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        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/Blog/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest/Sermons,Adam_ the Fall_ and Sin?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
    <description>This is a custom feed of BioLogos resources. Make a new feed at http://biologos.org/resources/find</description>
    <dc:language>en</dc:language>
    <dc:rights>Copyright 2013</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2013-05-22T03:39:32-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
      <item>
        <title>Hydrology of the Bow River</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/hydrology&#45;of&#45;the&#45;bow&#45;river?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/hydrology&#45;of&#45;the&#45;bow&#45;river?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>There’s a word beneath the water, and the Bow River belongs to God. Have you been listening?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<blockquote>"All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full. To the place where the rivers flow, there they flow again." - Ecclesiastes 1:7</blockquote>

<p>“This is 2,300 year old wisdom from the Book of Ecclesiastes that seems to very concisely understand the water cycle. That water evaporates from the ocean, gets stored in the atmosphere via clouds, comes down as snow or rain, and when it comes down on the mountain it’s often stored there, as snow is gathered via groundwater, streams, and rivers, and then through the river, returns to the ocean, again. What a beautiful, complex, interdependent, wonderfully mysterious way of providing water, life to the land … But what does this beautiful system teach us, Father, Son and Holy Spirit, about who we are? What is your word, God, about this river, that runs through the center of where we live?”</p>

<p>In this sermon, Pastor Jon Van Sloten of New Hope Church in Calgary, Alberta, describes how he set out to learn where the water from the Bow River, near their home in the Rocky Mountains, actually comes from. He interviewed scientists who study hydrology and have learned a curious truth about how this particular river keeps a steady flow the full year round. This modulating geophysical “safeguard,” which allows the Rocky Mountains to hold water and let it out at a slow trickle rather than a deluge during the annual snowmelt, speaks to Van Sloten of God’s grace at work in the world—grace we can’t see with the naked eye, but is there all the same.</p>
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        <pubDate>Mon, 04 Mar 13 10:10:51 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>John Van Sloten</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 04, 2013 10:10</dc:date>-->
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            <item>
        <title>A Scientific Commentary on Genesis 7:11</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;scientific&#45;commentary&#45;on&#45;genesis&#45;711?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;scientific&#45;commentary&#45;on&#45;genesis&#45;711?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <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.
</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 05 Feb 13 08:00:43 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Rolf Bouma</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 05, 2013 08:00</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>

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        <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>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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        <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>.  
]]></content:encoded>
        <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>Science and the Bible: Theistic Evolution, Part 4</title>
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        <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>Saturday Sermon: Over and Above Naturalism, Part 2</title>
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        <description>Barkley suggests that material creation is not the end of our understanding (as Naturalists think), but a beginning that unveils the majestic and power of a Creator who loves us.</description>
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<p>In <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/saturday-sermon-over-and-above-naturalism">part 1</a> of his sermon “Over and Above Naturalism”, Joseph Barkley explained that science does not reveal the greater purpose to life. He also looked at Naturalism, a philosophy that depends on atheistic assumptions and scientific knowledge, stripping the material world of higher significance. In part 2, Barkley suggests that material creation is not the <em>end</em> of our understanding (as Naturalists think), but a <em>beginning</em> that unveils the majestic and power of a Creator who loves us. Exploring the grand dimensions of the Milky Way galaxy as well as our unique solar system, he points to the greatness of God and smallness of humanity. However, the most profound truth is God’s incomprehensible love for each person that leads us into a divine relationship with him. </p>

<p>Barkley first suggests that all scientific discoveries, rather than confirming the absence of a God and divine purpose, affirm the presence of an intelligent God with a plan for his creation. Each new fact about nature is just another “clue,” he says, to God’s splendor. This is clearly taught in Psalm 19: 1-2 (NIV): “The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands. Day after day they pour forth speech; night after night they reveal knowledge.” Though some argue that Bible does not accurately describe the natural world, Barkley affirms the infallibility of Scripture in <em>revealing truth about God</em> and the <em>purpose of his creation</em>. </p>

<p>Barkley demonstrates his point by recounting stunning details about the Milky Way, just one of billions of beautiful galaxies. Within it, stars are birthed and others die, planets are pulled toward stars with great gravitational force, and other celestial bodies are also always in motion. He focuses on the mind-blowing detail of the galaxy’s length, which is so vast that it requires the measurement to be in light years. It is 100,000 light years wide, and each light year represents 5.88 trillion miles. What is more, the Milky Way is only a middle-sized galaxy! God rightly declares through the prophet Isaiah, “‘So—who is like me? Who holds a candle to me?’ says The Holy One. Look at the night skies: Who do you think made all this?” (Isaiah 40:25, The Message translation). As Barkley puts it,  “that is the question the creation is presenting to us today—who could have possibly made all this?” </p>

<p>Not only does creation reveal God’s grandeur, but it also speaks of how “unimaginably small” we are in comparison. In fact, when the Voyager space probe produced sixty separate pictures to capture our solar system from 4 billion miles away, planet Earth appeared as “a little mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam,” (Figure 1)  according to Carl Sagan. If our entire planet—holding the entirety of human life—appears as a speck of dust, then how much more inconsequential does humankind itself appear? This comparison helps to “right-size” humanity in relationship to God. We are infinitely small and God is endlessly vast, and yet he deeply loves us in the midst of our weakness. </p>

<p>Finally, creation stirs the human heart with longing to know the “who” behind the “what” in this world. For thousands of years, God revealed himself to Israel through the Law and the prophets, but when God decided to present the clearest, most perfect picture of himelf, he sent his beloved Son, Jesus Christ (Figure 2). Colossians 1: 15-17 confirms this truth of Jesus Christ: “He is the image of the invisible God, the firstborn of all creation.  For by Him all things were created, <em>both</em> in the heavens and on earth, visible and invisible, whether thrones or dominions or rulers or authorities— all things have been created through Him and for Him.  He is before all things, and in Him all things hold together.” With this, Barkley addresses the question of greater significance.  A scientific mindset might lead us to search for worth in our function, but Barkley says this is a mistake. In reality, he says, we were created not just for a function, but for a <em>person</em>. That person is Jesus Christ, the perfect image of the Triune God. Ultimately, Barkley affirms that one could fathom <em>all</em> scientific knowledge and still not discover his or her own purpose, which flows only from a relationship with God through Jesus Christ. </p>
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        <pubDate>Sat, 26 May 12 06:38:43 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 26, 2012 06:38</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Saturday Sermon: Over and Above Naturalism</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;over&#45;and&#45;above&#45;naturalism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;over&#45;and&#45;above&#45;naturalism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Pastor Joseph Barkley of Ecclesia Church extols the greatness of the God who has brought forth incredible works and engaged humankind in relationship. In the first part of the sermon “Over and Above Naturalism,” Barkley admires the factual knowledge unlocked by science, and yet reminds the Church that those material descriptions fail to answer the question of ultimate significance.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/42430343?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="570" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<p><strong>The full sermon can be downloaded from Ecclesia Church's <a href="http://itunes.apple.com/us/podcast/ecclesia-hollywood-podcast/id100493250" target="_blank">website</a>.</strong></p>

