover, contrarian examples easily come to mind: Isaac Asimov was an atheist but hardly lacking in imagination when it came to science fiction. I tend to think that both believers and non-believers can imagine (with varying degrees of effort, I'm sure) the new possibilities implied by Resurrection.</p>

<p>Thus, if it is neither imagination nor science that prompts skepticism about Resurrection, then what is left? I suggest that it comes down to a question of authority: At what point does one allow imaginative possibilities to have authority over how one lives? To the believer, Resurrection has an authority that science fiction does not. Resurrection is not thought-provoking entertainment. It requires far more than just imagining greater possibilities for the universe. It requires a change of life, here and now. Unlike the microscopic hidden dimensions of string theory, the new dimension implied by Resurrection has "broken though" into everyday reality and demands a response -- even if that response is to actively ignore it.</p>

<p>Now, what convinces the believer that Resurrection merits such authority when other imaginative possibilities such as extraterrestrial life or time-travel do not? The answer here appears to be historical commitment. There's no record of people committing themselves to the point of martyrdom to other imaginative possibilities as they have to Resurrection. The earliest example of such commitment being found, of course, in the dramatic post-crucifixion turn-around of the Apostles. Such an astounding change of heart, followed by an unwavering commitment capable of altering human history demands a categorically unique explanation: Resurrection.</p>

<p>The believer's argument, however, remains unconvincing to the skeptic. However impressive they might be, a change of heart and steadfast commitment do not necessarily add up to a new dimension of reality. Extraordinary claims require extraordinary evidence. Fair enough. So a key question regarding the interpretation of Resurrection is this: Is the post-crucifixion history of Christianity extraordinary? Does it compel the dispassionate observer to concede that a categorically unique event could plausibly be its best explanation?</p>

<p>It ought to be upon questions such as those above that skeptics and believers respectfully engage one another, rather than the simplistic and often acrimonious sloganeering that has increasingly become the norm.</p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 13 12:58:35 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Matt J. Rossano</dc:creator>
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        <title>A Scientific Commentary on Genesis 7:11</title>
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        <description>Although committed to the principle of sola Scriptura, Calvin recognized that the Bible would have been written in terms its original recipients would have understood. Calvin inherited the medieval cosmology of his time, a way of viewing the world heavily influenced by Greek thought and one which was about to receive shocks from astronomers such as Copernicus and Galileo. But not just yet.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p><strong>Genesis 7:11</strong>: In the six hundredth year of Noah's life, in the second month, on the seventeenth day of the month, on that day all the fountains of the great deep burst forth, and the windows of the heavens were opened.</p>

<p><strong>Genesis 8:1</strong>: But God remembered Noah and all the wild animals and all the domestic animals that were with him in the ark. And God made a wind blow over the earth, and the waters subsided; 2 the fountains of the deep and the windows of the heavens were closed, the rain from the heavens was restrained, 3 and the waters gradually receded from the earth.</p>

<hr />

<p>The Flood narrative of Genesis 7-9 has played a prominent role in science and religion debates for over three hundred years and gave rise in earlier centuries to geological theories such as old earth catastrophism. While literary studies have uncovered the chiastic structure of the Flood story (see Gordon Wenham, “The Coherence of the Flood Narrative” Vetus Testamentum 28 (1978):336-48) and with it the theological pivot point of the entire narrative (Gen. 8:1 – “And God remembered Noah…), much of the popular attention remains on the questions regarding details (Is there THAT much water in the world to cover ALL the mountains to a depth of 15 cubits? Could you really fit two or seven of every animal species in an ark that size?) </p>

<p>Looking at a smaller matter, we find at the beginning and the middle of the narrative indications of an ancient Near Eastern worldview. As the story is told, the flood was not merely the result of excessive rain, but actually the convergence of the waters above the earth with the waters below the earth. It is, as one translation puts it, as if the sluice gates at the deep and of the heavens were thrown open and water poured in from above and below. This is a consistent picture from the Old Testament of a three-tiered universe—a dome above the earth holding back the heavenly waters, a flat earth with water on its surface, and water under an earth which is held up by pillars. </p>

<p>That the story is told using the cosmology of its time should not be unduly unsettling, nor that the story is reinterpreted as new understandings of the universe come into favor. By way of example, consider John Calvin and his understanding of the structure of the universe. Although committed to the principle of sola Scriptura, Calvin recognized that the Bible would have been written in terms its original recipients would have understood.   </p>

<p>Calvin inherited the medieval cosmology of his time, a way of viewing the world heavily influenced by Greek thought and one which was about to receive shocks from astronomers such as Copernicus and Galileo. But not just yet. Calvin still subscribed to the common conception of his day in which the four elements—earth, air, fire, and water—comprised the earthly sphere and possessed unique characteristics. The nature of air and fire was to rise, while the nature of earth and water is to sink.  Earth, being heavier than water, should sink to the center of the cosmos and water should compose the next layer. Both earth and water are spherical, i.e., naturally form spherically around the cosmic center. Thus the heavier spherical element of earth should be encased entirely within the lighter spherical element of water.</p>

<p>Notice what this does to the flood story. For Calvin, the amazing thing is that the world isn’t constantly under water and subject to flooding. In the cosmology of Calvin’s day, it does not take an act of God to cause a universal flood, but rather an actively present and restraining hand of God to keep the waters back in everyday circumstances and make inundation by water something other than universal. </p>

<p>Obviously, Calvin was wrong. Or perhaps we should say that medieval cosmology was flawed and justifiably gave way to new conceptions of the universe. The answer is not to return to an ancient Near Eastern cosmology, but to reinterpret cautiously within new and better cosmologies and to pay closest attention to the text and the theology of scripture.  </p>

<p>The geological and planetary sciences bring their own unique contributions and are of more interest than the latest expedition to discover the ark on Mt. Ararat. Is the flood story a universalization of a catastrophic regional event that burned itself into the psyche of ancient cultures in the Mediterranean basin? Various theories regarding a Black Sea venue for a catastrophic flood event are still in process of being sorted out. It’s intriguing. Or the question where the water on Planet Earth comes from? Was it always here as an emanation of vapors from the earth’s crust in its early formation, or has it accumulated over eons through the steady bombardment of earth by small, icy comets? It’s an intriguing scientific question that is in the midst of determination through testing.</p>

<h3>Preaching Suggestions</h3>

<p>When preaching on the story of the Flood, it is easy to get lost in the debates over particulars. As mentioned elsewhere, to tackle all the peripheral issues threatens to turn a sermon into a geology lecture. Other settings are better suited to addressing those questions, and those are best addressed open-endedly. </p>

<p>A brief explanation of ancient Near Eastern cosmology can be helpful to contextualize the story. If there are those who are tempted to think that a cosmology embedded in the Bible must be inspired and definitive, one can note that cosmology has changed by the New Testament. The Bible itself isn’t wed to a particular structure of the universe. </p>

<p>What is important is to keep the theology of the text front and center, and in that theology there are at least three non-negotiables from the flood narrative. First, human sin and violence threatens to undo a good creation (the flood is a de-creation event, a return of the waters mentioned in Genesis 1:2). Second, God remembers Noah, and never forgets his promises. Third, the end of the flood is a covenant with the whole earth regarding the stability and endurance of the natural order.
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        <pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 13 08:00:43 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Rolf Bouma</dc:creator>
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        <title>Creator of the Stars at Night</title>
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        <description>The God who created the cosmos is the God who came to us as a child in Bethlehem.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<br /><p>Tonight and tomorrow, Christians around the world stop to remember and celebrate the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem just over two thousand years ago.  The familiar narrative of Joseph leading Mary to the stable to give birth to the Messiah, of the angels telling the shepherds in the fields of the great event that was happening nearby, and of the three men from the east who came to pay homage to the new King of Israel is re-told or acted out in countless churches, schools and homes.  And from countless pulpits, the message goes out that those events are not just a quaint story and an excuse to give gifts, but the central mystery of our faith—that God himself became one of us in order to redeem us and the cosmos from our bondage to sin and death. That mystery—that the Creator God is also the Redeemer Christ—has been to focus of our worship since the first days of the church, and is the subject of the 7th-century Latin hymn Conditor alme siderum, presented here in a new setting from Alex Mejias and <a href="http://highstreethymns.com/" target="_blank">High Street Hymns</a>.</p>  

<p>While this recording includes only verses one and three from the original text (given in full below), it adds a refrain that catches the spirit of the whole hymn and emphasizes the longing we still feel even in our Christmas joy—the “already, but not yet” state in which we find ourselves today, living between that first Advent and the second Advent yet to be: “Come, O come to us!”  For while we know that God has come to us in Jesus—that his death and resurrection have redeemed us and the universe—we are still waiting for that final consummation, depending on the Spirit to be working out our salvation even now.  Until the time when, as the hymn says, “all hearts must bow,” the entire BioLogos community invites you to join us in the blessed work of declaring, celebrating, and following the Christ who is both Creator and Savior.</p>


<h3>Creator of the Stars at Night</h3>

<em><p>Creator of the stars of night,<br /> 
 thy people's everlasting light, <br /> 
O Christ, Redeemer of us all, <br /> 
we pray you hear us when we call.</p>

<p>In sorrow that the ancient curse<br /> 
 should doom to death a universe, <br /> 
you came, O Savior, to set free <br /> 
your own in glorious liberty.</p>

<p>When this old world drew on toward night, <br /> 
you came; but not in splendor bright,<br /> 
 not as a monarch, but the child <br /> 
of Mary, blameless mother mild.</p>

<p>At your great Name, O Jesus, now<br /> 
 all knees must bend, all hearts must bow; <br /> 
all things on earth with one accord,<br /> 
 like those in heaven, know you are Word.</p>

<p>Come in your holy might, we pray, <br /> 
redeem us for eternal day;<br /> 
 defend us while we dwell below <br /> 
from all assaults of our dread foe.</p>

<p>To God Creator, God the Child,<br /> 
 and God the Spirit, sane and wild, <br /> 
praise, honor, might, and glory be <br /> 
from age to age eternally.</p>
</em>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/HSH-Album-Cover.gif" alt="" height="349" width="350" style="float:right;padding:10px 10px 10px 10px;" />

<p class="intro">Alex Mejias is the founder and director of <a href="http://highstreethymns.com/" target="_blank">High Street Hymns</a>, a non-profit music ministry that exists to spread the Gospel and worship the Triune God in spirit and truth through hymns, psalms and spiritual songs. Alex grew up in New Jersey and outside Washington, DC, receiving a BA in Religious Studies from the University of Virginia and a J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law.  For the past 15 years he has been leading worship for churches and ministries, writing and recording both new and old hymns, and touring the east coast as a singer-songwriter.  Alex is also committed to the power of the creative arts to advance the Gospel and promote justice and healing in the name of Christ, serving, supporting, and collaborating with several other non-profit ministries.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 24 Dec 12 10:34:31 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Dec 24, 2012 10:34</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Looking at the Collapsing Universe in the Bible</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/looking&#45;at&#45;the&#45;collapsing&#45;universe&#45;in&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/looking&#45;at&#45;the&#45;collapsing&#45;universe&#45;in&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The language of a collapsing universe is related to the end of the old covenant and the coming of the new covenant as God’s “new world order.”</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Creation and Decreation</h3>

<p><blockquote>When he opened the sixth seal, I looked, and behold, there was a great earthquake, and the sun became black as sackcloth, the full moon became like blood, and the stars of the sky fell to the earth as the fig tree sheds its winter fruit when shaken by a gale. The sky vanished like a scroll that is being rolled up, and every mountain and island was removed from its place. (Revelation 6:12–14)</blockquote></p>

<p>The non-concordist view of science and Scripture argues that Biblical texts about creation were never intended to concord with modern scientific theories. Thus, Genesis 1 is not cryptically describing the Big Bang or instant fiat, a young earth or old earth, special creation or evolutionary creation. It is not “literal” language describing the physics of the universe; it is “literary” genre describing God’s sovereignty over creation and most likely his covenantal relationship with his people.</p>

<p>But the argument against literalism of language of the creation of the heavens and the earth is also applicable to the language of the destruction of the heavens and the earth, or what the Bible calls, “the last days,” “the end of the age,” “the end of days,” or “the Day of the Lord.” Christians often refer to this as “the end times,” but the technical theological term is <em>eschatology</em>, which means “the study of end things.”</p>

<p>Regarding the end times, the modern Evangelical popular imagination has been deeply influenced and at times dominated by a theological construct that is best reflected in the 1970s bestselling <em>The Late Great Planet Earth</em> by Hal Lindsey and the newer bestselling fictional phenomenon <em>Left Behind</em> by Tim LaHaye and Jerry Jenkins.</p>

<p>This view believes that the Bible foretells an as-yet future scenario on the earth of a rapture of Christians, followed by the rise of an “Anti-Christ,” a world dictator who initiates a Great Tribulation on the earth, requires a “Mark of the Beast,” and assembles global forces for a battle of Armageddon against Israel, resulting in the Second Coming of Christ who replaces the universe with a new heavens and earth to rule forever. The technical theological term for this view is <em>futurism</em>, the belief that prophecies about the end times are yet to be fulfilled in the future.<sup>1</sup></p> 
 
<p>In this article, I will address the hermeneutic or interpretive approach used by this futurist perspective and apply it to the particular aspect of creation language, or in this case, decreation language -- the collapsing universe and the destruction of the heavens and the earth.</p>

<p>In short, the language of cosmic catastrophe often interpreted literally as referring to the end of the space-time universe is actually used by Biblical authors to figuratively express the cosmic significance of the covenantal relationship between God and humanity.</p>

<p>The tendency of modern literalism is to interpret descriptions of signs in the heavens and earth as being quite literal events of the heavens and earth shaking, stars falling from the sky, the moon turning blood red, and the sky rolling up like a scroll. The problem with this hermeneutic is that it assumes the priority of modernity over the ancient world. Rather than seeking to understand the origins of symbols and images used by the writers within their ancient context, this literalism often suggests the writer was seeing events that would occur in our modern day but did not understand them, so he used his ancient “primitive” language to describe it.</p>

<p>So for instance when the apostle John saw modern day tools of war in his revelation, such as battle helicopters, he did not know what they were so he described them in ancient terms that he did understand such as locusts with the sting of scorpions, breastplates of iron, a crown of gold and human faces, whose chopper blades made the “noise of many chariots with horses rushing into battle” (Rev 9:3-9).</p>

<p>I was taught this modernist interpretation and lived by it for many years. When I read about Jesus explaining the “end of the age” I would assume he meant the “end of the space-time universe” because that’s the kind of language I, a post-Enlightened modern scientific mind, would use to describe such an event.  When he spoke of the moon turning blood red and the sun being darkened, I assumed such events were easy miracles for God, so if you considered them figurative, you were falling down the slippery slope of neo-orthodoxy. When Jesus said stars would fall from the sky, you had better bet stars would literally fall from the sky (a primitive description of meteors<sup>2</sup>) or else you’re a liberal who doesn’t believe in the literal accuracy of the Bible.</p>

<p>But all that changed when I sought to understand the prophetic discourse on its own terms within its ancient cultural context instead of from my own cultural bias. I now propose that the ancient writers did understand what they were seeing, but were using symbols and images they were culturally steeped in, symbols and images with a history of usage from the Old Testament, <em>their</em> cultural context – not mine.</p>

<p>In this essay, I will argue that the decreation language of a collapsing universe with falling stars and signs in the heavens was actually symbolic discourse about world-changing events and powers related to the end of the old covenant and the coming of the new covenant as God’s “new world order.” In this interpretation, predictions of the collapsing universe were figuratively fulfilled in the historic past of the first century. The technical theological term for this view is <em>preterism</em>, the belief that most or all prophecies about the end times have been fulfilled in the past.<sup>3</sup></p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. The <em>Left Behind</em> series is a particular version of futurism called Dispensational Premillennialism. For a more in depth presentation of these varieties of eschatology see Bock, Darrell L. ed., <em>Three Views on the Millennium and Beyond</em>. Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan, 1999.<br />
2. Interestingly, as soon as the interpreter thinks falling stars are meteors, he has just engaged in figurative speculation, which is not literal.<br />
3. Some examples of orthodox scholars who hold to this view are Sproul, R.C. <em>The Last Days According to Jesus</em>. Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 1998; and Gentry, Kenneth L. Jr. <em>Navigating the Book of Revelation</em>. Fountain Inn: SC, Goodbirth Ministries, 2009.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 21 Dec 12 08:17:25 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Dec 21, 2012 08:17</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Surprised by Jack, Part 3: Mere Depravity</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/surprised&#45;by&#45;jack&#45;part&#45;3&#45;mere&#45;depravity?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;part&#45;3&#45;mere&#45;depravity?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>“Man is now a horror to God and to himself and a creature ill&#45;adapted to the universe not because God made him so but because he has made himself so by the abuse of his free will.  To my mind this is the sole function of the doctrine [of the Fall].”—C.S. Lewis</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In his lengthiest treatment of the Christian doctrine of the Fall—the fifth chapter of his book <em>The Problem of Pain</em>—Lewis makes it quite clear that he takes the Eden story, as he takes the first chapter of Genesis, to be sacred “mythology.”  It is worthy of reverence, contemplation, theological reflection, even, in a sense, belief, but is not, in his estimation, strictly historical.  Genesis 2-3 narrates deep truths about <em>the human condition</em> but not necessarily <em>historical facts</em> about the first humans:</p>