<p>Pastor Joseph Barkley of Ecclesia Church extols the greatness of the God who has brought forth incredible works and engaged humankind in relationship. In the first part of the sermon “Over and Above Naturalism,” Barkley admires the factual knowledge unlocked by science, and yet reminds the Church that those material descriptions fail to answer the question of ultimate significance. There are people who do not believe in the greater meaning of life or a higher being, but rather cling to scientific analysis as the sole source of understanding about the universe. Barkley explains the outcomes of such naturalism, and later (in part 2 of this sermon) suggests that material creation is not an end, but a beginning that speaks of its majestic and powerful Creator who loves us.</p>

<p>Barkley first highlights amazing facts about the human body to demonstrate God’s ingenuity. Human bones, for instance, are five times stronger than a piece of steel with the same density and length. He then focuses on a picture of DNA looking down its long axis from top to bottom.  That image  reveals order and beauty in an arrangement that looks strikingly similar to a stain-glass window. During a visit to Italy, Barkley surveyed such intricate stain-glass windows in cathedrals, as well as masterful art pieces in museums, and yet, to him, none compare to the incredible structures that were hidden deep within the human body long before we were able to discover them or their beauty. </p>

<p>This age of modern science has unveiled much about our world, answering some of the “biggest questions we have.” However, Barkley affirms (along with most good scientists) that science cannot answer all questions by itself. He offers a simple analogy articulated by writer John Lenox: </p>

<blockquote><p>Aunt Matilda makes a beautiful cake. It is then sent to the laboratories of a nutrition scientist, a biochemist, a physicist and a mathematician. No doubt one will receive a report of its nutritional value, its composition of molecules, and the behavior of the molecules, but all scientific analysis will never reveal to the investigators <em>why</em> Aunt Matilda made the desert to begin with. She brought it into existence, and alone can answer <em>why</em>. </p></blockquote>

<p>Just as these experts could not describe <em>why</em> the cake was made, so scientific knowledge does not reveal the point of existence—why there is something rather than nothing. This answer is not inherent within the created thing, but is dependent on its Creator. Therefore, if there is a <em>why</em>, there must also be a who. People have more recently asserted that there is neither <em>why</em> nor <em>who</em>. This is naturalism: the faith that there is no <em>who</em> which could generate significance (a why) beyond sensory observation. </p>

<p>This worldview requires the universe to be the product of countless undirected events with no intent behind them. Furthermore, it requires that humans have no purpose to their existence, and that death is their final end. Such ideas, says Barkley, logically affect people’s behavior:  “If nothing happens when we die and there is no grand design and we are not accountable to an absolute morality (as many people tend to think more and more); if we are not ultimately responsible for those things, then what motivation, logically, what motivation do we have to self-sacrifice, to love, to be kind?” </p>

<p>Some posit the idea of a collective consciousness that leads humans to act for the survival of the human species on the earth. According to Barkley, this still implies there is something beyond the physical occurring; that we are not the purely material beings that naturalism declares. He then suggests that naturalism relies just as much on a faith in empirical science as a Christian relies on faith in a creator God. At the conclusion of his argument, Barkley plants a seed of wonder by asserting that all the great scientific discoveries are not just describing a purposeless world, but are rather hinting at the greatness of the One who formed it. </p>
]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 19 May 12 10:48:56 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator></dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 19, 2012 10:48</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Saturday Sermon: Gloriously Functional</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;gloriously&#45;functional?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;gloriously&#45;functional?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Is Genesis 1 describing material creation or functional creation? Pastor Richard Dahlstrom of Bethany Community Church beautifully articulates the insights he has received through John Walton’s book The Lost World of Genesis One and probes deep into the Biblical text with us.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/36996310" width="570" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Today's sermon is from Richard Dahlstrom, senior pastor of <a href="http://churchbcc.org/" target="_blank">Bethany Community Church</a> in Seattle, Washington. The full sermon can be found <a href="http://churchbcc.org/sermon-series/gloriously-functional-genesis-11%E2%80%9331/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>Is Genesis 1 describing material creation or functional creation? Pastor Richard Dahlstrom of Bethany Community Church beautifully articulates the insights he has received through John Walton’s book <em><a href="http://biologos.org/resources/the-lost-world-of-genesis-one">The Lost World of Genesis One</a></em> and probes deep into the Biblical text with us . In his sermon “Gloriously Functional,” he highlights key Hebrew words that are often misunderstood by post-Enlightenment thinkers in order to generate a proper framework through which to grasp the original meaning of the text. He then examines each day of creation, explaining the function of the various created elements such as light, water, plants, animals, and people, according to the account. This enriching exercise brings the question of “Why has God made this very good, functional creation to begin with?” Dahlstrom affirms along with Walton that Genesis 1 is indeed about God making a temple to dwell in with His people, who he has ordained as priests, stewards over all creation. This is most clearly seen in the striking parallels between the creation narrative and the building of the earthly temple of God in the ancient Hebrew culture.</p>

<p>In addition to this clip from Dahlstrom’s sermon ,  there is a brief commentary by John Walton himself, which speaks about the functionality rather than materiality of Genesis 1. He states that the creation story is not one of material origins. If this is so, he explains there is no need to defend a Biblical account against an evolutionary account; the two are compatible with each other. What the creation story does offer, however, is a theology on the physical existence of what God has made; it reveals the divine purpose of God for his masterpiece, the universe.</p>

<p align="center"><iframe width="533" height="300" frameborder="0" src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/9188184?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0"></iframe></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 18 Feb 12 04:00:54 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Richard Dahlstrom</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 18, 2012 04:00</dc:date>-->
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        <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>Science and Faith: From Collision to Collaboration</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;faith&#45;from&#45;collision&#45;to&#45;collaboration?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;faith&#45;from&#45;collision&#45;to&#45;collaboration?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>in Genesis two, God calls humankind to know and study the surrounding world. The scriptures say that Adam took on the God&#45;given task of naming the animals, which is, in fact, science: the exploration of the natural world.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/33053947?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="570" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Today's sermon is from Richard Dahlstrom, senior pastor of <a href="http://churchbcc.org/" target="_blank">Bethany Community Church</a> in Seattle, Washington. The full sermon can be found <a href="http://churchbcc.org/sermon-series/science-faith-from-collision-to-collaboration-genesis-11/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>In this sermon, Pastor Richard Dahlstrom of Bethany Community Church in Seattle Washington disbands the warfare mentality surrounding science and faith as he explains that God’s truth is seen both in his written Word and his creation.  Throughout, he provides clarification about proper Biblical interpretation, background on the history of science and scripture, and finally the context in which the Biblical creation story took form.</p>

<p>The beautiful creation story in Genesis one and two captivates the heart and mind, providing revelation of God’s character and his divine relationship to all creation, especially humans. Although it is an ancient writing from a culture with limited knowledge of the world and its place in the cosmos, many Christians have used these passages to <em>scientifically</em> describe the birth of the universe. While the passages do reveal the origin of all created things—God—they do not necessarily reveal the natural mechanisms used by God to accomplish his will. This is where the work of the scientific community has come into play. Studying God’s handiwork always offers a deeper understanding of God himself, but the Church, unfortunately, has not always accepted its findings.</p>

<p>At the beginning, Dahlstrom opens with a challenging quote from the famous church father Saint Augustine. He believed that Christians should not be found ignorant on scientific matters, and so appear darkened in understanding to the outside pagan world. The pastor too affirms that Christians should not use God’s Word to challenge scientific matters and so turn a non-believer away from faith in Jesus Christ since it unnecessarily draws a line between faith and reason, pitting one against the other. Dahlstrom explains that the idea that science and scripture conflict stems from a view of Genesis one and two as a scientific description. Talking about Biblical interpretation, he affirms that plain reading of the text is best in most cases. Still, there are instances where the Bible speaks in metaphors. For example, in the gospel according to John, Jesus identifies himself as the door. Immediately one discerns that Jesus is not describing himself as a literal door made of wood, but rather is describing himself as the only Way to God the Father. When it comes to the creation story, then, is a literal or metaphorical reading the best method of interpretation for the passages? In light of certain details that appear physically contradictory—such as morning and evening existing before the creation of the sun on the fourth “day” although the earth’s rotation around the sun creates day and night— it seems logical that Genesis is portraying something other than the physical processes of creation.</p>

<p>As Dahlstrom continues, he makes a profound point:  in Genesis two, God calls humankind to know and study the surrounding world. The scriptures say that Adam took on the God-given task of naming the animals, which is, in fact, science: the exploration of the natural world. It is a wonderful gift to men and women to study the surrounding world and so discover more about the God who is its Creator. Unfortunately, the Church has not always accepted the ideas formulated through scientific discovery. This was clearly seen in the Church’s rejection of a heliocentric or sun-centered solar system as postulated by both Copernicus and Galileo. The following five hundred years, however, softened this tension, and acceptance of a heliocentric system was welcomed. Currently, the issue among Christians revolves around young versus old earth creationism and instantaneous creation versus evolution. Indeed, there are Christians in both camps. Pastor Dahlstrom affirms here that it is possible to view God as the master Creator and sustainer while still accepting evolutionary theory. This perspective acknowledges that science is not man’s truth contradicting God’s truth; there is no distinction, but all truth belongs to our Lord.</p>

<p>The sermon goes on to place the creation narrative in the context of the story of Gods’ people. Dahlstrom explains that Israel is about to enter the Promised Land where they will be surrounded by pagan cultures with their own gods and circulating creation myths. It is in this time that Moses writes down the true account of creation as revealed by the God of Israel. The story of Yahweh creating the heavens and the earth clearly contrasts the other Mesopotamian versions at the time, and demonstrates the uniqueness of Israel’s God. The story in Genesis resonates with the deepest longing of the human heart, proclaiming that humans were made for beauty, stewardship of creation, and relationship rather than slavery, war and suffering. This displays and speaks of the love and goodness of the one true God.</p>

<p>In his concluding thoughts, Dahlstrom brings the discussion back around to three particular points. First, he identifies the idea that “God is other than his creation.” In other words, God brought the world into being, but he is the uncreated One, and therefore, different than all finite things.  Next, there is the theme of separation in the creation account. For example, light is separated from darkness, the land from the sea, and animal life from human life. Although they consist of the same materials, there are different forms. This speaks to the profound unity in the midst of diversity established by God. Finally, it presents the nature of humanity. It speaks of our calling to steward the earth, our failure in fulfilling that calling, and the need for our redemption, which comes through Jesus Christ. All these themes ultimately unite us as believers despite the different interpretations of Genesis one and two.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 03 Dec 11 10:23:31 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Richard Dahlstrom</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Dec 03, 2011 10:23</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Gratitude</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/gratitude?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/gratitude?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Of all the blessings to be thankful for on Thanksgiving Day, none of them surpasses the riches of the eternal blessings which the Lord has bestowed on his sons and daughters in Christ Jesus.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/32635522?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="400" height="225" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Today's sermon is from <a href="http://mppc.org/about-mppc/leadership-team/mark-swarner" target="_blank">Pastor Mark Swarner</a> of Menlo Park Presbyterian Church in Menlo Park, CA. You can hear the full sermon <a href="http://www.mppc.org/series/psalms-beyond-small-talk/mark-swarner/gratitude" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>Of all the blessings to be thankful for on Thanksgiving Day, none of them surpasses the riches of the eternal blessings which the Lord has bestowed on his sons and daughters in Christ Jesus. Pastor Mark Swarner of Menlo Park Presbyterian emphasizes this point as he looks at Psalm 103: 1-4 (NIV):</p>

<blockquote><p>“Praise the LORD, my soul; <br />
   all my inmost being, praise his holy name.<br />
 Praise the LORD, my soul,<br />
   and forget not all his benefits—<br />
 who forgives all your sins <br />
   and heals all your diseases, <br />
 who redeems your life from the pit <br />
   and crowns you with love and compassion…”</p></blockquote>

<p>The benefits are “life-changing” and “soul transforming.” Unlike most where there are exclusions and various requirements, these are freely given through Christ, and no one is disqualified based on pre-existing conditions. In fact, God desires that people come to him in all their imperfections that he might renew and heal them. </p>

<p>The first benefit deals with the major problem of the human heart: sin. In the Psalm, King David, who knew what it meant to be forgiven for deeply wrongful acts, boldly speaks of the love which God has for his people such that God does not deal with us according to our past actions. Rather, “as far as the east is from the west, so far has he removed our transgressions from us.”  Regardless of a person’s past or future mistakes, God’s love is stronger still.  We are, above all, forgiven people and with that "we enter his gates with Thanksgiving in our hearts.”</p>

<p>In his second point, Swarner examines the power of God available for healing. The verse is not claiming that one will never become sick, but it does indicate that God has the power to heal. The all-important assurance in this passage is that God will take our brokenness and weakness, and through him, ultimately, we will be whole.  We are, above all, a people filled with hope, and  with that "we enter his gates with Thanksgiving in our hearts and we come into his courts with praise.”</p>