<blockquote>The story in Genesis is a story (full of the deepest suggestion) about a magic apple of knowledge; but in the developed doctrine [of the Fall] the inherent magic apple has quite dropped out of sight, and the story is simply one of disobedience.  I have the deepest respect even for Pagan myths, <strong>still more for myths in Holy Scripture</strong>. I therefore do not doubt that <strong>the version</strong> which emphasises the magic apple, and brings together the trees of life and knowledge, contains a deeper and subtler truth than the version which makes the apple simply and solely a pledge of obedience.  But I assume that the Holy Spirit would not have allowed the latter to grow up in the Church and win the assent of great doctors unless it also was true and useful so far as it went.  It is this version which I am going to discuss, because, though I suspect <strong>the primitive version</strong> to be far more profound, I know that I, at any rate, cannot penetrate its profundities.<sup>1</sup></blockquote>

<p>Whatever its theological profundities, though, Lewis is clear that Genesis 2-3 is probably not a straightforward narrative of historical events.  “What exactly happened when Man fell, <em>we do not know</em>,” he later writes.  “We have no idea in what particular act, or series of acts, the self-contradictory, impossible wish [to be our own masters] found expression.  For all I can see, it <em>might</em> have concerned the literal eating of a fruit, <em>but the question is of no consequence</em>.”<sup>2</sup></p>

<p>What, then, <em>is</em> of consequence for Lewis, we might ask?  The real story of the Fall, says Lewis, is not the surface narrative about “the magic apple,” but rather what he refers to as “the developed doctrine” of the Fall, namely the doctrine of humankind’s depraved condition:</p>

<blockquote>According to [the doctrine of the Fall], man is now a horror to God and to himself and a creature ill-adapted to the universe not because God made him so but because he has made himself so by the abuse of his free will.  To my mind <strong>this is the sole function of the doctrine</strong>.<sup>3</sup></blockquote>

<p>The “sole function of the doctrine” for Lewis is to name the human condition for what it is, namely, shot through with corruption.  Or, as Lewis put it in <em>A Preface to “Paradise Lost,”</em> “The Fall is simply and solely Disobedience—doing what you have been told not to do: and it results from Pride—from being too big for your boots, forgetting your place, thinking that you are God.”   You might call this the “Mere Depravity” view of the Fall.  </p>

<p>Throughout <em>The Problem of Pain Lewis</em> displays a remarkable degree of comfort with evolutionary theory, not least evolutionary accounts of human origins.  A corollary of Lewis’s acceptance of evolutionary theory, of course, is that death pre-existed humanity.  Lewis grasps this nettle in chapter IX of the book when he writes,</p>

<blockquote>The origin of animal suffering could be traced, by earlier generations, to the Fall of man—the whole world was infected by the uncreated rebellion of Adam.  This is now impossible, for we have good reason to believe that animals existed long before men.  Carnivorousness, with all that it entails, is older than humanity.<sup>5</sup></blockquote>

<p>Here is not the place to go into Lewis’s postulation that Satan was responsible for animal predation.  We need only note that he makes this suggestion precisely in order to show how a broadly Darwinian picture of natural history may be compatible with a broadly Christian view of the world.  For some, severing the link between the Fall of man and death’s entry into the world, is anathema.  But given Lewis’ mere depravity view of the Fall, this evolutionary understanding of natural history creates no real problem for Christian faith.</p>

<p>Moreover, for Lewis the evolutionary picture of the ascent of humankind presents no real objection to the Christian doctrine of the Fall, either:</p>

<blockquote>Many people think that this proposition [that we are fallen creatures] has been proved false by modern science.  “We now know,” it is said, “that so far from having fallen out of a primeval state of virtue and happiness, men have slowly risen from brutality and savagery.”  There seems to me to be a complete confusion here….  If by saying that man rose from brutality you mean simply that man is physically descended from animals, <strong>I have no objection</strong>.  But it does not follow that the further back you go the more brutal–<strong>in the sense of wicked or wretched</strong>–you will find man to be.<sup>6</sup></blockquote>

<p>Lewis goes on to note that the categories of virtue and vice simply do not apply to the animal kingdom–and therefore not to our pre-human ancestors either–because animals as such are not moral agents. Moreover, Prehistoric man is not to be presumed to be altogether reprobate simply on account of using only rudimentary tools, hunting and gathering, and the like.  Primitivity ought not to be confused with sinfulness he argues.  Thus, for Lewis, the discoveries of modern paleontology and archaeology can tell us nothing about when or whether our ancestors fell from a state of innocence, and so we are free to accept, as Lewis seems to have, man’s physical descent from animals without giving up the Christian doctrine of the Fall.</p>

<p>While Lewis may not have publically argued for the historicity of Adam and Eve, his private opinions might have been another matter. In his recent essay “Darwin in the Dock,” John G. West has argued that, regardless of what he said in print, Lewis <em>privately</em> “embraced the literal existence of Adam and Eve.”<sup>7</sup> West chiefly bases his argument for Lewis’s private belief in a literal Adam and Eve on an anecdote involving one of Lewis’ Oxford colleagues, Helen Gardner, recounted in A.N. Wilson’s <em>C.S. Lewis: A Biography</em>.<sup>8</sup> Upon being asked at a dinner party whom he would most like to meet after death, Lewis replied, “Oh, I have no difficulty in deciding…. I want to meet Adam.”  Gardner, it is reported, replied by saying that “if there really were, historically, someone whom we could name as ‘the first man’, he would be a Neanderthal ape-like figure, whose conversation she could not conceive of finding interesting.”<sup>9</sup> Lewis, we are told, gruffly responded, “I see we have a Darwinian in our midst” and never invited Gardner to dinner again.<sup>10</sup></p>

<p>West takes this tense little interaction between Lewis and Gardner to indicate that Lewis’ belief in a literal historical Adam and Eve.  However, it should be noted that such a conclusion seems somewhat overhasty in light of what Lewis says in <em>The Problem of Pain</em>, where he articulates a view rather similar to what Gardner said that evening:</p>

<blockquote>I do not doubt that if the Paradisal man could now appear among us, we should regard him as an utter savage, a creature to be exploited or, at best, patronised.  Only one or two, and those the holiest among us, would glance a second time at the naked, shaggy-bearded, slow spoken creature: but they, after a few minutes, would fall at his feet.<sup>11</sup></blockquote>

<p>Given that Lewis actually believed what he wrote here, the difference between Lewis and Gardner seems not to have been either the question of “whether man is physically descended from animals” (which, as we have seen, Lewis was willing to grant) or the question of whether Paradisal man would be a “naked, shaggy-bearded, slow spoken creature,” a “Neanderthal ape-like figure.”  Rather they differed over whether “Paradisal man,” as Lewis puts it, would have been someone, however primitive, to be revered, or whether, as Gardner seemed to believe, a mere brute.  Taking Lewis’ written statements at face-value, it would appear that his irritation with Gardner owed less to her acceptance of evolution than it did to her dismissive presumption that our forebears were but dull savages.</p>

<p>Finally, it should be noted that Lewis was not even committed to the most basic element of a belief in a literal Adam and Eve, namely, that it was precisely two humans who fell and from whence our species came.  He writes, “<em>We do not know how many of these creatures God made</em>, nor how long they continued in the Paradisal state.  But sooner or later they fell.”<sup>12</sup>   Lewis’s mere depravity view of the Fall and his belief in the mythical character of the Eden story gave him some latitude on the question of whether the Fall consisted of a historic first human <em>pair</em> going wrong at an easily identifiable moment.  For Lewis, it was apparently quite possible that whole tribes of “Paradisal” Prehistoric humans could have gone about their business for generations—hunting, gathering, singing around the campfire, rearing children, painting in caves—before the spiritual and scientifically undetectable catastrophe of “the Fall” occurred.  In other words, if Lewis were presented with the recent genomic evidence which suggests that our species arose from an initial population of several thousand rather than only two, it is doubtful that it would have flustered him.  It simply makes no difference to Lewis’s argument how or how many humans initially “fell.”  All that matters for Lewis is that God made humans (perhaps via evolution, perhaps not) and that we humans have gone quite wrong–so wrong, in fact, that it is beyond our powers to repair ourselves.  Mere Christianity, for Lewis, does not logically depend on the historicity of the Adam and Eve story, but on the doctrine of our mere depravity.  </p>

<p class="intro">In tomorrow's concluding post, we turn to C.S. Lewis' views on the compatibility of evolution and Christian faith.</p>


<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. Lewis, <em>The Problem of Pain</em>, (New York: Simon & Schuster, 1996), 63-64, my italics<br />
2. Ibid.<br />
3. Ibid, my italics<br />
4. Lewis, <em>A Preface to Paradise Lost</em>, (New York: Oxford University Press, 1961), 70-71<br />
5. Lewis, <em>The Problem of Pain</em>, 119<br />
6. Ibid, 64<br />
7. West, “Darwin in the Dock,” in <em>The Magician’s Twin: C.S. Lewis on Science, Scientism, and Society</em>, (Seattle: Discovery Institute Press, 2012), 121.  West’s volume takes a markedly different view of Lewis and Lewis’s legacy regarding debates about Christianity and evolution.  I intend to write a thorough critical review of West’s book in the near future. <br />
8. Ibid<br />
9. A.N. Wilson, <em>C.S. Lewis: A Biography</em>, (New York: W.W. Norton, 1990), 210<br />
10. Ibid<br />
11. Ibid<br />
12. Ibid.</p>

]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 12 Dec 12 04:00:11 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Williams</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Dec 12, 2012 04:00</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Surveying George Murphy&apos;s Theology of the Cross</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/surveying&#45;george&#45;murphys&#45;theology&#45;of&#45;the&#45;cross?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/surveying&#45;george&#45;murphys&#45;theology&#45;of&#45;the&#45;cross?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>If God himself is willing to die, particularly in such a gruesome way, then perhaps we should at least consider the possibility of God allowing the death of other creatures, too. But would this really be compatible with what we know of God through Scripture?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="margin: 0px 30px 0px 30px;"><em>Truly, I say to you, unless a grain of wheat falls into the earth and dies, it remains alone; but if it dies, it bears much fruit</em>. —John 12:24</p>

<h3>Introduction</h3>

<p>One of the reasons that some of us are hesitant to accept evolutionary creation is that it seems to make God responsible for the suffering and death of innumerable creatures over millions of years—before humans ever existed or sinned against their creator.  Since we believe in and worship a God who is loving, benevolent, and all-powerful, it sounds quite implausible that our God would have created a world like that; therefore, any scientific evidence for evolution <em>must</em> be incorrect.</p>

<p>Other people look at the scientific evidence for evolution and find a compelling case that it has taken place during our earth's history.  On this basis they may conclude that if evolution is true, then the belief in an all-powerful, perfectly good God must be false!</p>

<p>The trouble with both of these views is that they tend to invoke a completely abstract, philosophical god, not the living God of the Bible—the God who became a human being, experienced unimaginable suffering, and died in a grotesque and humiliating public display.  The death of Jesus completely defied the expectations (and common sense) of his followers, as well as the expectations of any “rational” understanding of the way the Creator of the universe should act in the world.  On the cross, in the person of Jesus, God took upon himself far more suffering than any creature has ever experienced.</p>

<p>If God himself is willing to die, particularly in such a gruesome way, then perhaps we should at least consider the possibility of God allowing the death of other creatures, too.  But would this really be compatible with what we know of God through Scripture?  In this essay, we will explore this quandary through a “theology of the cross”, a concept articulated by pastor George Murphy in his book <em>Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</em>.<sup>1</sup> </p>

<h3>Theology of the cross</h3>

<p>Before we jump into the theological problems associated with evolution, let’s take a look at how we understand Christian theology itself.  For the reformer Martin Luther, any theology (or science) that tries to reach knowledge of God apart from the cross is bad theology.<sup>2</sup>  Instead, Luther pointed to a <em>theologia crucis</em>, in which the true God is seen first and foremost “through suffering and the cross”. To make his point even clearer, Luther insisted that “the CROSS alone is our theology”.<sup>3</sup>   It is the lens through which we view <em>everything</em>.</p>

<p>Of course Martin Luther, having lived in the 16th century, was not aware of the vast history of life on our planet (or any other aspect of modern science, for that matter), but George Murphy draws from Luther’s teachings the foundation that all human knowledge begins with the Word made flesh and crucified.<sup>4</sup>   With the cross of Christ as the ultimate framework through which we view reality, we are bound to view the processes of nature quite differently.  As Murphy explains it,</p>

<blockquote>A theology of the cross is an explication of belief in a God who becomes a participant in the history of the universe and thereby shares in the suffering, loss, and death that are part of worldly experience.<sup>5</sup></blockquote>

<p>God does not sit idly by and watch unaffected as his creatures suffer, but neither does he swoop in and make everything completely effortless and easy.  Instead he chose another way, the crucifixion of Jesus—certainly not the approach that we would have preferred! The apostle Peter went so far as to try to talk Jesus out of it, but he was met with a stern rebuke (Matthew 16:21-23).</p>

As humans, we are inclined to recoil in horror at the idea of God being closely associated with the death.  Yet in the crucifixion we are forced to think of death and God together.  Jesus himself did not draw back from immense pain and suffering, but instead works <em>in</em> it and <em>through</em> it to accomplish his plans. In the cross we learn who God is, the One who brings new life from death (and ultimately conquers death completely).<sup>6</sup> 

<h3>Why is evolution so disconcerting to Christians?</h3>

<p>The problem of suffering throughout all of human history is troubling enough for us to reconcile with a loving, personal God.  But in addition to that, the discovery of vast numbers of fossils reveals that death has taken place on a far greater scale than we had ever imagined.  Both the wide variety of extinct creatures and their sheer numbers is quite staggering, and it raises questions about our Creator:</p>

<blockquote>The picture of a God who is immune from suffering and death but who forces organisms through millions of generations and extinction is disturbing to those who believe in a God of love.<sup>7</sup></blockquote>

<p>The mass extinction of life on earth was already well established by the early 19th century—decades before Darwin’s research—and extinction can be empirically verified independent of any theory of evolution.<sup>8</sup>   The fact that the earth’s crust is a veritable graveyard of long-lost creatures is deeply troubling, and as late as the 1790’s, distinguished intellectuals such as Thomas Jefferson denied the very possibility of extinction.<sup>9</sup></p>

<p>But in addition to the reality of species extinction, the theory of evolution by natural selection proposes that new species also arise in an environment containing widespread pain and death.  Both the creatures that are now living and those that are gone are tainted by an “acrid smell of death”.<sup>10</sup>  It makes us wonder, if our Creator is not the God of the dead, but of the living (Mk. 12:27), where is God’s presence in the evolutionary picture?</p>

<p>In all honesty, creation through evolution is not what we would <em>expect</em> from God, but Scripture is full of examples in which God acts in unexpected ways.  After all, God’s choosing to undergo an agonizing death on a cross is not what we would expect from the all-powerful Creator of the universe, either.  In both cases, new life comes about through pain, suffering, and death.  As George Murphy puts it,
</p>

<blockquote>A priori ideas about God have to be overcome, and God's character has to be learned from God's self-revelation.<sup>11</sup></blockquote>

<p>God’s fullest self-expression is in Jesus Christ himself, one who is intimately familiar with and personally endured creaturely pain and death.  The theology of the cross reveals that God's self-revelation takes place in situations of suffering, loss, and apparent hopelessness, much like situations that occur through natural selection.<sup>12</sup></p>

<h3>The crucifixion is disconcerting too</h3>

<p>Not only is creation through evolution an unexpected and unsettling process, but so is the crucifixion of Jesus!  Killing someone by hanging them on a cross is an unbearably painful, prolonged, humiliating form of death. It was such a horrific type of public execution that it wasn't until after the Roman Empire stopped the practice of crucifixion—and people no longer witnessed it personally—did the cross become a visual object of devotion.<sup>13</sup> Our culture is sufficiently removed from crucifixion that we are desensitized to its original significance, but to connect it to our current context, imagine the reaction you would get by wearing jewelry designed to look like an electric chair.<sup>14</sup></p>

<p>Once we are more attuned to the brutality of crucifixion, it seems all the more striking that the cross is the sign of God’s work, what George Murphy calls “the trademark of God”.<sup>15</sup>   The suffering and death of Jesus is featured prominently in the Gospels, but the crucifixion-resurrection pattern is strongly resonant within the Old Testament, too.  Israel suffered and toiled as slaves in Egypt for centuries before they were rescued in the Exodus, bringing life to a people who were spiritually dead.  Centuries later, the nation of Israel would experience death again when the Babylonians destroyed the Davidic monarchy, burned their Temple, killed their people, and sent many into exile.<sup>16</sup>  Neither Israel (God’s chosen people) nor Jesus (God’s own son) were spared from death and suffering; rather, suffering seems to have been the way in which God re-forms and renews humanity to fully bear His own image.</p>