<p>The third benefit the Psalmist declares is that the Lord “redeems your life from the pit and crowns you with love and compassion.” There is a sense in which we all—like Joseph in Genesis 37—have experienced life’s pit of despair.  We, like Joseph, emerge from the pit to a new life crowned with the confidence that we are loved, and with that we, ourselves, become agents of  God’s love and channels for God’s compassion.  We are, above all, a people redeemed by love, and with that "we enter his gates with Thanksgiving in our hearts and we come into his courts with praise.....This is the day that the Lord has made and we will rejoice for He has made us glad.<sup>1</sup>”</p>

<p class="date">1. See Psalm 100:4 and 118:24:</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 24 Nov 11 05:55:43 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Swarner</dc:creator>
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        <title>Saturday Sermon: The Failure of Religion</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;failure&#45;of&#45;religion?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;failure&#45;of&#45;religion?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In the last verses of Romans 2, the Apostle Paul relates the “failure of religion because of the terrible beauty of the Law” to the need for a regenerate heart.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/32342667?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="533" height="300" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Though some may believe that moving the science/faith dialogue forward is best left to scientists, scholars, and theologians, we at BioLogos recognize that our pastors play an invaluable role in the conversation. Across the globe, pastors are helping their congregations work through difficult issues of science and faith with honesty, insight, and a gentle spirit. To this end we present an ongoing series recognizing sermons (and the pastors who give them) that are helping to promote the harmony of science and faith. Today's sermon comes from Rev. Tim Keller, pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church. Click above to hear an excerpt. Below, is a brief summary written by BioLogos editorial staff. The full sermon can be downloaded <a href="http://sermons.redeemer.com/store/index.cfm?fuseaction=product.display&product_ID=18904&ParentCat=6" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>In tracing the story of the Bible, Dr. Keller’s previous sermons examined the early chapters of Genesis, which relate the events that lead to humanity’s fall from right relationship with God. Currently, he is exploring God’s redemption of the human brokenness in Paul’s epistle to the Romans. This particular message focuses on chapter two where the Apostle Paul exposes the hypocrisy of Law-observing Jews: while they judged Gentiles by the standard of the Law, they themselves failed to fulfill its requirements. He also asserts that outward performance of the Law by no means exempts them from God’s judgment or from the disease of Sin, which entered the human heart at the Fall. Keller affirms, therefore, that all are in need of a “regenerate new heart” through Jesus Christ, who perfectly fulfilled the requirements of the Law and who alone is able to accomplish this transformation through the power of his cross.</p>

<p>Paul’s message first illuminates what Keller identifies as the <em>failure of religion</em>. The church in Rome no doubt consisted of both Gentiles and Jews. With this in mind, Paul speaks to both groups. Up to this point, Paul has been highlighting the idolatry of the Gentiles. He then reorients his focus in Romans 2 to address the Jews, who were likely to stand in judgment of their gentile brothers and sisters because of the Jewish Law. He declares in verse one, “You, therefore, have no excuse, you who pass judgment on someone else, for at whatever point you judge another, you are condemning yourself, because you who pass judgment do the same things.” Keller explains that this statement exposes the hypocrisy of the religious who look to observance of an outward behavioral code for justification rather than to grace through Jesus, which leads to an inward observance of the Law. For example, although Law observers did not bow before physical graven images as the Gentiles did before faith in Christ, idols occupied their hearts. These inner idols, for both the religious Jews and present Christians, could take the form of power, career, achievement, etc. All in all, Paul demonstrates that religion fails since neither the moral nor the immoral person is perfect by God’s standards. Dr. Keller sums up this point nicely with this statement: “I’m not okay, you’re not ok.” There is not one person who measures up to the standard of the Law of God, and not one person, therefore, has a right to pass judgment according to it.</p>

<p>Dr. Keller then discusses <em>why</em> no one can measure up to the <em>terrible beauty of God’s Law</em> “no matter how good” one’s actions may be. Primarily, it is because the standard is not focused on performing the right deeds. Rather, the major sins described by Paul in Romans 1 include greed, insolence, heartlessness, etc. Although actions accompany such characteristics, they begin as inner attitudes of the heart. Often people read God’s ordinances at the behavioral level, as the religious Jewish people did, in an attempt to justify themselves as a moral person, but God’s requirements are much more demanding. This is revealed in Jesus’ Sermon on the Mount, for example, when he examines the Ten Commandments. He says in Matthew 5: 21-22 (NIV), “You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder, and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.’ But I tell you that…anyone who says to a brother or sister, ‘Raca,’ is answerable to the court.” In using the Hebrew word ‘raca’ meaning ‘nobody,’ Jesus is revealing that the sin of murder is birthed from a heart that devalues another person who is infinitely valuable in God’s eyes. Simply put, the Law of God is after a certain type of person whose right actions flow from a right heart. For example, the Law points to a person so filled with God’s love that they not only refrain from murder, but rather treat others as royalty. Keller continues as he explains the impossibility of such a standard for a human being, yet the Law demands it. What is more, people will demand a similar standard of others. Keller also emphasizes the Day of Judgment. Because God is just, he will hold a person accountable to either the standard of grace or to the standard that one person required of another. No person is perfect, and therefore, none will be able to stand in either God’s judgment or the judgment of their own heart. This creates the need for a transformed heart as Dr. Keller expounds in the final point of this passage.</p>

<p>In the last verses of Romans 2, the Apostle Paul relates the “failure of religion because of the terrible beauty of the Law” to <em>the need for a regenerate heart</em>. This is only possible through the circumcision of the heart in Christ by the Holy Spirit. Keller first explains the significance of circumcision. Circumcision was a physical distinction between the pagan cultures and the Jewish people who were in covenant with the God of Israel. On a deeper level, this act symbolized the consequence of disobedience to the covenant first established between Abraham and God: one would be cut off from the covenantal relationship with God. As Dr. Keller explains, all people have fallen short of the Law. For this reason, God sent Jesus, his son, to fulfill the requirements of the Law. He then died on the cross to receive upon himself the consequence of death that all deserved. Therefore, Paul argues that it is no longer one who receives physical circumcision who is saved, but one who receives the circumcision of the Spirit in Christ. Romans 2:28 (NIV) establishes this point saying, “A person is not a Jew who is one only outwardly, nor is circumcision merely outward and physical. No, a person is a Jew who is one inwardly; and circumcision is circumcision of the heart, by the Spirit, not by the written code.” Finally, Dr. Keller explains the significance of the Old Testament Law: the perfect standard describes not a moral code, but our Savior Jesus Christ. Ultimately, one seeks to obey the beautiful Law which Jesus embodied, yet one receives grace in the times of failure, confident that Christ has indeed paid it all.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 19 Nov 11 04:00:47 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Tim Keller</dc:creator>
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        <title>Life and Death</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/life&#45;and&#45;death?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/life&#45;and&#45;death?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>If you go back into the Genesis account, it says “now do not eat this or you will surely die”. There is a whole chain of events that happens when Adam and Eve decide they want to walk away from God.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/32172516?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Today's video is courtesy of filmmaker Ryan Pettey, director/editor of Satellite Pictures.</p>