<h3>Redemption extends to all of creation</h3>

<p>Fortunately, God’s story does not end with death.  God gives new life after his creatures have been subjected to terrible circumstances.  Redemption was promised to Israel itself—Ezekiel’s vision of the valley of dry bones describes how God would renew His chosen people (Ezek 37:1-14).  Later, the astonishing resurrection of Jesus made salvation possible not only for Jews, but for all people in Christ (Gal 3:26-29).  Ultimately, the New Testament makes it clear that God’s renewal will encompass the entire Creation:</p>

<blockquote>For God was pleased to have all his fullness dwell in him, and through him <strong>to reconcile to himself all things, whether things on earth or things in heaven</strong>, by making peace through his blood, shed on the cross. (Colossians 1:19-20)</blockquote>  

<blockquote>With all wisdom and understanding, he made known to us the mystery of his will according to his good pleasure, which he purposed in Christ, to be put into effect when the times reach their fulfillment—<strong>to bring unity to all things in heaven and on earth</strong> under Christ. (Ephesians 1:8-10)</blockquote>

<p>Christians are accustomed to thinking of the death of Christ in regard to humans, but our culture rarely acknowledges God plan for the redemption of His entire creation.  This is partly attributable to the fact that discussions of creation and origins are often separated from the topic of salvation.<sup>17</sup>   In doing so we tend to marginalize Jesus as we argue about Genesis.  Rather than fall into this trap, if we view nature through a theology of the cross, we will see Christ as both the alpha and the omega point in discussions of life’s history and life’s future.  With this perspective, we are more apt to sense our solidarity with the rest of creation as we wait in eager anticipation of a glorious future:</p>
	
<blockquote>The creation waits in eager expectation for the children of God to be revealed. For the creation was subjected to frustration, not by its own choice, but by the will of the one who subjected it, in hope that the <strong>creation itself will be liberated from its bondage to decay and brought into the freedom and glory of the children of God</strong>. (Romans 8:19-21)</blockquote>

<h3>Conclusion</h3>

<p>As part of the Church’s conversation about the problem of natural evil, this essay is meant to be a brief introduction to a “theology of the cross”.  One can explore this concept in greater detail in Murphy’s book <em>The Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</em>.  While there is a lot more to be said, let me conclude with the following observation:  though evolution may not be compatible with <em>some</em> interpretations of Christianity, <strong>evolutionary creation is certainly compatible with the crucified Christ and the theology of the cross</strong>.  In the person of Jesus, God suffers with the world and ultimately redeems it.  As George Murphy puts in, “The world's pains are God's stigmata.”<sup>18</sup></p>

<h3>Explore this Topic Further</h3>

<ul><li>Miller, Keith. <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/death-and-pain-in-the-created-order">“And God saw that it was good”: Death and Pain in the Created Order</a>. BioLogos series</li>

<li>Murphy, George L. <em>The Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</em>. Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press, 2003.</li>

<li>Murphy, George L. “Cross, Evolution, and Theodicy: Telling It Like It Is”. In <em>The Evolution of Evil</em>. Edited by G. Bennett, M.J. Hewlett, T. Peters, and R.J. Russell. Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2008.</li>

<li>Southgate, Christopher. <em>The Groaning of Creation: God, Evolution, and the Problem of Evil</em>. Louisville, KY: Westminister John Knox Press, 2008.</li></ul>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1.  Murphy, George L. <em>The Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</em>.  Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press, 2003.<br />
2.  Murphy, p34<br />
3.  “CRUX Sola Est Nostra Theologia,” in <em>D. Martin Luthers Werke, Kritische Gesammtausgabe</em> (Weimar: Hermann Boehlau, 1892), 5:172.  The captitalization is in the original.  Cited in Murphy, p26.<br />
4.  Murphy, p108<br />
5.  Murphy, p4<br />
6.  Murphy, p43<br />
7.  Murphy, p3<br />
8.  Some Christians ascribe animal death to some combination of Adam’s fall and Noah’s flood, but this does not resolve the problem that the animals are still suffering and dying through no fault of their own.  See Keith Miller’s BioLogos series <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/death-and-pain-in-the-created-order">Death and Pain in the Created Order</a> for the limitations inherent in a fall-based theodicy.<br />
9.  Rudwick, Martin. <em>The meaning of fossils: Episodes in the history of paleontology</em>. Chicago, University of Chicago Press, 1985.<br />
10.  See Jeff Schloss’ BioLogos essay <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern-baptist-voices-evolution-and-death-series">Evolution, Creation, and the Sting of Death</a><br />
11.  Murphy, p63<br />
12.  Murphy, p122<br />
13.  Murphy, p27<br />
14.  This example is drawn from an evangelical outreach event held by a Christian student group in Innsbruck, Austria.  On campus one day, they started conversations with their classmates by asking the question, “Would you wear an electric chair on your neck?”<br />
15.  Murphy, George L.  <em>The Trademark of God: A Christian Course in Creation, Evolution, and Salvation</em>. Wilton, Conn.: Morehouse-Barlow, 1986.<br />
16.  Murphy, <em>Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</em>, p 31-32.<br />
17.  Murphy, p35<br />
18.  Murphy, p87</p>

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        <pubDate>Tue, 04 Dec 12 04:00:47 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Thomas Burnett</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: From the Dust</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;leap&#45;of&#45;truth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;leap&#45;of&#45;truth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Ryan Pettey offers several clips from his powerful documentary &quot;From the Dust&quot;. This feature&#45;length film is divided up into various sections, each of which wrestles with the difficult problems that arise when reconciling Scripture with the theory of evolution. A light of hope dawns on the science&#45;faith conversation, however, as scientists and theologians engage in honest dialogue about tough issues such as the interpretation of Genesis, the nature of the Fall, and the idea of random design. Their profound insights are sure to enlighten all minds, raise deeper questions, and provoke new thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/25367217?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="533" height="300" frameborder="0"></iframe></p>

<p>This week we feature the third clip from the upcoming documentary “From the Dust”, directed by filmmaker Ryan Pettey. It is our sincere hope that, above all else, the film can become a focal point for some of the big questions that inevitably arise at the intersection of science and faith. We believe Ryan's work will inform faith and enrich discussion, and we feel that this week’s topic, the Fall, is of particular importance for Christians as we think through the ramifications of creation by evolutionary mechanisms.</p>

<p>To help foster such dialogue, we are once again including several discussion questions with this week’s clip. In the transcript below, you’ll find several prompts that are meant to help viewers dig deeper into the material being presented. Mouse over each highlighted region and a question will appear on the side. We encourage you to watch this video with your friends, your churches, your small groups and Sunday School classes, your pastors -- or anyone else for that matter – and take some time to discuss what is being said (and maybe even what isn’t). You may not all agree, but you will find yourselves engaged in fruitful and spirited conversation. And it is this kind of conversation that will help move the science and faith discussion forward.</p>

<p>The provided questions are just a few of the discussion questions that go with this transcript, and we'd be happy to send them to you to foster further conversation within your church or small group setting. If you’d like to see the questions, or if you have stories from your own small group discussions about the clip, we would love to hear from you at <a href="mailto:info@biologos.org">info@biologos.org</a>.</p>

<p class="intro">Editor's Note: The full documentary is now available on DVD and Blu-ray.  You can order the film <a href="http://www.highwaymedia.org/Product4.aspx?ProductId=1985&CategoryId=171">here</a>, and learn more about the project <a href="http://fromthedustmovie.org/">here</a>.</p>

<h3>“The Fall” Transcript</h3>

<div class="see-also" id="pop1" style="display:none;">Dr. Schloss says that one of the big questions for theologians is: what is the nature of the Fall? How does Dr. Polkinghorne address this question at the end of the video?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop2" style="display:none;">Jeff Schloss states, “Christians [and] all theists who believe in a good and providential God have wrestled with [this]…problem of natural evil.” Then, Michael Lloyd says, “[Evolution] does not look like the sort of system that a good and loving and benevolent God would have set up.” What does natural evil mean to you in the history of life? What aspect of natural evil caused Darwin to lose his faith? Does evolution imply the world is naturally evil? If so, how?</div>

<p><strong>Dr. Jeff Schloss</strong>: “My friends and colleagues, who have concerns about evolutionary theory for theological reasons, are onto something, and <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop1');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop1');">one of them involves the Fall</a>, the nature of the Fall, what it is. Even if it is a metaphor, it is a metaphor for something, and what is that something? And how would we make sense of that something in light of evolutionary theory? The other issue on this has been probably the most serious issue that not only Christians, but <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop2');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop2');">all theists who believe in a good and providential God have wrestled with, it is the problem of natural evil.</a>”</p>

<div class="see-also" id="pop3" style="display:none;">What three reasons does Lloyd offer to show that all was not harmonious before the Fall? Do they lend credibility to an evolutionary view of creation?   Do you agree with Lloyd’s analysis?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop4" style="display:none;">Many people feel that it is impossible to harmonize the Biblical view with the evolutionary view. Would you agree? Why or why not? </div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop5" style="display:none;">What does it mean for humans to work in the “garden” in today’s world?</div>

<p><strong>Reverend Dr. Michael Lloyd</strong>: “The problem of evil is a real problem to religious faith. It was certainly the thing for Darwin himself. That is what made him question his faith, and I think rightly so. It does not look like the sort of system that a good and loving and benevolent God would have set up. Now, obviously that raises huge questions because <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop3');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop3');">we don’t see any evidence of a world that was harmonious</a>. We only see evidence of a world that was at war with itself, and that obviously is <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop4');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop4');">the problem that Christian theologians face</a>. For a long time I used to believe that the Genesis narratives paint a picture of a world completely at peace, completely harmonious until the human fall, and then something goes wrong. When I began to look at it more closely, I began to think that there is more to it than that. There is evidence from the text that things are already dislocated, already out of joint. For one thing, there is the serpent, and however you interpret the serpent, here is a bit of the created order that is actively talking against God, working against God—so there is already something that has gone wrong. Secondly, there is the command to fill the earth and subdue it. There is the suggestion that something needs to be subdued, something is not quite right that needs to be put right and humans beings are called to do that—to put it right. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop5');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop5');">And thirdly, it is a garden</a>. It is almost as if God has said, ‘Here is a little bit I have done for you, here is a little bit of order and harmony that I have done for you. Now you go and spread that order and that harmony throughout the rest of creation.’ The tragedy is, of course, that human beings don’t do that. Rather than put that right, they make it worse.”</p>

<div class="see-also" id="pop6" style="display:none;">When talking about the image of God, Alister McGrath points to humanity’s relational abilities. How does a human’s capacity for relationship with God  image Him?</div>

<p><strong>Dr. Alister McGrath</strong>: “Clearly Scripture distinguishes humanity from the rest of creation by <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop6');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop6');">this idea of the image of God</a>. And that is understood in a number of ways—one of which is relational. Human beings have this God-given capacity to be able to relate to God, which is simply not there for the rest of creation. How do we understand that phrase: the image of God? If we accept the narrative of biological evolution, we have to say that at some point humanity became sufficiently distinguished from the rest of the natural world to be able to have this relationship with God.”</p>

<div class="see-also" id="pop7" style="display:none;">Is it possible, as Lloyd has indicated, that the image of God was attained at a decisive moment in light of evolutionary theory? </div>  

<p><strong>Reverend Dr. Michael Lloyd</strong>: “If you have a very finely graded gas tap and you begin to turn it on, initially, there is not enough gas in the air for the gas to ignite. So, you turn it up some more, still nothing, a bit more, still nothing, and a bit more, still nothing. At a particular point, there will be enough gas to air ratio for the thing to ignite. So, you can have a completely smooth, upward development, and yet, you can have something decisive happening at a particular moment. You get an increase in that moral capacity and moral awareness; you get an increase in their relational ability, in their social ability. You get an increase in their tool-making ability. You get an increase in their language. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop7');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop7');">At a particular point there is enough of all that.</a> There is enough relational capacity; there is enough social capacity and moral awareness and spiritual awareness for God to deal with us in a new way: ‘They have enough creativity to reflect the fact that I am the creator. They have enough relational capacity to reflect the fact that I am love. This in some way reflects who I am, and I will stamp my image upon them.’”</p>

<div class="see-also" id="pop8" style="display:none;">How does Polkinghorne define mortality? How does that relate to what he calls self-consciousness?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop9" style="display:none;">In what sense is Adam and Eve’s disobedience a fall? And, in what sense is it upwards?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop10" style="display:none;">What similarities could the story of the fall of Adam and Eve bear to the gaining of consciousness by humanity?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop11" style="display:none;">Could the story of the Fall be a symbolic simplification of what went wrong in humans? If so, in what ways?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop12" style="display:none;">If the Fall were to be symbolic and not historical, would that make the principles in it any less true?</div>

<div class="see-also" id="pop13" style="display:none;">According to Polkinghorne, what is spiritual death? In Romans 5,  Paul speaks of Jesus as being the second Adam.  What is Paul getting at?  In what sense does the second Adam cure the death problem created by the action of the first Adam?    Is it really a cure, or is it  just medication that makes the symptoms more bearable?</div>

<p><strong>Reverend Dr. John Polkinghorne</strong>: “As hominids evolved and became more complex, then self-consciousness, in the sense of projecting our minds into the remote future or past began to dawn in them. And that didn’t bring biological death into the world, because obviously it had been there for millions of years beforehand, but it brought into the world what you might call <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop8');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop8');">mortality</a>. Because our ancestors were self-conscious, they knew they were going to die. Because they had turned away from God, they had alienated themselves to the only one who was the ground for the hope of a destiny beyond death. And so, mortality, meaning the sadness, the human sadness at transiency and decay dawned in human life. Another very subtle feature of the Genesis 3 story is that it is <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop9');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop9');">a fall upwards</a> as people would sometimes say. It is the gaining of some knowledge, the knowledge of good and evil, the story says. And so, <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop10');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop10');">the dawning of self-consciousness</a> is also the gaining of something that wasn’t there before. What the serpent whispers in Eve’s ear is, ‘eat this fruit, and you will be like God. You won’t need God anymore. You can do it yourself.’ <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop11');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop11');">That is the fundamental sin</a>, the fundamental mistake in human life is believing that we can do it on our own, doing it my way, and spiritual death is to deliberately and persistently cut yourself off from that. It doesn’t occur as an angry God giving you a punishment for not falling into line. It is simply that you have punished yourself. You know, preachers sometimes say that the gates of hell are locked from the inside not to keep the creatures in, but to keep God out. And that, I think in the end, is what spiritual death is if you persist in it. But God is always, I am sure, at work, seeking to draw people back into the divine love. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop12');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop12');">I think that is the work that is necessary</a> to understand what Paul is getting at in <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop13');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop13');">Romans 5</a> when he says that death came into the world through one man. The cost of development is a degree of precariousness. The people need the grace of God if we truly are to live fulfilling lives.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 19 Oct 12 05:00:13 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ryan Pettey</dc:creator>
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        <title>Shaping the Human Soul, Part 5</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/shaping&#45;the&#45;human&#45;soul&#45;part&#45;5?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>We need to have an account of Sin in terms of habit.  A lot of Christians today think of “sins” and discreet choices, but historically Christians have thought of Sin as a habitual tendency and disordering.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>After Curt Thompson and James K.A. Smith finished their individual presentations, someone asked them about how they understood the nature of Sin.</p>

<p>Dr. Thompson responded that while the essence of Sin is ultimately mysterious, he suggests that there are some ways to think about Sin in the language of interpersonal neurobiology.</p>

<p>On the other hand, Dr. Smith found the wisdom of St. Augustine in <em>The Confessions</em> quite helpful—The essence of Sin is loving the wrong things in the wrong ways. It’s a disordered love.</p>

<p>We need to have an account of Sin in terms of <em>habit</em>.  A lot of Christians today think of “sins” and discreet choices, but historically Christians have thought of Sin as a habitual tendency and disordering.  It is formed over time—that’s what a vice is.  Virtue and sanctification require ongoing re-habituation, a counter-formation of our inclinations.</p>

<p>Dr. Thompson followed up with a reference to Malcolm Gladwell’s <em>Outliers</em> and noted that people who are really good at what they do generally acquire it through lots of practice.   Thompson then asked the audience, “How are we, in an embodied way, going to practice Christianity for 10,000 hours?”</p>

<p class="intro">We hope you have enjoyed this video series.  If you'd like to learn more, we encourage you to read Curt Thompson's <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Anatomy-Soul-Connections-Neuroscience-Relationships/dp/141433415X"><em>The Anatomy of the Soul</em></a> and James K.A. Smith's <a href="http://www.jameskasmith.com/"><em>Desiring the Kingdom: Worship, Worldview, and Cultural Formation</em></a>.  Dr. Smith also has a new book coming out this winter entitled <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Imagining-Kingdom-Worship-Cultural-Liturgies/dp/0801035783/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1348604590&sr=1-1&keywords=imagining+the+kingdom"><em>Imagining the Kingdom: How Worship Works</em></a>.  
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        <pubDate>Fri, 05 Oct 12 04:00:00 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Curt Thompson, Smith, James K.A.</dc:creator>
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        <title>Jesus the Artist</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/jesus&#45;the&#45;artist?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Speaking in parables is indeed similar to an artist’s craft.  They create impressions, whole new worlds of meaning intended to turn old worlds on their heads.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In another <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/faithful-poetics-and-christian-knowledge-of-the-world-part-4/">post</a>, my colleague <a href="http://biologos.org/about/team/mark-sprinkle/">Mark Sprinkle</a> drew a very helpful analogy between Jesus’ use of parables and the creative expressions of artists. There is one part of that post that I think is particularly important for BioLogos readers to grapple with, and I would like to expand on it below from the point of view of a biblical scholar.</p>