<h3>Video transcript</h3>

<p>I think there are sometimes a couple of biblical images we struggle to lay hold of. In the New Testament we find when we talk about life, we have the idea of living or ‘bios’. In other words, we talk about how we are alive. But Jesus talks about the fact of “coming to life “ when we know him. That doesn’t suddenly mean that our heart starts beating. It means that there is this whole side to us which was dead… which wasn’t alive and is now… that has actually sprung to life. And we run into complications maybe if we reduce all of these things into exactly the same categories. Now you can have the same issues with ‘death’ too. That word is used in many ways, and different words are used to try and signify various different things.</p>

<p>Now what is interesting is that if you go back into the Genesis account, it says “now do not eat this [apple] or you will surely die”. There is a whole chain of events that happens when Adam and Eve decide they want to walk away from God. The first thing that happens is that they cover themselves up. There’s like a psychological  alienation that comes. They are no longer happy with the way they are. The next thing that happens is God steps into the garden, they run and hide. There is spiritual alienation. The voice that was once welcoming where they went, they now find themselves cut off from that. Then there is a social alienation that comes as a result of turning away from God. They start blaming each other. There is a vocational alienation that comes as a result of, of course, judgment. That which was meant to be home for them, all work become labor, and we could keep going.</p>

<p>So when we talk about “death” the picture, to me, seems to be much bigger, much fuller. I can’t think of a more comprehensive view of possibly what it could mean. And so I think we need to again break away from a straight forward, in fact, mechanistic understanding. In no way do I think that impoverishes either or understanding of the gospel or of the cross. As a matter of fact, it enhances it. It makes the work of the cross even more incredible and it makes the idea that God is looking for redemption from us more complete. We are not talking simply about the idea of physically living forever because that’s clearly not what it means. We know that we are going to physically die. All of us. But when you think about it in terms of what that means psychologically, spiritually, emotionally, socially, vocationally and so on it becomes a huge picture. The text is teaching us something which is real, which is true, which is there. I think we just need a bigger more sophisticated handling of the text, than a reductionist one that I think actually impoverishes or understanding of The Fall, the cross, redemption, the ‘coming again’ and so on.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 15 Nov 11 16:00:11 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Michael Ramsden</dc:creator>
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        <title>Seeing the Flood Story Through an Ancient Israelite Lens</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;flood?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;flood?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Pete Shaw highlights the story of Noah to explore how the story would have been understood in ancient times and from there he goes on to explore how we might consider it today.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Though some may believe that moving the science/faith dialogue forward is best left to scientists, scholars, and theologians, we at BioLogos recognize that our pastors play an invaluable role in the conversation. Across the globe, pastors are helping their congregations work through difficult issues of science and faith with honesty, insight, and a gentle spirit. To this end we present an ongoing series recognizing sermons (and the pastors who give them) that are helping to promote the harmony of science and faith. Today's sermon features Pete Shaw, who is the senior pastor of <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/" target="_blank">Crosswalk Community Church</a> in Napa California. The full sermon can be downloaded <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/sermon/110515-the-flood/" target="_blank">here</a>. <strong>Finally, if you know a sermon or podcast related to science and faith that has especially spoken to you, please <a href="/contact">let us know</a></strong>.

<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/31992768?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p>The early chapters of Genesis appear to pose scientific problems that challenge our literal, post-Enlightenment lens through which we often read the Word of God. (See this  <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/saturday-sermon-science-the-enlightenment-and-god" target="_blank">post</a> for a commentary on how this situation came about.) This leads many people to believe that the descriptions in these texts are meant to reveal more than raw scientific fact. Pete Shaw of Crosswalk Community Church highlights the story of Noah and the Ark to explore the possible reasons for adopting a non-literal understanding of this ancient narrative. Shaw first summarizes the story of Upnashatim in the Epic of Gilgamesh, a famous Sumerian flood story that the young and old in Abraham’s day would have known well. Upon comparison, these two accounts—the Genesis flood and the Gilgamesh flood—are incredibly similar. Furthermore, Shaw exposes the various practical problems that arise if one takes every word of the Noah story to be a precise truth. For example, he wonders how Noah could have fed and maintained every living land creature in a small boat for ten months. He also explains how a primitive understanding of the universe is heavily reflected in this text. In light of these points, he concludes that whether or not this story is portraying actual historical events, it is presenting rich truths about God, and that should be the focus of the believer.</p>

<h3>Transcript</h3>
<p>“The first eleven chapters of Genesis are what scholars call pre-history. In other words, they can’t really date what was going on very well in those first elven chapters. After that, twelfth chapter on, it is a lot easier to date, and the stories have a different feel, a different structure… but those first eleven have caused a lot of debate over the years. In fact, the next slide is going to kind of give you the line of where I am going to take you today. You might not be aware of this, but there is a Noah controversy. You and I, when we hear the story of a great flood, the first thing that comes to our mind—when we think of the whopper of all whoppers—we think of Noah and the Ark, but if we lived in Abraham’s time or especially before, the name Noah probably would not have come up. In fact, if we grew up with Abraham, the story we would have most likely known about was the story—I am going to butcher this name—of Utnapishtim.</p>

<p>You are familiar with Utnapishtim aren’t you? And you are familiar with the god Enlil. I am sure you are familiar with Enlil. And you would have been very aware of a storybook that was read by children and adults alike called the Epic of Gilgamesh. And in the eleventh tablet of the Epic of Gilgamesh, we have the story of Utnapishtim and the god Enlil. And just so that you would know about that story a little bit, knowing that that would have been the predominant story that you would have understood anytime you thought about a flood, this is how the story went down. So, this god Enlil was the god of thunder and rain and all that and he was not a happy camper (kind of temperamental) as thunder gods can be. And for no clear reason, except to mess around with some of the other gods in his discontent, he made the decision that he was going to wipe out the earth with a great flood. And one of the other gods, a goddess in fact, did not like that this was going to happen and thought that it was unfair, unjust, and so she sent a message to Utnapishtim that this flood was going to come at the hand and the wrath of Enlil. And so Utnapishtim got to work, and he built a vessel (a strange vessel), a cube, but he used some of the similar materials that we saw in the Ark, and he made this massive structure (if in fact you do the math, it is probably at least twice, if not much larger, than the actual Ark) this massive cube that he made hoping that it would float, and he got it done on time.</p>