<blockquote><p>[T]he purpose of Jesus’ “art” was to give verbal, visual, and dramatic forms to those complicated and confounding relationships and symmetries and harmonies between Himself (and the Father and Spirit) and the world, ourselves included in the latter. Such creative expressions did and do not make everything clear, but rather resist simple clarity, forcing their hearers to come at the whole complicated, opaque truth from a position of intellectual and spiritual humility.</p></blockquote>

<p>Speaking in parables is indeed similar to an artist’s craft. Neither are systematic, logical arguments aimed at intellectual persuasion. Rather, they create impressions, whole new worlds of meaning intended to turn old worlds on their heads. Further, they do not always clarify, but actually can by design obscure a deeper reality. To apprehend that deeper reality, one must—like a patron facing a timeless painting—continue to seek, ponder, and meditate on what is being said.</p>

<p>Parables are radical pieces of communication meant to disorient the hearers and then reorient them to an entirely new way of thinking. The reason Jesus does so much story telling is because stories—not debate or other “proofs”—are best suited for such a whole scale reorientation. Jesus’ preaching, after all, was about the kingdom of heaven (or of God). This kingdom was not about where one goes after death, but a here-and-now transformation of how people thought about God and their relationship to him.</p>

<p>Jesus “explains” this new kingdom in several ways, one of which is the Sermon on the Mount (Matthew 5-7), where Jesus lays out the types of behaviors that should now characterize the people of God. These new behaviors contrast again and again with the old and are fully at odds with what the religious leaders of the time were teaching the people. Jesus’ kingdom is counter-cultural.</p>

<p>But Jesus more often “shows” the people what this kingdom looks like by telling a good story, which regularly begins, “The kingdom of heaven is like….” Sometimes the best way to get an idea across is to paint a verbal picture, which is precisely what Jesus does in the parables.</p>

<p>Jesus’ stories are not like Aesop’s Fables (as interesting as they are), where there is a moral to the story. The parables are not about playing nice with each other. They actually plant you in a different world where things are running according to a wholly different set of rules of the kingdom of heaven.</p>

<p>We can see this by looking at one of Jesus’ favorite topics in the parables: how Jews related to Gentiles. Jewish identity was an extremely important and touchy issue in Jesus’ day. Even though the Jews had returned to their land after the exile (539 BC), they had been guests in their own land—first of the Persians, then Greeks, and now the Romans. How Jews could maintain their ethnic and religious identity in such a pressure cooker of pagan Greek and Roman ideas, not to mention the embarrassment of pagan rulers telling them what to do, was a sore point.</p>

<p>So, one can understand why Jewish attitudes towards tax collectors, for example, are a repeated concern in the Gospels. Tax collectors were fellow Jews who were traitors to their own people by collecting taxes for the Romans. They were even spoken of in the same breath as prostitutes (e.g., Matthew 21:31-32).</p>

<p>No “good Jew” committed to maintaining his or her identity amid a pagan world would lower themselves to work alongside the Romans. Yet, what does Jesus do? He associates with these (and other) “sinners” on a regular basis, and even calls a tax collector (Matthew) to be among his select group of followers. By his actions Jesus demonstrates that his kingdom operates by different, counter-intuitive, counter-cultural rules.</p>

<p>These types of concrete actions were supported again and again by Jesus’ parables. Such a radical change in how Jews viewed God, the world, and their place in it—where sinners and other outsiders were welcome—required a communication strategy that was up for the task.</p>

<p>Stories are that communication strategy. Parables were Jesus’ canvas for “painting” a new vision for what life in his kingdom should look like. And in Jesus’ kingdom, there was no longer any place for maintaining those <em>fundamental</em> ethnic and religious distinctions by which the Jews had been operating.</p>

<p>We can go to virtually any parable to make this point, but the well-known parable of the Good Samaritan works as well as any (Luke 10:30-37). We recall that what drove Jesus to tell this story was the question asked by the “expert in the law” (v. 25): “Who is my neighbor?” Jesus’ answer was this parable, and it carries a double punch.</p>

<p>First, the Jewish leaders step around the beaten man on the road—certainly a non-Jew—feeling no obligation to come to his aid. The point is that the leaders of Israel, of all people, should know enough of God’s character to stop and help him. They shouldn’t ask whether he is “one of us,” an insider. All one needs to know is that this human being needs help. In Jesus’ kingdom, carefully drawn lines of ethnic and religious separation are a thing of the past.</p>

<p>But second, on a deeper level, Jesus’ point is far more threatening. By calling upon a Samaritan as the “good guy” in this story—with all of the backdrop of cultural hostility—Jesus is making a more pressing point than “be good to everyone” (which is where the Sunday School lesson typically ends). The hated Samaritan sees the man lying there, and without asking questions about who he is—whether Jew, Samaritan, Greek, Roman, or anything else for that matter—helps him. The Samaritan, <em>of all people</em>, acts like a neighbor toward the man who needed help, the very thing the Jewish leaders failed to do.</p>

<p>By telling Jewish leaders that they have something to learn <em>about their own God</em> from, of all people, <em>Samaritans</em>, is not a suggestion to be more open-minded and tolerant. It is nothing less than a rewriting of the Jewish narrative or religious and ethnic identity. Jesus uses a story to paint a vivid mental and emotional picture for his hearers. No other medium would do.</p>

<p>It is sometimes thought that Jesus told stories because he wanted to persuade the masses, the common people who are not used to debating fine points of theology like the scribes and priests. This is partially true, but it is also true that the radical message of the kingdom of heaven required a means of communication that was best suited for it. Like any work of art, stories “create” new ways of seeing the world—and it is, after all, a new world that Jesus means to create.</p>

<p>Let me put this another way: Jesus himself communicated the deep mysteries of a new way of being through the use of such things as vivid imagery, symbolism, metaphors, and other devices common to artistic expression. In fact, the incarnation, God in human flesh, is not a debate or argument about the nature of God that appeals primarily to the intellect. It is a vivid—and true—demonstration, a portrait, of a radically new and mysterious way of thinking about God, the world, and our place in it.</p>

<p>If this is how God chooses to communicate at the incarnation—the very climax and epicenter of his story—we should not be surprised to see God painting vivid portraits elsewhere in Scripture. This is especially true of Genesis and creation. Something so fundamental to God’s story may need to be told in a way that transcends the limitations of purely intellectual engagement. Genesis may be written more to <em>show</em> us—by grabbing us with its images than laying out a timeline of cause and effect events—that God is the central figure on the biblical drama.</p>

<p class="intro">Originally posted February 1, 2011.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Sep 12 05:00:22 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Pete Enns</dc:creator>
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            <item>
        <title>&quot;Come and See&quot;:  A Christ&#45;centered Invitation for Science</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/come&#45;and&#45;see&#45;a&#45;christological&#45;invitation&#45;for&#45;science&#45;part&#45;4?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/come&#45;and&#45;see&#45;a&#45;christological&#45;invitation&#45;for&#45;science&#45;part&#45;4?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Classical Christian orthodoxy as expressed in the Creeds begins at the beginning: nature owes its existence to and is sustained by Jesus Christ. One implication is that the best way of finding out about nature is to look at nature.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This post is drawn from Mark Noll's book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Jesus-Christ-Life-Mind-Mark/dp/0802866379/ref=sr_1_1?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1312792837&sr=1-1"><em>Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind</em></a>. In this excerpt, Noll reveals some of the implications that follow a Christ-centered view of science. If one accepts that nature is created and sustained by Jesus Christ, the author explains, then one must conclude that looking at nature is, in fact, the best way to learn about nature. Since Christ is revealed both in science and in Scripture, these things must complement each other rather than contradict.</p>

<h3>A Christology for Science</h3>

<p>The theologian Robert Barron has nicely clarified much of what lies behind recent conflicts over human origins that feature supposedly biblical truths contending against supposedly scientific conclusions.</p>

<p>In his words, “recent debates concerning evolutionist and ‘creationist’ accounts of the origins of nature are marked through and through by modern assumptions about a distant, competitive, and occasionally intervening God, whether the existence of such a God is affirmed or denied.”<sup>1</sup> Barron’s response to these modern debates is a sophisticated exposition of classical Christology aimed at his theological peers. My effort is much simpler and is aimed at academics in general, but it comes from the same christological perspective.</p>

<h4>Christ as Creator, Sustainer, Redeemer</h4>
<p>Classical Christian orthodoxy as expressed in the creeds that summarize the Scriptures begins at the beginning: nature owes its existence to and is sustained by Jesus Christ. From this starting point several important ramifications follow naturally.</p>

<p>One is the implication that the best way of finding out about nature is to look at nature. This implication comes directly from the christological principle of contingency. As described in the Gospels, individuals who wanted to learn the truth about Jesus had to “come and see.” Likewise, to find out what might be true in nature, it is necessary to “come and see.”</p>

<p>The process of “coming and seeing” does not lead to infallible truth about the physical world since there is no special inspiration from the Holy Spirit for the Book of Nature as there is for the Book of Scripture. But “coming and seeing” is still the method that belief in Christ as Savior privileges for learning about all other objects, including nature. This privileging means that scientific results coming from thoughtful, organized, and carefully checked investigations of natural phenomena must, for Christ-centered reasons, be taken seriously.</p>

<p>From this perspective, the successes of modern science in recent centuries testify implicitly to the existence of a creating and redeeming God. To once again quote Robert Barron, scientific activity by its very nature “implies . . . an unavoidable correspondence between the activity of the mind and the structure of being: intelligence will find its fulfillment in this universal and inescapable intelligibility.” But how can this implication be justified? According to Barron,</p>

<blockquote>The universality of objective intelligibility (assumed by any honest scientist) can be explained only through recourse to a transcendent subjective intelligence that has thought the world into being, so that every act of knowing a worldly object or event is, literally, a recognition, a thinking again of what has already been thought by a primordial divine knower.<sup>2</sup></blockquote>

<p>In lay language, the “transcendent subjective intelligence” and the “primordial divine knower” guarantee the possibility that a researcher’s mind can grasp something real about the world beyond the mind. The Scriptures—in John 1, Colossians 1, and Hebrews 1 — provide a name for that “intelligence” and that “knower.” In these terms, the existence of nature and the possibility of understanding nature presuppose Jesus Christ.</p>

<p>A second implication arising from the centrality of Christ in creation concerns the interpretation of Scripture. Classic biblical texts about the purpose of the Bible reinforce the foundational principle that the believers’ confidence in Scripture rests on its message of salvation in Jesus Christ. Thus, in John 20, the Gospel story has been written down so “that you may believe that Jesus is the Christ, the Son of God, and that by believing you may have life in his name” (20:31). In 2 Timothy 3, the inspired or God-breathed “holy scriptures” have as their main purpose instruction “for salvation through faith in Christ Jesus” (3:15). And in 2 Peter 1, “the word of the prophets made more certain” as these prophets were “carried along by the Holy Spirit” (1:19, 21) deals preeminently with “the power and coming of our Lord Jesus Christ” (1:16).</p>

<p>As these passages suggest, salvation in Christ anchors the believer’s confidence that all of Scripture is trustworthy.<sup>3</sup> But because of that supreme fact, the effort to understand <em>how</em> Scripture is trustworthy for questions like the ordering of nature should never stray far from consideration of Christ and his work. Yet as we have seen, “Christ and his work” includes, as an object, the material world of creation, and as a method, “come and see.” In other words, following the Christ revealed in Scripture as Redeemer means following the Christ who made it possible for humans to understand the physical world and offered a means (“come and see”) for gaining that understanding.</p>

<p>Final and ultimate disharmony between what “come and see” demonstrates about Christ and what “come and see” reveals about the world of nature is impossible. This Christ is the same one through whom God has worked “to reconcile to himself all things . . . making peace through his blood, shed on the cross” (Col. 1:20) and in whom “all things were created” and in whom “all things hold together” (1:16-17).</p>

<p>Yet it is indisputable that on some science-theology questions, trust in Christ (and therefore trust in Scripture) has seemed to conflict with trusting in what Christ-authorized procedure (“come and see”) reveals about a Christ-created and Christ-sustained world. The parade of difficult questions arising from the effort to bring together standard interpretations of Scripture and standard interpretations of the natural world is a long one. Trying to answer these questions has been a consistent feature of the modern scientific age.</p>

<ul><li><p>In the nineteenth century, many earnest believers were wondering, if “coming and seeing” in geology and astronomy led to the conclusion that material existence has a very long history, should the “days” of Genesis 1 be understood as long periods of time or should a new interpretation of Genesis 1:1 be adopted that posits a “gap” between “in the beginning” and “God created”?</p></li>

<li><p>More recent advances in both historical understanding (the ancient Near East) and empirical science (genetics, biology, astronomy) have prompted questions about the creation accounts of early Genesis. Well-trained scientists with strong Christian convictions have followed the Christ-rooted procedure of “coming and seeing” in their study of physical evidence for the origin of the universe and have concluded that much of standard evolutionary theory seems well grounded.<sup>4</sup> Similarly, well-trained biblical scholars with strong Christian convictions have followed the Christ-rooted procedure of “coming and seeing” in their study of ancient Near Eastern cultures and have concluded that the early chapters of Genesis seem to be directly concerned about attacking idol-worship that substituted the sun or the moon for God.<sup>5</sup> Given the combination of these two streams of testimony, should it be thought that early Genesis is not concerned with modern scientific questions but is very much concerned about encouraging worship of the one true God who is the originator and sustainer of all things?</p></li>

<li><p>Even more recently, the rough consensus on evolutionary change assembled from many scientific disciplines makes for even more complex questions: for example, if human evolution seems indicated by a wide range of responsible scientific procedures (“come and see”), how might responsible biblical interpretation understand the New Testament stress on Christ (very definitely in historical time and historical space) as overcoming the sinfulness inherited from Adam and Eve, whom Scripture, at least on a surface level, also represents as individuals in historical time and historical space?</p></li></ul>

<p>All such questions caused understandable consternation when they were first raised, since they challenged specific interpretations of Scripture that had been tightly interwoven with basic interpretations of the entire Bible. Even after long and hard thought, such questions continue to pose definite challenges.</p>

<p>Answering such questions responsibly requires sophistication in scientific knowledge and sophistication in biblical interpretation — exercised humbly, teachably, and nondefensively. Unfortunately, these traits and capacities have not always predominated when such questions are addressed. But the difficult questions will almost certainly only continue to multiply because of two ongoing realities: the Holy Spirit continues to bestow new life in Christ through the message of the cross found in Scripture, and responsible investigations lead plausibly to further evolutionary conclusions from the relevant scientific disciplines.</p>

<p class="intro">This excerpt was drawn from chapter 3 of Mark Noll's book <em>Jesus Christ and the Life of the Mind</em>. If you would like to read the whole chapter, click <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/noll_scholarly_essay3.pdf">here</a>. First posted August 30, 2011.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. Robert Barron, <em>The Priority of Christ: Toward a Postliberal Catholicism</em> (Grand Rapids: Brazos, 2007), 221. For convenience, I return several times in the following paragraphs to this book by Robert Barron. But there are other parallel efforts, for example from the physicist and Anglican theologian John C. Polkinghorne, in books like <em>Belief in God in an Age of Science</em> (New Haven: Yale University Press, 1998), and <em>Science and the Trinity; The Christian Encounter with Reality</em> (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2004).<br />
2. Barron, <em>Priority of Christ</em>, 154.<br />
3. See above on providence.<br />
4. Barron, <em>Priority of Christ</em>, 13.<br />
5. <em>A Summa of the Summa</em>, ed. Peter Kreeft (San Francisco: Ignatius, 1990), 174 (from Thomas Aquinas, <em>Summa Theologica</em>, I, 22, 4).</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 27 Sep 12 05:00:26 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Noll</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Sep 27, 2012 05:00</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Science and the Bible: Theistic Evolution, Part 4</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;4?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;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;4?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Scientist&#45;theologians who write about TE also think about creation and theodicy in terms of divine “kenosis” and eschatology. So today we’ll conclude our “implications” section by returning to creational theology, and then turn to the ways TEs re&#45;think Adam and Eve in light of human evolution.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Some implications and conclusions of Theistic Evolution—continued again</h3>

<p>Last time I introduced the idea that a Christocentric theology of creation is one of the hallmarks of Theistic Evolution, and I focused on the idea of the “Crucified God.”   But the scientist-theologians who write about TE also think about creation and theodicy in terms of divine “kenosis” and eschatology. So today we’ll conclude our “implications” section by returning to creational theology, and then turn to the ways TEs re-think Adam and Eve in light of human evolution.</p>

<h3>Kenosis, theodicy and eschatology</h3>

<p>John Polkinghorne and others, citing Philippians 2:7, like to speak about divine <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Kenosis">“kenosis”</a>, God’s choice to “empty himself” in taking on human form; they apply this also to the act of creating the world in a great work of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/The-Work-Love-Creation-Kenosis/dp/0802848850">self-sacrificial love</a>. Although Wikipedia gives much information about the roots of this doctrine in Orthodox and Catholic circles, my knowledge is minimal and I cannot confirm what I find there (though it might all be correct). According to a theologian I once consulted, kenosis in soteriology was discussed by Lutherans in the 17th century (if not perhaps even earlier, by others), but was only extended to theology of creation in recent decades. The most I can say with confidence is this: one of the most striking features of Protestant thought about nature, during and since the Scientific Revolution, is the degree to which it is <em>not</em> Christocentric in the sense we are now discussing. In much Protestant and Evangelical literature devoted to the topic of creation, one often looks in vain even for <em>references</em> to Jesus, let alone to Jesus as the suffering servant through whom the world was made,. Only in the latter part of the 20th century do I find a clear emphasis on the idea that nature is the creation of the God who put aside power and was crucified. If this understanding is correct, then I would say that it’s high time, and let’s get on with it!</p>

<p>TEs (especially Polkinghorne) are also in the forefront of those Christian writers who are linking theodicy inextricably with eschatology. Yet another scientist-theologian, Robert Russell, offers this powerful eschatological vision in <em><a href="http://www.ctns.org/CAO.html">Cosmology From Alpha to Omega</a></em>, drawing on all of the main ideas I’ve presented in this section: </p>

<blockquote>&#91;I&#93;n order to move us beyond mere kenosis to genuine eschatology, I believe that both kenotic theology and eschatology must be structured on a trinitarian doctrine of God. The reason here is simple: it is the trinitarian God who will act to bring about the redemption of all of nature since it is this God who is revealed as God in and through the cross and resurrection of Jesus. A kenotic theodicy (that God suffers voluntarily with the world) in and of itself is not redemptive. Eschatology is required, in which the Father who suffers the death of the Son acts anew at Easter to raise Jesus from the dead. In turn, the involuntary suffering of all of nature--each species and each individual creature--must be taken up into the voluntary suffering of Christ on the cross (theopassionism) and through it the voluntary suffering of the Father (patripassionism).(p. 266) </blockquote>

<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_te_4_2.jpg" alt="" height="335" width="266"  /><br />George MacDonald (<a href="http://georgemacdonald.info/gmd_1862.jpg">source</a>)</p>

<p>Because this series is primarily focused on the history of approaches to understanding Science and the Bible, I will not delve more deeply into these important theological issues, but only direct readers  to resources such as these. Still, I close this section with a quotation from George MacDonald’s <em><a href="http://www.online-literature.com/george-macdonald/unspoken-sermons/2/">Unspoken Sermons</a></em>, the same passage that C. S. Lewis used in abbreviated form as an epigram for <em>The Problem of Pain</em>: </p>

<blockquote>“the Son of God, who, instead of accepting the sacrifice of one of his creatures to satisfy his justice or support his dignity, gave himself utterly unto them, and therein to the Father by doing his lovely will; who suffered unto the death, not that men might not suffer, but that their suffering might be like his, and lead them up to his perfection...”</blockquote>

<br /><br /><br /><br />

<h3>Adam, the fall, and sin</h3>

<p><strong>(5) TEs have to confront questions about human origins that are much easier for OECs or YECs to answer: Did Adam and Eve really exist as historical persons? Was the “fall” an actual historical event? If not, what is the origin of sin?</strong></p>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_te_4_3.jpg" alt="" height="246" width="563"  /><br />Michelangelo Buonarroti, “The Fall and Expulsion from the Garden of Eden,” Cappella Sistina, Vatican (1509-10)</p>

<p>My comments here are much briefer, but I don’t mean to imply that the questions are any less important than the one I’ve just dealt with. Polkinghorne does not hold a traditional view of the fall, but he likes Reinhold Niebuhr’s view “that original sin is the only empirically verifiable Christian doctrine!” (<em>Belief in God in an Age of Science</em>, p. 88) This reminds me of G. K. Chesterton, who famously remarked, “Certain new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Christian theology which can really be proved” (<em><a href="http://www.pagebypagebooks.com/Gilbert_K_Chesterton/Orthodoxy/The_Maniac_p1.html">Orthodoxy</a></em>, chap. 2). In other words, anyone who doubts the idea that we are “fallen” creatures simply needs to look around—that is all the evidence of our strong bent to wickedness that you’ll ever need.</p>

<p>There are ways to finesse the fall and evolution in a quasi-concordistic manner, such as the “headship” model advocated by <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/models-for-relating-adam-and-eve-with-contemporary-anthropology">Denis Alexander</a>. Others reject any appeal to Concordism, stressing the principle of divine accommodation. For example, <a href="http://www.ualberta.ca/~dlamoure/p_adam_1.pdf">Denis Lamoureux</a> argues that in the revelatory process the Holy Spirit came down to the level of understanding of the ancient Hebrews and used their ancient conception of <em>de novo</em> creation, in which humans were created quickly and completely. Thus, in Genesis chapters 2 and 3, Adam and Eve are ancient vessels that deliver the <em>inerrant</em> spiritual truths that God created us and that we are sinners. </p>

<p>The views that have received the most attention among evangelicals, however, are probably those of biblical scholar Peter Enns, particularly his new book, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/Evolution-Adam-The-Doesnt-Origins/dp/158743315X">The Evolution of Adam</a></em>. Instead of trying to summarize them myself, I’ll link his discussion of <a href="http://www.internetmonk.com/archive/pete-enns-on-mistakes-in-the-adamevolution-discussion">“Mistakes in the Adam/Evolution Discussion”</a>, since it parallels some of the content in the book. Also see <a href="http://www.patheos.com/blogs/peterenns/2012/08/spinning-our-wheels-a-response-to-a-review-of-the-evolution-of-adam-with-apologies-to-those-with-a-500-word-1-6-minute-internet-attention-span/">his replies</a> to some evangelical scholars who have been critical of the book. </p>

<p>One of the most original and thoughtful proposals I have seen comes from philosopher Robin Collins (for bibliographical information on this and the other works cited in the rest of this column, see below). Collins calls his model the “Historical/Ideal” view, because “the original state described in the Garden story represents an ideal state that was never realized,” showing “what an ideal relation with God would be like.” Adam and Eve represent every person who has ever lived, but they also represent “the first hominids, or group of hominids, who had the capacity for free choice and self-consciousness.” Just as the first hominids made sinful choices, so do we now, and original sin involves “the resulting bondage to sin and spiritual darkness that is inherited from our ancestors and generated by our own choices.” I can’t convey the subtlety and thoroughness of this account in a short space, so those who want to know more will have to read for themselves. Conveniently, Collins provides a link to a “near final version” of his paper on his <a href="http://home.messiah.edu/~rcollins/home.htm">web site</a>. If someone wants to summarize his arguments in a few paragraphs below, it would be a real service to our “course.”</p>

<h3>Problems with historicity</h3>

<p><strong>(6) Questions about the historicity of Adam & Eve are underscored by evolution, but they would still come up even if Darwin had never existed and no one had ever proposed that humans and other animals have common ancestors. The Bible places Adam & Eve in a Neolithic world, with cities and agriculture, whereas non-biological scientific evidence shows that humans existed for a very long time before cities or agriculture came into existence. </strong></p>

<p>Read that again. It’s a crucial point. Far too many people believe—erroneously—that evolution is responsible for undermining the historicity of Adam, Eve, and the Garden of Eden. In fact, the relevant science here is almost entirely from anthropology, not biology, and it involves human antiquity, not common ancestry. Since the mid-nineteenth century, evidence has been building that creatures anatomically and behaviorally identical to us have been on this planet for a very long time, far longer than the biblical 6,000 years. We could leave Darwin and evolution entirely out of the picture, and we would still be having a conversation about the historicity of Genesis 2 and 3. The same issues pertain to any OEC scenario. Most proponents of ID can’t duck this, either, even though they get to say “officially” that ID isn’t about the Bible. Because most ID proponents are not YECs, they accept the general validity of the methods used to date rocks and fossils, and so (by implication) this is their problem, too, whether or not it’s acknowledged.</p>

<p>To illustrate my point historically, let me introduce readers to George Frederick Wright (read more <a href="http://collopy.net/projects/wright.html">here</a> and <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/George_Frederick_Wright">here</a>). Ronald Numbers, the leading historian of American religion and science, wrote a clear, detailed article about this (see the reference below) that I strongly recommend to anyone who’s interest has been piqued. An influential Congregationalist clergyman and theologian, Wright was mentored by Harvard botanist <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/asa-gray-and-charles-darwin-discuss-evolution-and-design-part-1">Asa Gray</a>, served briefly under <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thomas_Chrowder_Chamberlin">Thomas C. Chamberlin</a> on the U. S. Geological Survey, and even contributed articles on early humans and the ice age—his specialty—to scientific journals. During the 1870s, he worked closely with Gray to promote what is usually seen as a type of Theistic Evolution. By the early twentieth century, however, he appeared in some of his writings to have almost completely reversed his views on evolution. He even contributed an essay on “The Passing of Evolution” to the famous pamphlets, <em><a href="http://www.blueletterbible.org/commentaries/comm_view.cfm?AuthorID=16&contentID=4590&commInfo=20&topic=The%20Fundamentals">The Fundamentals</a></em>, that later gave its name to that movement. </p>

<p>In other writings, however, Wright seemed to remain convinced of evolution, at one point saying that, “it is difficult to resist the conclusion that, so far as his physical organism is concerned, man is genetically connected with the highest order of the Mammalia.” Whatever he really thought about common ancestry—whether he was really a TE, an OEC, or an ID (one could make a good case for each)—the question of human antiquity dogged Wright for decades, as he sought ways to reconcile the genealogies in Genesis with accumulating evidence that humans have existed much longer than 6,000 years. Fortunately for Wright’s Christian faith, which probably hung in the balance, the famous Princeton theologian <a href="http://www.theopedia.com/B_B_Warfield">Benjamin Breckenridge Warfield</a>, together with the conservative biblical scholar William Henry Green, managed to persuade Wright that the Genesis genealogies had plenty of wiggle room. Anyone wanting to see the crucial details should read Green’s paper on <a href="http://www.outersystem.us/creationism/PrimevalChronology.html">“Primeval Chronology</a>” at this point. Note Warfield’s own conclusion (same URL): “There is no reason inherent in the nature of the Scriptural genealogies why a genealogy of ten recorded links, as each of those in Genesis v. and xi. is, may not represent an actual descent of a hundred or a thousand or ten thousand links.”</p>

<p>Can this really be true, without straining the whole idea of historicity? <a href="http://www.asa3.org/ASA/resources/CSRYoung.html">Davis Young’s skepticism</a> seems appropriate here. How far back can we place Adam and Eve and still have contact with the biblical period? In my opinion, a clear and convincing picture of an historical Adam and Eve, reconciling the biblical picture with human antiquity, has not yet been produced, and I am doubtful that we will ever have one. Those who want more information about the possibilities and the difficulties are invited to consult the articles (cited below) by anthropologist James Hurd, evolutionary biologist David Wilcox, and anthropologist Dean Arnold. To the best of my knowledge, Hurd and Wilcox are TEs, while Arnold is an OEC. It’s up to you, my “students,” to consult these sources and place summaries and comments below. I’ve done enough already.  </p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>In about two weeks, I’ll conclude with a short history of Theistic Evolution. There’s plenty to think about in the interval. Please follow some of these links, borrow some of these books, and add your views to mine.</p>

<h3>Citations</h3>
<p class="date">Dean Arnold, “How Do Scientific Views on Human Origins Relate to the Bible?” in <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Not-Just-Science-ebook/dp/B000SEVJC6"><em>Not Just Science</em></a>, edited by Dorothy F. Chappell & E. David Cook (Zondervan, 2005), 129-40.<br /><br />
Robin Collins, “Evolution and Original Sin,” in <em><a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/perspectives-on-an-evolving-creation">Perspectives on an Evolving Creation</a></em>, edited by Keith B. Miller (Eerdmans, 2003), 469-501.<br /><br />
James P. Hurd, “Hominids in the Garden?” in <em>Perspectives on an Evolving Creation</em>, 208-33.<br /><br />
Ronald L. Numbers, “George Frederick Wright: From Christian Darwinist to Fundamentalist,” <em>Isis</em> 79 (1988): 624–45.<br /><br />
David Wilcox, “Finding Adam: The Genetics of Human Origins,” in <em>Perspectives on an Evolving Creation</em>, 234-53.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 25 Sep 12 05:00:57 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Still, Citizen Sparrow</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/still&#45;citizen&#45;sparrow?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/still&#45;citizen&#45;sparrow?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>A combination of observation and interpretation can help us better appreciate the way the whole world speaks of the glory of its Creator, including those parts we are inclined to find supremely inglorious.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>We are used to claims that discoveries and insights from the physical and biological sciences put hard limits on the truthfulness of the Bible, and even to strident assertions that they actually disprove its narrative. But careful and scientific study of the natural world—God’s second book of revelation—can also bring out aspects of the Bible’s story and imagery that we would have missed, especially when seen through the synthesizing lens of a poet.  A combination of observation and interpretation can help us better appreciate the way the whole world speaks of the glory of its Creator, including those parts we are inclined to find supremely inglorious.</p>

<p>An example of the way poetry helps re-make our interpretive framework is Richard Wilbur’s poem, <em>Still, Citizen Sparrow</em>.  Directly addressing our “natural” revulsion for death and those contaminated with it, the poem contrasts the small “darting” sparrow with the vulture—an unwelcome visitor in the sparrow’s space.  Surely, the vulture must seem an awkward and ungainly abomination in the fruitful orderliness the smaller bird inhabits, for those “orchard aisles” hint at both a garden and a church.  Yet the poem also presents a two-fold defense of this most un-clean of birds, beginning with the difference between how it seems on the ground and how it is in its own element, at the “tip of the sky.”  “[N]o more beautiful bird is in heaven's height “, Wilbur tells us,  “No wider more placid wings, no watchfuller flight.”  But more than just his aeronautic skills are at issue.  It is the vulture’s “rotten office”—the very thing that makes it so repulsive to our sensibilities—that Wilbur names as its saving grace. </p>  

<p>The “naked-headed one. . . Devours death, mocks mutability, / Has heart to make an end, keeps nature new.”  This description of the vulture could be a purely naturalistic assessment of the importance of biological recycling, but a turn at the poem’s fourth stanza takes its imagery in an explicitly scriptural direction.  From here on, it connects the vulture with Noah, and the sparrows (and implicitly us) as those “who would have died / Gladly with all [they] knew” rather than put up with the tedium and apparent foolishness of Noah’s incessant sawing and hammering.  At last, Wilbur implores the sparrows to consider how “high and lonely” was Noah’s time on the waters as “He rocked his only world, and everyone's.” </p>

<p>The vulture here is more than just “the hero” of the poem, as Wilbur puts it, but exactly what he stands for is not immediately clear.  In terms of the great narrative of the Bible, we are used to thinking of ourselves and all humanity as “Adam’s sons,” and even as the “sons of Abraham”; in Christ, both of those images are completed and fulfilled, and all of us redeemed. But <em>Still, Citizen Sparrow</em> ends not with a claim of kinship with Adam or Abraham, but with this: “all men are Noah's sons.”  Might Noah also be a type of Christ? How does the all-too-natural vulture connect with it, deepening our understanding the role and experience of Jesus as the Messiah?</p> 

<p>Following Wilbur’s account of the nobility of the vulture, we can make the connection between it and Jesus’ role of overcoming death.  But what unites them more subtly (and perhaps even more poignantly in this season of Lent) is shame and rejection, even exile. These terms are not at all unrelated to death, for touching the dead was one of the things that made an Israelite ceremonially unclean, and vultures’ ordinary habits might account for their similarly-rejected status in the Jewish bestiary. Elsewhere in the Bible, the characteristic baldness of the vulture provides imagery of shame, despair and humiliation, as in Micah 1:16: <em>Make yourselves bald and cut off your hair, for the children of your delight; make yourselves as bald as the vulture, for they shall go from you into exile.</em>  </p> 

But personal ridicule and rejection are also part of the package. Noah’s plan for saving his race seemed foolishness to his contemporaries, all the more because they rejected the idea that they were in need of salvation at all. No less did the Jewish leaders laugh at Jesus’ announcement that he would rebuild the Temple in three days, and his own disciple rebuke him for his plan to go to Jerusalem and die.  But surely in the passion of Holy Week, Jesus’ shame was complete, coming both from his own people and from the gentiles to whom he was turned over.  He was mocked, rejected, and killed. By his death—especially on the cross—he seemed to confirm to the people of Israel that he was not the savior, after all.  Rather, he appeared as one accursed, tainted by the means as much as the fact of his death, though the very humiliation and rejection was the path by which he brought renewal.</p> 