<p>The rain didn’t come down for forty days, it came down just for seven, but it flooded everything out, and the only survivor was Utnapishtim. And when Enlil came around and saw that some human beings had survived, he was very upset because he intended to wipe out everybody to show his wrath and his anger to the world and to show that he was upset to all the gods in heaven. Well, Utnapishtim obviously saved his own life, the life of his family, the life of his personal animals because those are the animals that he saved—not the rest of the animals of the world. And he took some carpenters along because he didn’t know how to build stuff and once you are starting over you have got to build stuff, and so he brought some carpenters along. In honor of his faithfulness (in light of this word from the goddess) he was given divinity. And so, he became a god, he became one of the gods, he got to reside in heaven, if you will, because of his faithfulness…interesting story.</p>

<p>If you grew up in Sumer, which is present day Iraq, and you grew up with Abraham in what is present day Baghdad that would have been the story that you would have known very, very well. It is because that story exists and other cultures have their own flood stories as well that some scholars look at the story of Noah and the Ark, and they think, ‘well, gee, how should we really interpret this thing? You know, our Enlightenment and post-Enlightenment perspective says it is in black and white, and if it says that is what happened, then that is exactly what happened. There is no way around it.’ Well, what if the first people who shared this story with each other and what if the early writers of this word, what if when they approached the Bible, they didn’t approach it the way we do? What if they didn’t approach the Bible, the Word of God, as a literal, this is exactly how it happened book that our post- Enlightenment eyes are framed to do? How would that change us? And also, some of the things that some of the challengers of this story are bringing out are some of the issues with the story like ok is this really a big enough boat to handle all of the creatures of creation…can they really, really fit?</p>

<p>Some have really tried to make a case that there weren’t as many animals back then as there are now because they got together and hooked up, and now, we have all kinds of varieties and that kind of thing. And so that is kind of there, but you are talking ten months of time! How do you feed all the animals of the world? How do you store all the food? Did they eat fish, because the fish didn’t die? The fish lived on just fine. How do you do that? And what about—it is kind of unpleasant—but all the excrement? What are you going to do with all that ‘bleep?’ Are you going to throw it out the eighteen inch window at the top? Did they have a conveyor belt system? How did it work? And so they look at that and think, ‘I am just not sure about that.’ Would you really take that literally? Is that how we should take it? Is that how they took it around their campfires and around their dinner tables? Did they think about it that way?</p>

<p>And there are other issues too that academics look at, and they challenge somewhat.   Like they know that forty days and forty nights is a proverbial statement in Jewish culture. It was like saying (and you see it in many accounts in the Bible), forty days and forty nights was saying a long time, but it probably was not meant to be taken literally. It is just a long time. It is how they thought about things. Then, there is the issue of the rain itself, and how it all came down. Now, the New Living Translation and most modern translations, just simply talk about it as--there is the sky and the rain came down from the sky and you are good to go. But there is another word that is used.  If you go to the New King James Bible, for instance, and they talk about the firmament—that the rain came down from the firmament. And so, when we think about firmament, we think, ‘well they are talking about sky or they are talking about the starry host and all that stuff,’ but if we go back to the original word, which the New American Standard version got right (it is one of the most academic and precise versions that is out there), both in the creation story and in the Noah account, they use a different word for sky: they use the word dome.</p>

<p>Now, I am going to butcher this a little bit, but broad stroke version is that the way the ancient people saw the world was that we kind of lived in this bubble, you know sort of like a snow globe, and there was water--not all inside, but outside, surrounding us. There was water below and there was water above, and above us was this massive dome called the firmament or called the sky. And then when it rained it was because God was opening up the floodgates of heaven. That is how they thought back then. They didn’t know any better. And so, kind of what these questions are asking us now is how we make sense of this and do we have to believe like they did in order to believe the story. How many of you believe that the sun revolves around the earth? None! Nobody does. Do you get mad at, do any of you hold a grudge against the earliest people in the Bible, actually, all the people in the Bible, do you hold them accountable and are you angry at them that they believed with everything in them that the sun revolved around the earth and not the other way around?... no, of course not. Do you get angry at them because they believed we lived in a dome and that God opened up the gates of heaven and there you go? No, you don’t hold it against them because you understand that it is the best that they could do given their time.</p>

<p>But we live in the age of Doppler radar, right? We know within minutes, you know, when rain is going to hit Napa and when it is going to move on to Valeo, and so on and so forth. I mean it is that precise, and we know when it is coming hundreds of miles off shore and we can look thousands of miles because of satellite stuff and our ability to understand temperatures and all that. We know how the whole thing is brewing. We know that hurricanes are lining up one after the other  in hurricane season because we have cameras up there that are seeing them start to form, and we can gauge temperature in the water and so forth—we do not live back then. So, it would be inappropriate for us to become primitive in the sense of looking at the world the same way they did in that kind of a literalness because we know different, you know what I mean? We know different. And so really the bottom line is that the literalness of the story really isn’t the most important thing to begin with anyway.”</p>

<p class="intro"> A few editorial reflective thoughts by Darrel Falk: The sermon continues, of course, and you can download it at the above link.  What<em> is</em> "the most important thing" to which Pastor Shaw refers as the audio clip draws to a close? Regardless of whether you think it is historical or not, what is the message that God wants to communicate to us through this story?  Consider reading Genesis 9 right now.  What are the parallels in this "recreation"account to the original creation account?  What does God want us to see in making those parallels?  What about the rainbow? What does it symbolize for you?  Can you sense God's love for all of creation (not just humankind) as this story draws to a close?  Why does the story of Noah himself, however, not have a happier ending?  Have we seen the theme of nakedness and the need to cover up nakedness in an earlier scriptural passage?   Why do you think the story of Noah draws us back to this point (nakedness and shame), just like the story Adam and Eve does?  What brought on shame for them?  What brings on shame for us?  Do you see that God is wanting us to think deeply about this story and its meaning?   What is another example of the need to cover up? (Hint: think Moses.)  What difference does the coming of Jesus make to all of this? (Hint: see II Corinthians 3:12-18.) Do you see the rainbow?]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 12 Nov 11 04:00:15 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Pete Shaw</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Nov 12, 2011 04:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Breaking Free of the Enlightenment&apos;s Shackles</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;science&#45;the&#45;enlightenment&#45;and&#45;god?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;science&#45;the&#45;enlightenment&#45;and&#45;god?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Pete Shaw, the senior pastor of Crosswalk Community Church in Napa California, offers a brief history of the interactions between science and faith in the first segment of his sermon.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/31287569?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0&amp;color=ffffff" width="575" height="323" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Though some may believe that moving the science/faith dialogue forward is best left to scientists, scholars, and theologians, we at BioLogos recognize that our pastors play an invaluable role in the conversation. Across the globe, pastors are helping their congregations work through difficult issues of science and faith with honesty, insight, and a gentle spirit. To this end we present an ongoing series recognizing sermons (and the pastors who give them) that are helping to promote the harmony of science and faith.<br /><br />
Pete Shaw, who is the senior pastor of <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/" target="_blank">Crosswalk Community Church</a> in Napa California, offers a brief history of the interactions between science and faith in the first segment of his sermon “The Flood. ” In this excerpt, he explains how the Church adopted Enlightenment thinking and advocated the scientific method as a way to verify God’s created order in nature. However, as science became more sophisticated, scientists began to question whether or not God intertwined with the natural world or even existed. In other words, they were asking the Church, ‘How can you prove God scientifically?’ Although the Church identified God as the first cause that led to all other causes in creation, scientists remained skeptical. At this, “the Church retreated, not recognizing that maybe they needed to change their perspective or widen their understanding of how we define what is true and what isn’t--beyond the scope of science.” Pastor Shaw appropriately concludes with this challenge: be willing to acknowledge the lens through which you see the world and be willing to be grown by God. The full sermon can be downloaded <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/sermon/110515-the-flood/" target="_blank">here</a>. <strong>Finally, if you know a sermon or podcast related to science and faith that has especially spoken to you, please <a href="/contact">let us know</a></strong>.
</p>