 <img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/about/sparrow_detail_small.jpg" alt="" height="167" width="250"style="float:left;padding:10px 10px 10px 10px;"   />

<p>Surely the vulture is an unlikely symbol for Christ, especially when wrapped up with the character of Noah.  But the key insight of the poem and the image actually lies in the relationship between the vulture and the sparrow, the latter of which serves as our stand-in.  We are too often like that small bird in Wilbur’s account, wanting a more noble and glorious emblem than this of how the Kingdom bears on our world, wishing ever still to banish the unclean from our presence and keep our own lives neat and tidy.  The cause of Christ is not neat or tidy, though, and brings ridicule and rejection from our peers more often than it brings honor.  As we draw close to Jerusalem with Jesus, may we be willing to accept the “rotten office” ourselves, and to take his (and the vulture’s) perspective on rejection—in his story, and in our own.</p>

<h3>“Still, Citizen Sparrow”</h3>
<p>by Richard Wilbur</p>

<p>Still, citizen sparrow, this vulture which you call<br />
Unnatural, let him but lumber again to air<br />
Over the rotten office, let him bear<br />
The carrion ballast up, and at the tall</p>

<p>Tip of the sky lie cruising. Then you'll see<br />
That no more beautiful bird is in heaven's height,<br />
No wider more placid wings, no watchfuller flight;<br />
He shoulders nature there, the frightfully free,</p>

<p>The naked-headed one. Pardon him, you<br />
Who dart in the orchard aisles, for it is he<br />
Devours death, mocks mutability,<br />
Has heart to make an end, keeps nature new.</p>

<p>Thinking of Noah, childheart, try to forget<br />
How for so many bedlam hours his saw<br />
Soured the song of birds with its wheezy gnaw,<br />
And the slam of his hammer all the day beset</p>

<p>The people's ears. Forget that he could bear<br />
To see the towns like coral under the keel,<br />
And the fields so dismal deep. Try rather to feel<br />
How high and weary it was, on the waters where</p>

<p>He rocked his only world, and everyone's.<br />
Forgive the hero, you who would have died<br />
Gladly with all you knew; he rode that tide<br />
To Ararat; all men are Noah's sons.</p>


<p>From <em>Richard Wilbur: New and Collected Poems</em>. San Diego: Harcourt Brace Jovanovich, 1988: p. 318. ©Richard Wilbur.</p>

<p class="intro"><a href="http://www.danagioia.net/essays/ewilbur.htm" target="_blank">Richard Wilbur</a> is a poet, translator, and playwright, and was appointed as the second Poet Laureate of the United States in 1987.  Please read the poem aloud, then click <a href="http://www.amazon.com/Anterooms-Poems-Translations-Richard-Wilbur/dp/0547358113/ref=sr_1_3?s=books&ie=UTF8&qid=1332682076&sr=1-3" target="_blank">here</a> to buy your own copy of Wilbur’s latest work, <em> Anterooms: New Poems and Translations</em>.</p>


]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 25 Mar 12 06:14:47 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 25, 2012 06:14</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>Behold, the Man</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/behold&#45;the&#45;man?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/behold&#45;the&#45;man?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Anyone interested in the faith and science conversation knows that there currently is considerable, heated debate over the problem of “Adam.” I’d like to suggest that this argument is in significant ways misplaced.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Anyone interested in the faith and science conversation knows that there currently is considerable, heated debate over the problem of “Adam.”  Genetic studies conclude that the modern human population could not have arisen from only one primal couple.  Excellent Biblical scholars and theologians from various perspectives argue over whether “Adam” should be thought of as part of a population of early humans, or as an entirely non-historical figure.   And of course, many Christians continue to insist that scientific data that appears to contradict a particular Biblical / theological interpretation of human origins should be rejected out of hand.</p>

<p>I’d like to suggest that this argument is in significant ways misplaced.  The participants in this debate all seem to agree that what makes us “human” can be defined by genes and population studies.  There is a pressing need for them to conform theology to population genetics, or to conform population genetics to theology, because the story of our genes is implicitly equated with the story of what it means to be “human.”  The hypothesis that there was a “first human” – a capital-A <em>“Adam”</em> – can be tested in our genes.</p>

<p>But “genes” do not make us “human.”  What makes us “human” is the irreducible phenomena of all of our material and immaterial being as persons.</p>

<p>Nothing we observe in the universe is flat.  By “flat” I mean having only one aspect or “layer.”  Consider, for example, an apple.  What <em>is</em> it?  Is it the fruit of an apple tree? The seed-carrier – the potentiality – of new apple trees?  Beautiful and delicious?  Skin, flesh, and core?  Water and organic molecules?  Caloric energy and roughage?  Hydrogen, oxygen, and carbon?  Physical laws? All of these things comprise some of what we mean by “apple,” but none of them are what an “apple” <em>is</em>.  The reality that is “apple” cannot be reduced to any one of its aspects or layers.</p>

<p>It is possible to think of these aspects or layers hierarchically, with “higher” layers that emerge from “lower” ones.  Physical laws emerge from quantum probabilities; molecules emerge from physical laws; seeds, skin, flesh and core emerge from complex arrangements of molecules; beauty and delight emerge from the connection of skin, flesh and core to human sense perception;<sup>1</sup> “apple” emerges from all of this (and more) combined with the human cultural experience of this thing we call “apple.”</p>

<p>Notice that some “layers” can impinge or “supervene” on lower ones – for example, human sense perception and cultural experience <em>do something</em> to this thing confronting the subject in order for it to <em>become</em> “apple.”  But notice also that “apple” is not merely a cultural construction.  The word or signifier “apple,” of course, could be arbitrary, but there is an objective reality to the thing signified.  The layer of human sense perception and cultural experience supervenes upon, but does not create, the lower-order reality from which it emerges.</p>

<p>Sociologist Christian Smith draws these strands together in a critical realist framework in his excellent book <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0226765911/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0226765911">What Is a Person?: Rethinking Humanity, Social Life, and the Moral Good from the Person Up</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0226765911" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />.  In a critically realist approach to culture and human personhood, Smith suggests, “[h]uman beings do have an identifiable nature that is rooted in the natural world, although the character of human nature is such that it gives rise to capacities to construct variable meanings and identities….” Culture is a social construction, but it is not <em>merely</em> a social construction.  Human beings are social, but they are not <em>subsumed</em> by the social.  The reality we inhabit is “stratified”:  it includes both the reality of individual conscious human agents and the reality of the social structures that emerge from the cultures created by those agents.  These “personal” and “cultural” layers of the world interact with each other dynamically, each continually informing and changing the other.</p>

<p>Smith’s approach is helpful, but perhaps it does not go far enough.  For Smith, as for critical realists in general, the phenomena of human culture remain subject to some degree of granular disaggregation, at least analytically.  A phenomenological approach suggests that no “thing” can be broken into components and still comprise that “thing” – the genes that encode for apple trees are not apple seeds, apple seeds are not apple trees, and apple trees are not apples.  The critical realist framework of stratification, emergence, and supervenience functions as a very useful heuristic device, but to describe what an apple is, we must approach the phenomenon of “apple” in its fullness.  To know whether something falls into the kind “apple,” we must hold an ideal of everything an apple is, and compare the subject to the ideal.</p>

<p>And because of the transcendence of the ideal concept of “apple,” we can begin to speak of the relative excellence of particular instantiations of apples.  What is an “excellent” apple?  What distinguishes the excellent apple from a poor one?  We can only ask such questions if “apple” means something more than the particular physical specimen in hand, whether firm, sweet and tart, or bruised and sour.</p>

<p>The same is true of human “persons.”  We can say almost nothing about a “person” merely by observing genes, because genes are not “persons.”  Populations genetics studies can provide models of the dispersion of genes through groups of biological entities, but they can tell us nothing whatsoever about when the first “human person” emerged.  Indeed, for population genetics <em>qua</em> population genetics, there simply are no “persons” – for this is a science of the movement of genes, not a philosophical, sociological, or theological description of “persons.”</p>

<p>So what of “Adam?”  It is often suggested that in Romans 5:12 Adam is a type of Christ.  But, in fact, in Paul’s thought, as well as for the early Church Fathers, <em>Christ</em> is the type, the <em>typos</em>, a notion derived from the “stamp” or “seal” on an official document.  There is a hint in Romans 5 of a truth that would only become clarified later in Christian theology – that the pre-incarnate Christ, the second person of the Trinity, always <em>was</em>.  Whereas Arius declared that “there was a time when he [Christ] was not,” Nicea established the orthodox Christology of Christ’s eternal sonship.  Thus Christ is and was the Redeemer, the one for whom creation was made and in whose death and resurrection creation always finds its fulfillment.  Adam’s failure was that he went against type – he did not conform to Christ but rather tried to become something else, and thereby the true nature of humanity was broken.</p>

<p>Is the <em>typos</em> of Christ reducible to a set of genes?  Surely not.  It resides not in genes or in any other created thing but rather in the Triune life of God Himself.  We might speak, in a roughly analogical way, of ideas we hold in our minds – say, the idea of a perfect Bordeaux, ruby-red, silky, smoky, plummy, luxurious.  We could labor to instantiate that idea, combining genes and <em>terroir</em> and water and light and care, and perhaps we might achieve it, to the point where upon taking a sip we exclaim, “this – <em>this</em> – is Bordeaux.  Nothing else is worthy of that name.”</p>

<p>This is what God said of Adam, when he gave him breath and a name.  It is not something that God said of any other creature, even apparently some creatures that a modern population geneticist or paleoanthropologist might designate as ancestrally human based on genes or bones.  Yet <em>that</em> Adam, and each of us <em>in</em> that Adam, fail to participate fully and unreservedly in the true nature of the true human, the nature of Christ.  And so Pontius Pilot, an unwitting prophet, said of Christ:  “behold, the man” (John 19:5, KJV).  And so also Paul invites us to see:  the sinful man, the broken seal, the first created Adam; and the true type, the seal of humanity’s future, the perfect Adam, the Christ.  None of this is about the definitions and categories of modern science, as helpful and important as they may be for the progress of scientific thought.  It is, rather, about the fullness of what it means to be human.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. Human sense perception, of course, is an emergent property of an even more complex set of relations that give rise to the human “person.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 31 Jan 12 04:00:05 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Opderbeck</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jan 31, 2012 04:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>The Fall</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;fall?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;fall?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The lyrics begin by painting a picture of the Fall as something in which each person has participated: “The fruit (of the Fall of man) is seen in every eye and every hand.”</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/EccGm1JOQ8E" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>

<p>The song entitled “The Fall” by Gungor is from the artists’ latest album Ghosts Upon the Earth. The lyrics begin by painting a picture of the Fall as something in which each person has participated as indicated by the assertion that “the fruit (of the Fall of man) is seen in every eye and every hand.”   After reflecting on the words, consider the discussion questions below.</p>

<h3>“The Fall” by Gungor</h3>
<p>The Fall, the Fall, Oh God, the Fall of man,<br />
The fruit is found in every eye and every hand,<br />
Nothing, there is nothing yet in truest form,<br />
We walk like ghosts upon the Earth,<br />
The ground it groans.</p>

<p>How long? How long will you wait?<br />
How long? How long till you save us all, save us all?</p>

<p>Turn your face to me; turn your face to me.<br />
Turn your face to me; turn your face to me.</p>

<p>The light, the light, the morning light is gone,<br />
And all that is left is fragile breath and failing lungs.<br />
The night, the night, the guiding night has come,<br />
Uniting lover with his bride more precious than the dawn.</p>

<p>How long? How long must we wait? </p>

<p>Turn your face to me; turn your face to me.<br />
Turn your face to me; turn your face to me.</p>

<h3>Questions</h3>

<p>1. By focusing only on the Fall as a historical event, have we consciously or unconsciously simplified it—almost removing ourselves from the story?</p>
<p>2.  Besides Genesis 3, what other Scripture has inspired the opening lines of this song?   Does the feeling evoked by these opening lines personalize that passage for you?</p>
<p>3.  Have you ever felt:  “the light, the light, the morning light is gone?”   Have you experienced night as “guiding?”  Who is the lover?  What Scripture informs these lines?</p>
<p>4.  Have you ever asked, “How long? How long?”   Have you heard the answer, “Turn your face to me. Turn your face to me?”</p>
<p>5.  Do you  agree that the story of Adam and Eve is your story, except for one important difference?  What is that difference for you? </p>

<p>Michael Gungor has also served as a pastor at the Bloom Church in Denver, Colorado.   Below we post an excerpt from a sermon he has given on his own personal journey and his views about science and Scripture. </p>

<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/35777838?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p>(To hear the entire sermon go to this <a href="http://bloomchurchdenver.com/#/gatherings" target="_blank">link</a> and scroll to sermon of March 8, 2009—“What Can We Learn About Jesus from Science?”) </p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 28 Jan 12 05:31:14 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Michael Gungor</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jan 28, 2012 05:31</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Series: A Quest for God</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;quest&#45;for&#45;god?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;quest&#45;for&#45;god?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this five part series, two young men, Josh and Aron, engage each other through e&#45;mail letters. Their conversation oscillates between the seemingly suspicious elements of God and the gospel (raised by Josh) as well as responses that offer meaningful insight into these questions (answered by Aron). Ideas such as prayer, judgment, and the concealed nature of God are among the many points in this truth&#45;seeking exchange.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro"> Recently, we became aware of an email conversation between two young persons: one a young physicist and a deeply committed Christian named Aron and the other, Josh, a person who at least at the time the conversation began was a skeptic. The exchange is so rich that we’ve asked for permission to post it here. We hope you find it as informative and intriguing as we have.</p>

<h3>Josh wrote:</h3>

<p>Hi Aron,</p>
<p>Thanks for taking the time to discuss this. I am still skeptical. Please consider the following:</p>
<p>Suppose:</p>
<ol><li>The evangelical Christian God exists, is omnipotent, omniscient, loves people and wants them to believe in him so that they can join him in heaven.</li>
<li>There are sincere truth-seeking people who have not seen evidence that convinces them that this God exists, but if they just saw Jesus walk on water, feed thousands with a few fish and loaves, rise from the dead, have vivid and non-contradictory dreams about heaven, etc, they would believe. It does not have to be one single awesome event. It can be many different signs to different people. If God employed a multitude of miracles and awesome ways to reach people, people will not idolize one single manifestation. They would understand that these diverse awesome signs are just different ways that God is using to show his presence and not God himself.</li>
<li>God has no other agenda more important than the agenda of loving people and having people believe in him that would prevent him from showing evidence like the ones above.</li></ol>

<p>Then, I believe God would show himself more clearly to these people, but he isn't doing so, so one of the above statements must be false.</p>

<p>The first step in communicating yourself is to signal your presence. 'Creation' may or may not convincingly point to the existence of a Creator, but I don't see how it points to the Christian Creator and not some unknown Creator that is not the Christian God. To many people, the Bible is just a religious book, and not special compared to other religious books of other religions. Just because it is claimed to be true and to have had its accuracy preserved doesn't mean that claim is true. A non-believer who requires more substantial evidence in order to be convinced should not be required to just accept the Bible, because he has no prior reason to believe in it.</p>

<p>In essence, God is letting these people go to Hell because they fail to believe as a result of his failure to provide convincing evidence. In this situation, humility doesn't really matter.</p>

<h3>Aron wrote:</h3>

<p>Dear Josh,</p>

<p>In my last email, I was discussing only of this life, and what reasons God might have for partially concealing himself for the sake of our spiritual development here. The issue you raise in this email regards the final judgement and Hell. Any discussion of this must necessarily be more tentative than discussions of life on earth, because the final judgement hasn't happened yet, so we don't know right now exactly what it will be like. If the life of Jesus reveals what God is like, then God is very merciful (even though he is also very severe towards hypocrisy and unforgiveness). If Christianity is true, then Jesus will be the one doing the judging. If he was merciful when he was on earth, then he will also be merciful when he comes again.</p>

<p>Your objection to Christianity is this: How could a loving God possibly arrange things so that a sincere truth-seeking nonchristian, (an atheist, polytheist etc.) goes to Hell through no fault of his own?</p>

<p>In order to check to see if this is a problem, we should first check to see whether there are any sincere truth-seeking non-Christians who go to Hell. One could imagine two different kinds: 1) people who have never been exposed to Christianity, and therefore have no opportunity to know it is true, and 2) people who have been exposed to Christianity but claim there is not enough evidence to believe it.</p>

<p>With respect to the people in the category (1), how do you know that the Christian God would send them to Hell just for not being Christians? I think the Bible teaches quite explicitly that God does NOT do this. In Acts 17, Paul is trying to convince the Athenians not to worship idols. He says, "In the past God winked at this ignorance, but now he commands all people everywhere to repent." In other words, Paul explicitly says that God did not hold the idol worship of the pagans against them before they had an opportunity to hear the gospel and repent. Furthermore, it says in the book of Revelation that people are redeemed from every "nation, tribe, people, and language". Since many groups went extinct before having an opportunity to hear the gospel, it is clear that at least some people are saved without having explicitly heard the gospel in their lifetimes. Finally, Peter seems to suggest that there is some opportunity for people to believe the gospel even after they have died, when he says:</p>