<p>One of the primary things that I am trying to bring to your attention is that in our present day, we have a certain proclivity toward how we approach the Bible, and it is a post-Enlightenment perspective, which means that when we look at just about anything in our world, when we read anything in our world, we read it as if it was literal historical fact: ‘it is true if it is verifiable.’ And we adopted that mindset—you didn’t vote on this—but our forefathers in the church adopted this mindset in the 17th century when Enlightenment started to come into play. The Church initially saw Enlightenment as a wonderful ‘brother in crime,’ so to speak, because Enlightenment was starting to come up with great scientific discoveries which were pointing to organization in the created world, and things developed in a very orderly way. Things could be proven that they turned out a certain way, and immediately, the Church Fathers looked at that and said, ‘that’s great news for the Church because science is proving that God exists.’ So, for 150 years, 125 years, we rode in that cart together, but science is indiscriminate in terms of how it approaches whatever its subject is—it doesn’t care about what subject it addresses.</p>

<p>So, when it came to God, science was starting to wonder if we need God at all, and was curious since they were figuring out so much about the created order and how things worked together and the explanation of so many things—they were taking mythology out of a lot of things, and so they were asking the Church: ‘how can you prove God?’ By this time, the Church had already adopted the scientific method saying, ‘It’s only true if you can prove it.’ And so, they were left with this question of how do you prove God scientifically? And the best thing that they could come up with was what is called the first cause, which simply means that science can identify that something happened to get this whole creation thing going, and the Church rallied and said ‘Yes! That something is God—God is the first cause that started all the other causes since, and he has been involved in the process.’ But science came back and said, ‘you know, just the fact that we don’t really know that doesn’t prove that you are right.’ So, the Church retreated, not recognizing that maybe they needed to change their perspective or widen their understanding of how we define what is true and what isn’t--beyond the scope of science. We held to our guns, and that has been the predominant voice in American Christian culture for the last 200 years or so—so strong, in fact, that a lot of what I have been sharing with you in last couple weeks seems incredibly new and disturbing. You may be wondering, ‘Where did this guy come up with this stuff?’ Well, the fact is that I am not really giving you anything new, I am giving you stuff that is very, very old. Because what I have recognized (because I have researched this stuff) is that the greats of our faith who lived centuries ago, when they looked at this book [the Bible], they looked at it very, very differently than we do, and they have something to say. So greats in the early Church like Origen, you know…names that you kind of remember from history class…St. Augustine, these kinds. Some of the Catholic greats that we know of through history, they had something to say, and all of what they said happened long before the Enlightenment when the Church decided to define what is true extremely narrowly.</p>

<p>So, my challenge to you is: can you, in a way, come to grips with the fact that your worldview, your vision, has been shaped significantly by the time you’ve grown up in and by the world in which we live? I am telling you it has, and I am also stating with great confidence that until we identify how the lens has been crafted through which we see everything, we are trapped and bound by it. In fact, we are shackled by it. Until we can see ourselves for who we are, understand our biases and how they shape everything we think about, those things keep us where we are, and we literally will not be able to hear anything new because it just won’t fit—that is a real problem when it comes to walking with God because God is continually wanting to grow us and stretch us in new directions, and if we don’t have room for that, we really don’t have room for God.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 29 Oct 11 06:42:21 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Pete Shaw</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Maker of Heaven and Earth</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/maker&#45;of&#45;heaven&#45;and&#45;earth&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/maker&#45;of&#45;heaven&#45;and&#45;earth&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In his sermon, Dave Swaim discusses the early chapters of Genesis that seemingly contradict scientific evidence, and he suggests that Christians have simply asked the “wrong questions” about this ancient text, which has led to warfare between the two. In light of this, Swaim wraps up his sermon with the three concluding points that he feels sums up the Biblical truth of creation: there is an all&#45;powerful God, he has a perfect plan, and he has given us his love through Jesus Christ.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/30571770?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="434" height="240" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<h3>Introduction</h3>
<p>Today BioLogos begins a series that we think ought to have significant impact on evangelical churches far beyond the local congregation in Arlington, Massachusetts where it was first delivered.  A recent   <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2011/june/noadamevenogospel.html/" target="_blank">editorial</a> in Christianity Today stated that many Christians likely face another "Galileo moment."  In that earlier era, finding that the earth moved around the sun--and not the other way around--caused the Church to reorient its understanding of certain scriptural passages.  Today, interconnecting strands of evidence all of which lie at the heart of biology, geology, physics and astronomy require segments of the Church to carefully evaluate its magnificent creation narrative--it needs to be certain it is hearing God's message in the way that God intends for it to be understood.  It is healthy for the conservative wing of Christianity to be carefully examining the genre of the creation narrative.  It has had to do this once before and, it is appropriate to prayerfully seek clarity once again.  Christians are truth-seekers and God's Spirit will guide the process as we sincerely seek that wisdom which is from above.</p>
  
<p>Oratory, at its best, has long been an important key in opening the door to new and dramatically important insights.     Pastor David Swaim of <a href="http://www.highrock.org/" target="_blank">Highrock Church</a> in the Boston suburb of Arlington illustrates this poignantly.  In fact his sermon is so significant, we've asked permission to post it in serial form so that each of us can deeply reflect on his words in a protracted fashion.  We encourage you to let others who are conflicted over this issue know about the series so that they can follow it.   Indeed, we believe It will be a great series for small group discussions--we need to lovingly support each other as we seek God's guidance in coming to understand God's truths.</p>