<blockquote><p>"For Christ also suffered once for sins, the righteous for the unrighteous, to bring you to God. He was put to death in the body but made alive in the Spirit. After being made alive, he went and made proclamation to the imprisoned spirits—to those who were disobedient long ago when God waited patiently in the days of Noah while the ark was being built....the gospel was preached even to those who are dead, so that they might be judged according to human standards in regard to the body, but live according to God in regard to the spirit." (1 Peter 3:18-20 and 4:5-6).</p></blockquote>

<p>This text goes against the standard evangelical view that there is no chance to be saved after death. On the other hand, evangelicals also say you're supposed to go with the Bible rather than what any particular church says, so I think I'll go with the Bible. :-)</p>

<p>Now let's turn to category (2), the case of a person who has been exposed to Christianity but doesn't believe it because they claim not to have enough evidence. I think there are several different possible things that might be going on here:</p>

<p>First of all, just because they claim to be seeking the truth doesn't mean they really are:</p>

<p>(A) They might actually have enough evidence to believe in God, but dishonestly refuse to admit it to themselves, because they don't want it to be true. In this case, they are not actually sincere, and have rejected God not because of inadequacy of the evidence, but because of stubborn rebellion. In this case, there is no reason to think that they would accept God even if they did have more evidence. So it is not God's fault that they do not believe. It should be pointed out that many of the people who saw Christ multiply the loaves, heal people, raise the dead etc. nevertheless refused to believe. It is naive to think that if everyone saw miracles, everyone would believe. Rather the people who don't want to believe become more firm in their rejection of God.</p>

<p>(B) Or, although they don't have enough evidence to believe, they choose not to investigate to see whether it is true or not. In this case, it is their own fault that they don't have enough evidence. If people claim to base their decisions on evidence and reason, it is hypocritical if they reject Christianity without carefully considering whether there is sufficient evidence for Christ's Resurrection and other miracles to show that Christianity is true. In particular, it is utterly irrational to insist on seeing a miracle personally in order to believe if there is lots of evidence that other people have seen miracles. People don't refuse to believe in scientific results unless they personally witness the experiments, so long as multiple reliable people say they have done the experiments, that is enough. Why should religion be different?</p>

<p>I never assume that anybody is intellectually dishonest until I have some specific reason to think they are dishonest. But I've talked to enough atheists to know that most of them do fall into categories (A) or (B), at least to some extent. However, I'm sure that there do exist cases in which atheists are sincere. In this case:</p>

<p>(C) It might be that although right now they do not have enough evidence to believe, later God will give them enough evidence to believe and they will become Christians. This might happen either before or after death, for all we know.</p>

<p>(D) Or, although they will die without explicitly believing in Jesus, it may be that through caring for the needy, Jesus will regard them as having accepted him without knowing it. (See Matt 25:31-36)</p>

<p>(E) Or, although they do not have enough evidence to believe, they live wicked lives without love. Since God is love, this means that what little they do know about God, they hate (even though they do not know it is God that they are hating). If people hate God, there is no reason to think they will stop hating God if God reveals himself more clearly. Why should God reveal himself to someone who would not benefit from it?</p>

<p>Given all of the possibilities A-E, it is not at all obvious that there ARE any sincere, truth-seeking atheists who are going to Hell. I think that most of them aren't really sincere or truth-seeking, and also that many of them aren't going to go to Hell.</p>

<p>Jesus says "Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will be forgiven, but anyone who speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be forgiven, either in this age or the age to come." In other words, when people reject Jesus without knowing his divinity, God forgives them and does not hold it against them. But when someone by the influence of the Spirit receives the insight necessary to understand that God is working through Jesus, and then rejects him, this is a sin that cannot be forgiven. (God forgives everyone if they repent, but the point is that people who persist in this attitude won't repent.)</p>

<p>It should also be made explicit that no one <em>deserves</em> to go to heaven; God saves people by his mercy. But God will not overrule people who insist at every opportunity that they want nothing to do with his mercy. If people would hate God if they knew him, God is being merciful by not revealing himself to them yet. It gives them a chance to grow and develop, so that maybe later they would be prepared to accept him.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 26 Jan 12 04:27:22 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
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        <title>Jesus, History and Mount Darwin: Part 10</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/jesus&#45;history&#45;and&#45;mount&#45;darwin&#45;an&#45;academic&#45;excursion&#45;part&#45;10?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/jesus&#45;history&#45;and&#45;mount&#45;darwin&#45;an&#45;academic&#45;excursion&#45;part&#45;10?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The life of Jesus is noisy. A cacophony of information reaches through two thousand years to communicate with us. In the Bible alone we have four organized biographical sketches, Luke’s history of the first decades after Jesus, and a bunch of letters.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Written in the genre of Henry David Thoreaus travel-thinking essays, Rick Kennedy's <a href="https://wipfandstock.com/store/Jesus_History_and_Mt_Darwin_An_Academic_Excursion" target="_blank">Jesus, History, and Mount Darwin: An Academic Excursion</a> is the story of a three-day climb into the Evolution Range of the High Sierra mountains of California (<a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Evolution_Mts.jpg" rel="shadowbox;height=755;width=570;initialHeight=755;initialWidth=570">click here to see a map of the mountains</a>). Mount Darwin stands among other near-14,000-foot-high mountains that are named after promoters of religious versions of evolutionary thinking. Using the trek as its framing narrative, this series branches off to explore the complex and at times even murky spaces at the intersection of Christian faith, ancient and natural history, and observational science.</p>

<h3>The Noisy Life of Jesus</h3>

<p>Dave as a backpacking buddy is always an out-front kind-of-guy. Scrambling up, over, and around the large boulders at the base of Mount Darwin, he was out front.  Dave  once led me on a road-trip study of the twelfth- and thirteenth-century Indians of the Southwest. Dave, at the time, was student president of our Phi Alpha Theta history honor society. Cliff dwellings came up in class, and Dave organized a road trip to see as many Mogollon, Hohokam, and Anasazi ruins as can be done in an October four-day weekend.</p>

<p>Elbows in the breeze, my boys in the way back, a car-full of students following, we drove east from San Diego to Casa Grande and Montezuma’s Castle near Phoenix. Approaching Mesa Verde we hit snow. Our last night, we camped at Canyon de Chelly, east of Flagstaff. At every site, we were frustrated by the silence of the ruins. We could imagine life in these impressive buildings and speculate on why they were built and abandoned. However, we learned no specific names, nothing of political innovations, next to nothing about major events. Unrelenting mystery engulfed every site.</p>

<p>The cliff dwellings are, in many ways, as impressive as the ruins of Athens and Corinth, but we know so much more about genius of the latter’s citizens. The Greeks tell us about themselves, their leaders, the heroes, their gods, their acts. We listen and learn. In the Southwest we knew we were in the presence of genius, but there we could only listen to a frustrating silence.</p>

<p>The life of Jesus is noisy. A cacophony of information reaches through two thousand years to communicate with us. In the Bible alone we have four organized biographical sketches, Luke’s history of the first decades after Jesus, and a bunch of letters. Intersecting Jesus and the New Testament is an amazing amount of Roman literature dealing with Syria and Palestine, which were important and unruly parts of the empire. A Jewish/Greek historian, Josephus, wrote books about Israel that contribute to our knowledge of Jesus’ time. From the Bible and Josephus, historians have much more information about Jesus and the social and political issues of Jerusalem than any person or place in Europe at the same time.  On top of all of the noise of good information in the Bible and Josephus, a large library of books, called the “Dead Sea Scrolls,” were discovered in the middle of the twentieth century. We have much more information about Jesus to fight about than we have for almost any other person you read about in ancient history. Our sources are strong and diverse. We have multiple testimonies from highly credible sources, sources willing to live and die by the truth of their testimony.</p>

<p>Ironically, we have so much information that is essentially consistent and reliable, that we historians nitpick fights about all sorts of little things. Historians are frustrated when they don’t have information, but they become hypercritical when they have lots of information. We harmonize, then criticize, then revise, then harmonize again. We chase our tails. Many are so overwhelmed by so much information that they turn their back on the information. They declare that we can’t expect to ever know the real “historical” Jesus.</p>

<p>There is some truth in what they say. The discipline of history is a blunt instrument—in the university pocketknife, we are the awkward can-opener tool. Historians don’t have the knife-blade precision of controlled, repeatable experiments or the screwdriver leverage of geometrical demonstrations. By high standards of scientific precision or by high standards of philosophy, we don’t “know” historical people—be they Jesus or Caesar Augustus—really. However, by the practical standards of history, we know about Jesus as much, probably more, than we know about most ancient people, even Caesar Augustus.
Those who proclaim that we can’t know the “historical” Jesus are usually folks who don’t want to listen to the noise of so many good sources. Instead of listening to hear about Jesus, they want to create a Jesus. They want to create a more modern Jesus, a rational Jesus.</p>

<p>Giving up on the historical—traditional—Jesus is the first step to giving up on a Christianity strong enough to withstand any overblown Darwinian claims. Darwinism’s greatest threat to Christianity depends on the bait-and-switch of substituting a rationalized Jesus for the biblical Jesus. When we get to the top of Mount Darwin, we will be able to see Mount Fiske to the south. John Fiske can remind us of the danger in substituting a rational Jesus for the real one reported in history.</p>

<h3>The Jesus People Wish For</h3>

<p>John Fiske was a modern-minded young man from the start. He was born in Middletown, Connecticut in 1842 with the name Edmund Fisk Green. In college he changed his name to John Fisk, and then when he became an author he added an “e” to the end. Before leaving home for college, his concerned grandmother asked after his religious belief:</p>

<blockquote><p>“In her sore perplexity, grandma asked whether I believed in the Bible, meaning whether I believed everything in it; of course I said no. I couldn’t lie even to save her feelings. She felt bad about it. She asked me if I didn’t believe Christ was God, and of course, again I had to say no. How can a man have two natures without having two medulla oblongatas? A double ego, a double center of innervation is something to which I cannot yet subscribe.”</p></blockquote>

<p>Fiske was a smart kid wanting to be on the intellectual cutting edge. In his junior year at Harvard, he was caught reading Auguste Compte in chapel. Much like young Solomons, Fiske wanted to be a writer.  When he got famous enough, he become a traveling intellectual, publishing his lectures and reviews as they accumulated.</p>

<p>Like many nineteenth-century historians, Fiske wrote history largely to prove that modern people are smarter than ancient people. Such historians don’t love history for a larger sense of community and experience; they find it self-justifying and gratifyingly isolating. History, for them, is the story of progress. The historian becomes magisterial and dispenses praise and blame, honor and pity at will. Listen to Fiske’s magisterial tone when talking about the past as childlike:</p>

<blockquote><p>“No religious creed that man has ever devised can be made to harmonize in all its features with modern knowledge. All such creeds were constructed with reference to theories of the universe which are now utterly and hopelessly discarded. How, then, it is asked, amid the general wreck of old beliefs, can we hope that the religious attitude in which from time immemorial we have been wont to contemplate the universe can any longer be maintained? Is not the belief in God perhaps a dream of the childhood of our race, like the belief in elves and bogarts which once were no less universal? and is not modern science fast destroying the one as it has already destroyed the other?”</p></blockquote>

<p>God, elves, and the bogeyman versus modern science. The reader is shamed into joining the writer’s triumphal modernity. Biblical accounts of Jesus, of course, must be rationalized so as to fit our adult/modern minds. Many biblical reports of events and statements have to be jettisoned so that the “real” Jesus can be found.</p>

<p>In a review article entitled “The Jesus of History” (1870), Fiske declared that we have “but few facts resting upon trustworthy evidence” for Jesus. The words of Jesus are “preserved by hearsay tradition through the generation immediately succeeding his death,” and that generation cannot be trusted to distinguish the “authentic utterances of the great teacher from the later interpolations suggested by the dogmatic necessities of the narrators.” The early church was duped into a history of Jesus by its own “uncritical spirit,” its own lack of a rational historical method that could have preserved a genuine history. Fiske then offered a quick survey of an appropriate “method of inquiry which, in the hands of the so-called Tubingen School, has led to such striking and valuable conclusions concerning the age and character of all the New Testament literature.” Fiske particularly praises David Friedrich Strauss’s <em>The Life of Jesus Critically Examined</em> (1835–36) and praises early nineteenth-century German biblical scholarship. This new German scholarship supported the French tradition evident in the book that Fiske was reviewing: an anonymous work published in 1869 derived from the internationally popular French <em>Life of Jesus</em> written by J. D. Renan in 1863.</p>

<p>Renan’s book was reprinted and translated many times. In it, Renan declared his desire to get at a genuine history of Jesus. He criticized his German predecessors for their overemphasis on philosophy and wrote in a simplified critical spirit that discarded impossibilities and discounted the given narratives while offering conjectures about what really happened and what really was said. Of course, there was no actual historical resurrection. Renan’s Jesus was the Son of God because he taught that true worship is not tied to earthly places and rituals. Given the popularity of his book, we can assume that Renan struck a deep chord in lots of people who wanted a vaguely rational Jesus who was anti-clerical and might even be a liberal Protestant. Renan’s Jesus was a guy who would fit well in a faculty meeting. It was the disciples who embarrass us with pseudo-historical stories of the transfiguration, walking on water, and the resurrection.</p>

<p>Fiske supported books that supported the search for the rational Jesus. The Bible obfuscates more than illuminates. To find the truth, the scholar must go behind what is reported in the Bible to find the bits and pieces of the “true” Jesus that poke from underneath. This “true” Jesus unearthed by modern scholarship is the Jesus of the bait and switch. Once a rational Jesus is established, then a rational guy like Fiske can knock him down. The abstraction of Jesus can’t win against the stronger abstractions of natural history. My GPS is bigger than your GPS.</p>

<p>This is the central problem with the common claim of scientists. Stephen Gould, in <em>Rocks of Ages: Science and Religion in the Fullness of Life</em> (1999), insisted that science is about facts, experimental results, and natural reality, while Christianity is about values, ethics, and things taught in literature classes. Christianity can’t breathe in the realm of abstractions. If Christianity is about values, then I would rather be Confucian. Christianity has to be about facts, facts about a teacher who not only messed with the laws of nature, but rose from the dead, confirming his own claims, reported to us in ancient history.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mount_darwin_sierra.jpg" alt="" height="847" width="570"  /></p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 17 Jan 12 03:59:49 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Rick Kennedy</dc:creator>
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        <title>Appointment</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/appointment?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/appointment?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Like Christmas, each New Year’s Day is symbolized by a baby, but one destined to grow old and be replaced only 365 days later as the next year supercedes the one before.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Only a week after celebrating the Incarnation at Christmas—the singular mystery of God entering into His own creation as a human child—we come to another holiday that marks beginnings: New Year’s Day.  Like Christmas, each New Year’s Day is symbolized by a baby, but one destined to grow old and be replaced only 365 days later as the next year supercedes the one before.  As any of us who have ever made resolutions know, there is really not that much “new” to the turning of the year, and the way we find ourselves making the same resolutions over and over again suggests that most of what passes for novelty in the world actually has a well-rehearsed and cyclic character more than a feeling of radical departure from the past.</p>

<p>Indeed, despite our technological advancement, our yearly calendars remain tied to the movements of celestial bodies, whether to the course of the moon around the earth or to the course of the earth around the sun.  And putting the point above in a slightly more positive way, such naturalistic calendars serve to assure us of the dependability of the background rhythms of the physical world, against a foreground that often seems disconcertingly unpredictable and chaotic.  But looking only to the material, such calendars can only give shape to the tension between our competing experiences of earthly time as something that is relentlessly marching forward, but also as something that is ever the same and ultimately futile, devoid now of the sense of wonder and mystery that the sun, moon and stars evoked in our forebears.</p>

<p>Yet attention to the natural rhythms and processes of the material world does not necessitate a belief that the sun and moon (or oscillating crystals) are, in fact, the only measures by which we can mark time, nor does it mean the material world really has been disenchanted by our inspection of it at scales both large and small.  Unlike each imaginary “Baby New Year,” the babe born in Bethlehem does not cede His place each year, much less only a week after Christmas, but lays claim to all of time and the world as His own, forever, insisting that mystery and paradox remain at the heart of what is true about the cosmos: this includes that the material world is <em>good</em> and speaks of Him who made it, and that humanity occupies a peculiar place at the intersection of the material and the spiritual. Rather than demystify or “explain” who we are in strictly material terms, the past year’s worth of essays, papers, paintings and poems on this site demonstrates that looking deep into the fabric of the universe and our own human bodies via science, yet through the lens of Christ, heightens our awareness of the mystery of being human.  Our accounting of human identity, of what it means to be made in the image of God, need not avoid attention to the sometimes-ordinary aspects of the material “how,” so long as we resolutely keep our eyes fixed on the “why” and “who,” as well.</p>

<p>Continuing this link between images of babies, childbirth and beginnings, and the problem of seeing the world in disenchanted terms, Suzanne Rhodes’s poem “Appointment” makes explicit the tension between the “ordinary” scientific and medical aspects of human pregnancy and birth and the intrinsically extraordinary fact that what is being knit together is a human person—a being capable of knowing itself and its Creator, and of being known and cherished, itself.  Rhodes models a faithful tension between the material and the spiritual by first establishing a running point/counterpoint between the medical information she hears from her doctors (“facts”) and her own sense of the wisdom and meaning of the life taking shape within her (“mystery”).  Despite our extensive clinical knowledge of what is happening at each stage of an average pregnancy, and even our ability (illustrated by a first snapshot of my own third son, above) to peer inside “so dark a place,” Rhodes insists that what is happening has cosmic significance, that the process moves to “music steep as stars.”</p>

<p>Yet notice, too, that the poet is not removing the earthy truth from the human experience—not seeking to distance the miraculous from the ordinary context in which it comes to be.  Rather, it is the very physicality, the specificity, the sacrificial quality of what bringing about a new life entails that makes that life a treasured “pearl” (as we’ve discussed <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/oyster-and-pearl">elsewhere</a>, an emblem of the coming Kingdom).  Technical knowledge need not, cannot, replace wonder, nor erase the import of what we can now recognize as an echo of the incarnation in each birth.  Like Mary’s answer to the angel at the Annunciation of Christ, Rhodes’ last lines are an acquiescence to and affirmation of the outworking of God’s plans through the most ordinary of means, a recognition that He speaks when we are rendered mute.  And finally (and perhaps most <em>apropos</em> a discussion of calendars and beginnings and new years), throughout Rhodes’ poem is the implication that what we can see and measure and claim as the start of something new, God has already been working on in advance of our knowledge, much less participation.</p>

<p>If we see only mindless futility in the natural world and its cycles, or even more in its relentless march forward, we have little choice but to despair that all our beginnings will amount to nothing.  But if we understand our task as joining into what has already begun and trust that the Lord intends renewal for us and creation rather than merely novelty (or stasis, for that matter), then we can look back over the past and forward to the future with renewed hope.  Further, we can commit to continuing our exploration of the world with confidence that our concerns over “how” will always be allayed by our knowledge of the “who,” that what is “new” to us is no surprise to the Creator of heaven and earth, and that even things that seem like the “quake of birth” will, in the end, leave us speaking poems of praise and thanksgiving for what the Lord has done and will yet do.</p>


<h3>“Appointment”</h3>
<p>by Suzanne Underwood Rhodes</p>

<p>Tomorrow they will tell me what I know.<br />
After tools and taps they will talk in facts <br />
of mystery, of the flame in so dark <br />
a place you want to look and see God <br />
shaping the hands and face.</p>
 
<p>They will call it by other names <br />
but I will be hearing <br />
blood and bones sliding in place <br />
to music steep as stars. </p>
 
<p>I'm dreaming <br />
while the doctor feels clay <br />
and schedules birth on a chart unreal. <br />
As the earthen womb sings, <br />
making its pearl,<br />
I allow everything:</p>
 
<p>quake of birth that will leave<br />
the poem of dust in my mouth.</p>
 
<p class="intro">This poem first appeared in Sow's Ear Poetry Review.</p>
<p class="intro">Suzanne Underwood Rhodes received an M.A. in poetry from Johns Hopkins University and was a resident fellow at the Virginia Center for the Creative Arts. She has served on several boards and committees of poetry organizations and is a co-founder of the Appalachian Center for Poets and Writers.  Her latest book, <a href="http://www.canonpress.org/store/pc/viewPrd.asp?idproduct=371&idcategory=8" target="_blank">A Welcome Shore</a>, is a sequel to her earlier collection of prose meditations, <a href="http://rhodesnottaken.com/Books/Creative-Prose/sketches-of-home-click-here/8718990_jYKFA/" target="_blank">Sketches of Home</a>.  She has also published two volumes of poetry, <a href="http://rhodesnottaken.com/Books/Poetry/What-a-Light-Thing-This-Stone/8716727_osbDr/" target="_blank">What a Light Thing, This Stone</a> and <strong>Weather of the House</strong>, in addition to a poetry textbook, <strong>The Roar on the Other Side</strong>. Her work has been featured in journals from Georgia to Alaska, and been nominated for a Pushcart Poetry Prize and the Library of Virginia Prize.  Besides her literary activities, she works full-time as the director of public affairs for a charitable organization, Mercy Medical Airlift. Suzanne and her husband, Wayne, a professional photographer, have five grown children.  More on Suzanne and her work may be found <a href="http://rhodesnottaken.com/" target="_blank">here</a>, and she may be contacted <a href="mailto:SuzanneLRhodes@gmail.com">here</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 31 Dec 11 05:43:36 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
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        <title>Theotokos</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/theotokos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/theotokos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The Incarnation is a revelation of who we are. It is a retelling of Genesis chapter 3 and that is why, in this season of retelling this story, we enter a dangerous time.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In considering images that help us think about the intersection of Christian faith and scientific thinking in a way that is particularly appropriate for Christmas, it seemed right to focus on the central miracle and mystery of the incarnation.  After all, that God became human in the person of Jesus Christ is not only a defining tenet of Christian belief, but also a stumbling block to many who can not account for such a thing happening in a world they recognize as largely described (or “governed”) by materialistic laws.  Can not the miracle of Christ’s birth—specifically the claim that He was born of a virgin mother—be accounted for in several other ways, none of which require the suspension of those ordinary rules of nature?  Is not the miracle of Christmas only a fairy tale that conveniently covers the shame of an un-wed teenage mother?  And why do Christians persist in talking about this or any “miracle” when simpler, more earthly explanations (or denials) are at hand?</p>

<p>Part of the “answer” to the mystery of the incarnation lies in realizing that those three are not really the right questions to be asking, for they focus merely on means rather than meaning.  Rather, we should recognize that the miracles of Jesus’ life—beginning with His conception and birth through Mary—are not only or most miraculous in their physical, material aspects, but as demonstrations of His identity and calling, and ultimately of our own as those who bear His image.  In contrast to the manger scene familiar to most Western Christian eyes, the image pictured above is an Orthodox icon of Mary as the Theotokos, the birth-giver of God, and it offers to us an alternate way of picturing the central mystery of Christmas that Orthodox priest, curator and art historian David Goa has described as “the Church’s great image of the human vocation and call to us to claim that vocation—who we are and how we are to then live all in one simple image of our common human experience.”  For, without setting aside or attempting to explain the material aspects of the virgin birth, the continuing miracle of the incarnation is that it is as much a present reality in the lives of Christians today as it was for Mary or for those in the early Church.</p>

<p>In a sermon dedicating another Theotokos icon, Goa warned of the danger of living in a time when Christmas imagery has become too-familiar, "that we make a fetish of virginity and the birth of a Palestinian baby; his mother and would be father; that we fill the emptiness with the glamour offered from all quarters; that we turn this feast into a family occasion: freeze frame our familial affection.”  Against those temptations, this icon does not “naturalize” Christ as a perfect human baby born in a manger, but reminds us that even within Mary’s body—and though setting aside his power for a time as a fully human infant—Christ remained the Lord of all; thus, He is shown seated on the throne of the heavens and with a scroll in His hand, emblems of both arenas of His revelation of Himself.  Yet far from minimizing Mary’s role, this iconography of the fullness of God emphasizes her as a model of the way every Christian can and does make a place and a way for the Lord, as well.</p>

<p>In speaking of the icon, Goa reminds us that, “the Incarnation is a revelation of who we are. It is a retelling of Genesis chapter 3 and that is why, in this season of retelling this story, we enter a dangerous time.”  It is dangerous not just because we might miss the meaning of it, but because with every re-telling of our commissioning as image-bearers, sent to cultivate and create in God’s name, we are tempted to exert our own desires, to exercise dominion for our own sake, in our own names.  Goa continues, “The mystery of the Incarnation of God in Christ is our mystery, a revelation of our created nature and a call to its fullness, . . . [thus] the Icon of the Virgin and Child is . . . the Icon of the Human Vocation. It reveals to us our capacity as persons, as women, men and children.”  That vocation certainly includes seeking to understand the created world and its ways via careful and faithful study, just as it includes seeking the Lord through the scriptures and traditions of the Church; but it is most fully expressed when we use both of those resources to ease the pain and injustice we find (and have even caused, ourselves) in the world around us.</p>

<p>Finally, Goa notes that, “When Orthodox Christians around the world enter the church, they bring a candle to this icon and, bowing in a prayer of gratitude to God who clothed them in flesh, ask that they, too, like the Theotokos, may be open to be a birth giver of divine love in a fractured and suffering world.” Motivated by confidence that the Lord who created the cosmos is the same Lord who was born of Mary in Bethlehem, may all of us who struggle to understand the way God continues to reveal Himself in creation and in the scriptures remember that the most vital and present revelation of His love occurs by the Spirit within us, for the benefit of others.  May we recognize that the miracle of Christmas was not that God chose to break the rules of biology, but that He makes a way for all of us “who were far off” to join in His reconciling, redemptive work by likewise bringing—<em>being</em>—the Body of Christ unto the world.  May we, then, join with Mary Theotokos in her song of praise and thanksgiving that we have been called to share in the mystery of the incarnation of our God and Savior.</p>

<p class="intro">Dr. David J. Goa is the Director of the <a href="http://www.augustana.ualberta.ca/research/centres/ronningcentre/" target="_blank">Ronning Centre for the Study of Religion & Public Life</a> at the University of Alberta.  All quotes were taken from Goa’s “Our Common Calling: The Icon of the Human Vocation,” given at Bethel Lutheran Church in December 2007. More on the iconography of the Theotokos and this image may be found <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Our_Lady_of_the_Sign" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 24 Dec 11 10:04:00 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
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        <title>Christ, The Apple Tree</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/christ&#45;the&#45;apple&#45;tree?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/christ&#45;the&#45;apple&#45;tree?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>This traditional American carol turns to Song of Songs 2:3 for inspiration; it uses the familiar apple as a emblem of the very tree of life, emphasizing that the promise we have in Jesus goes beyond the merely material to encompass our complete shelter, nourishment, and passionate joy.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/33852211?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p>In last Sunday’s consideration of the “root” image for the coming Christ, I noted that the text of Isaiah 1:11 helps us understand Jesus to be not only the source of creation and salvation (the literal “root” of both), but also the means of their flourishing (as the growing “branch” or “shoot”) and their culmination (their “fruit”).  The traditional American carol linked above goes even farther afield than the prophets for its image of Christ, turning to Song of Songs 2:3 for inspiration and a more specific tree image: it uses the familiar apple as a emblem of the very tree of life, emphasizing that the promise we have in Jesus goes beyond the merely material to encompass our complete shelter, nourishment, and passionate joy.</p>

<p>The text of the song (included below) was collected in New England or the Appalachians in the late 18th century, and was then set to an American Revolutionary War-era marching tune by Jeremiah Ingalls (1764-1838) of Newbury, Vt.  According to early music scholar, performer and popularizer Thomas B. Malone, “Jeremiah Ingalls had a particularly successful run as a tavern keeper and church musician in Newbury between the years of 1709 and 1810, during which he published a book of fasola music called <em>The Christian Harmony</em>. This book contained not only the familiar fuging-tunes and anthems . . . but something rather new, folk-melodies with sacred texts, as well as call-and-response spirituals, and camp-meeting revival choruses.”</p>

<p>But though the lyrics’ narrative of individual spiritual weariness relieved by communion with Jesus is itself praise, and though the central drawn-from-cultivated-nature image of the apple tree reminds us of the inextricable linkage between the material world and its creator, it is the way the music is sung in this particular recording that has the most to tell us about how we might find our way forward though the overlapping contemporary cultures of science and Christian faith.  This abridged version of the entire carol was <a href="http://www.singingalls.org/WeathersfieldCD.htm" target="_blank">recorded</a> by Malone at the Weathersfield Meeting House in Vermont in June, 2005 during a celebration of the 200th anniversary of Ingalls’ book—an event that brought together new and seasoned practitioners of the traditional American form of congregational music known as “shape note” or “fa-so-la” singing.</p>

<p>Also called “Sacred Harp” music (for the instrument that God has provided to every individual and, hence, to every gathering of worshippers), shape note singing requires participants to have only limited technical knowledge in order to join voices and hearts in praise and celebration of the works of the Lord in creation and in human lives.  The resulting music is much more about the act of making music together in community—perhaps especially in community with those you may have just met—as it is about making music to be listened to.  There are other available versions of this tune (for instance, <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/B0000007DK/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&tag=thebiofou06-20&linkCode=as2&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=B0000007DK">here</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=B0000007DK" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" /> you can listen to a snippet of a considerably more precise and “professional” version of the song from the album <em>Carols from the Old and New World</em>, sung by <a href="http://www.paulhillier.net/ph_tov.htm" target="_blank">Theatre of Voices</a> as directed by Paul Hillier), and the song text has been set to new music several other times this century (including the most well-known <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=Cm3fZDZxiko&feature=youtu.be" target="_blank">version</a> by Englishwoman Elizabeth Poston and <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=v5dM465yyro&feature=youtu.be" target="_blank">another</a> by Stanford Scriven), but this version preserves the original song’s feel of a common struggle to find our way in the world as well as the specific words of the text. And though even the setting published by Ingalls can be sung by highly-trained musicians, a simple repertoire of harmonic rules, a specific notational style, and a basic commitment to the underlying goodness and truth of the music itself is sufficient to link groups of amateur singers across centuries as well as across miles; it is doubtful that the versions recorded in more formal settings are “better” or more true to the heart of the music and its message than are un-recorded, “come as you are” shape-note versions sung in the myriad church congregations where they are still (or are newly) being sung.</p>

<p>That tension between getting every note right, on one hand, and, on the other hand, understanding music as a means of expressing and deepening both human and divine relationships in sometimes motley company, is suggestive for thinking about the tension that exists between technical and popular understanding of science, among other fields where there is a divide between amateurs and professionals.  Especially in a culture so enamored of specialization and compartmentalization as is ours, experts in whatever field perennially run the risk of missing the forest for the trees (apple or otherwise), of forgetting that knowledge and expertise are fulfilled when integrated into the context of the greater human community—made part of that wider conversation on meaning.</p>

<p>This does not mean, of course, that the depth and subtlety of knowledge gained by years of study, research and practice by professionals (scientists included) should or can be discarded by non-experts, either.  Instead, it is a reminder that—especially for believers instructed by Paul to think of ourselves as co-equal and interdependent parts of Christ’s Body—the authority of knowledge must be both given and received in humility for the good of the whole church and, through the church and by its example, for the good of all.  Those who understand, study, and contribute to music or any other great tradition of knowledge have a gift to offer non-experts, even if they hear the results of their gifts rendered as a “joyful noise,” rather than a “studio-quality” recording.  For both sides of the amateur/expert divide, keeping one version in mind while listening to (or singing) the other gives the richest, most fruitful sense of the music (or science) as both worship and art, precisely because such an attitude and demeanor of self-giving emulates the life lived and given by Jesus, himself.</p>

<h3>“Jesus Christ, The Apple Tree”</h3>
<p>traditional, collected by Joshua Smith/arranged by Jeremiah Ingalls<br />
(verses omitted in this recording given in <em>italics</em>)</p>

<p>The tree of life my soul hath seen<br />
Laden with fruit and always green;<br />
The trees of nature fruitless be,<br />
Compar’d with Christ the appletree.</p>

<p>This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
The glory which I now can see,<br />
In Jesus Christ the appletree.</p>

<p><em>For happiness I long have sought,<br />
And pleasure dearly I have bought;<br />
I miss’d of all, but now I see<br />
‘Tis found in Christ the appletree.<br />
[refrain]</p>

<p>I’m weary’d with my former toil,<br />
Here I shall set and rest awhile;<br />
Under the shadow I will be<br />
Of Jesus Christ the appletree.<br />
[refrain]</p></em>

<p>I’ll sit and eat the fruit divine,<br />
It cheers my heart like spir’tual wine<br />
And now this fruit is sweet to me,<br />
That grows on Christ the appletree.</p>

<p>This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
The glory which I now can see,<br />
In Jesus Christ the appletree.</p>

<p>This fruit doth make my soul to thrive,<br />
It keeps my dying soul alive;<br />
Which makes my soul in haste to be<br />
With Jesus Christ the appletree.</p>

<p>This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
This beauty doth all things excel,<br />
By faith I know, but ne’er can tell,<br />
The glory which I now can see,<br />
In Jesus Christ the appletree.</p>

<p class="intro">This copyrighted recording was made available by Thomas B. Malone via a <a href="http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by-nc/2.5/" target="_blank">Creative Commons license</a> on his <a href="http://www.singingalls.org/index.htm" target="_blank">website</a>.  The site is devoted to Ingalls' music and life, features similar recordings of many of his and others’ shape note arrangements and provides information on joining an annual singing event in Vermont, about which Malone says: “No experience is necessary, and books are provided.”  Malone’s own page on the Apple Tree Carol is <a href="http://singingalls.org/apple2007.htm" target="_blank">here</a>, and the direct link to this mp3 is <a href="entish.org/ch/Bicentennial/61.mp3" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 18 Dec 11 12:35:14 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
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