<p>In this sermon, Swaim discusses our belief in God as creator, or “Maker of heaven and earth”, as the Apostle’s Creeds so poetically states.  To begin, he reminds us that some passages in the Bible, like the parable of the prodigal son, convey deep truths even though they are not historical accounts.  Asking “the wrong questions”—questions that focus on arbitrary details—about such stories can cause us to miss out on their intended message.  In a similar way, he says, it is possible that we might be asking the “wrong questions” about the opening chapters of Genesis.  In recent years, conflict has erupted because a literal reading of Genesis seems to contradict the findings of science.  Swaim suggests, however, that accepting scientific evidence about things like evolution and the age of the earth need not rule out faith in Scripture.</p>

<p>If you wish to jump ahead and hear the sermon in its entirety, you may do so <a href="http://www.highrock.org/listen-to-sermons/2011-10-2-the-apostles-creed-creator/" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p class="intro"><em>Introduction written by the BioLogos editorial team.</em></p>

<h3>"Maker of Heaven and Earth" (transcript)</h3>

<p>One of my favorite parables is that of the lost son.  There’s a lot to it. Basically, it’s a story that Jesus told about a young man who insulted his father by demanding his share of the inheritance early, then ran off to spend that money on wild living, and found himself destitute when the money was gone.  In desperation, he returned to his father, asking to work as a servant.  But instead of being angry, his father joyfully embraced his lost son and threw a huge feast to celebrate his return.  It is a great story that Jesus tells to help us understand God’s amazing grace.</p>

<p>How many of you know this story?  Raise your hand, if you would.  Okay.  Now I want to make sure I’m clear…that’s a lot of you…I don’t mean just like, you know it because I just told it to you.  I mean you know it because you’ve heard a sermon on this before, or maybe you’ve read it on your own.  Raise your hand high if that’s true of you.  Wow, still a lot of you.  That’s perfect because I actually have a couple of questions maybe you can help me with.  You see, it says that the father saw the son while he was still a long way off.  Can anybody tell me how far off was the son at that point?  Anybody know that? Because, you know, they didn’t have glasses back then, and the father was really old, so how far could he really see?  It just doesn’t really add up for me.  Can anybody tell me about that?  Nobody?  Okay.  Well I have another question.  Maybe this one’s easier.  What town did that family live in? Does anybody know that?  No?  Nobody?  What town they lived in?  People, this is one of the greatest stories of all time!  This is a story that has changed thousands of lives, including many of yours!  How can you say that you know this story, that you understand this story, if you don’t even understand these basic facts?  Okay, well maybe this is easier.  Speaking of family, the Bible’s into family values, so I want to know—where’s the mother?  Can anybody tell me?  Is this family not intact?  What’s wrong?  Did they get a divorce maybe?  And how come the father ended up with the custody of the sons?  And why did they only have two?  Families back then had much bigger families.  Maybe they just got divorced too early?  But I mean he seems so nice—why do you think she left?  Anybody know these things?  I mean I just don’t get it.  You all tell me you know this story, and yet you don’t understand just these simple things about it. </p>

<p>Obviously, my questions miss the whole point of the story.  There was no mother, or for that matter, no father or son either. This never actually happened.  It’s just a parable.  It’s one of the many marvelous stories that Jesus told in order to help us understand something that was hard to see.  Now does that make it so that this story isn’t true?  No, it is true.  This story communicates some of the most important truths in the universe—about God’s nature, and the way that we relate to him. There are many passages in scripture that promise God’s love, or praise God’s love, or even try to explain God’s love.  But this passage helps us grasp that truth in a way that’s much more effectively communicated than just through direct reporting.  This way helps us feel it.  This event never happened, but it’s one of the truest stories in the world.  And what a shame for someone to dismiss it as irrelevant because it’s not literal history, or miss the point by asking the wrong kinds of questions.</p>

<p>Now I bring this up because just like my questions miss the point of the lost son parable, so, I fear, many of us ask the wrong questions about the beginning of the book of Genesis, which we read from just a few minutes ago.  Not only does this generate needless confusion and division, it also makes us miss the point, miss the life-changing truths that we could see if we asked the right questions.  Right now we’re in a sermon series studying the Apostle’s Creed, an ancient declaration of faith in the God of the Bible.  And today, we’re considering the word “creator.”  So, Genesis seemed like the right place to go.</p>

<p>Like the story of the lost son, most of you know the basic outline: God created the universe in six days and then napped on the seventh (so those of you who nap through my sermons every Sunday, you’re in good company!).  But by adding up all the names of the people mentioned in Genesis, and throughout the rest of the Bible, seventeenth century Bishop Ussher determined that the creation of Adam and Eve, and everything else, happened in 4,004 BC—about 6,000 years ago.  And that’s great.  But you’re probably also aware that this creates some tension with contemporary scientists who suggest a different timeline.  Considering the evidence offered by the size and expansion rate of the universe, plate tectonics, fossil evidence, and genetics, their best guess is that the universe was created by a big bang about 13 billion years ago, the earth appeared about 4.5 billion years ago, and the earliest humans existed about 200,000 years ago.  In the past 300 years, this has become a very heated debate.  Apparently, we need to choose whether we believe in science or in scripture.  At least that’s the claim made by the most strident voices on each side, so the general population seems to have accepted that if you believe in God you can’t believe in evolution, and if you believe in evolution then you can’t believe in God.</p>

<p>This topic arouses passions and anxieties in many people, including some in this room.  No matter what your perspective is, I’m probably going to say something today that you’ll disagree with, and might even make you angry.  There’ll be plenty of time for you to set me straight in the coming weeks.  But for the next half hour, in order to allow the possibility that we might hear something new, or even learn from the Holy Spirit, let’s lay aside our defensiveness so that we can at least consider why we are so attached to whatever ideas we have, and evaluate whether our devotion to one truth may be blinding us to others.  As scientists have discovered more and more evidence supporting the basic evolutionary theory outlined in Darwin’s Origin of Species, Christians have responded in a variety of ways.</p>

<p>Science has been right about so many things, so some Christians have embraced evolution and felt forced to abandon their trust, not only in the truth of Scripture, but also in the God it describes.  Other Christians, including many renowned scientists, have fought back by pointing out the many flaws in evolutionary theory and proposing alternative theories of their own.  These include Young Earth Creation, which asserts that the earth was created in six days six thousand years ago, and offers thoughtful explanations to reconcile the findings of science with the words of Genesis 1.  Old Earth Creationists do the same thing, but contend that each of the days in Genesis could represent an epoch, or a million years, or whatever amount of time, instead of just a 24-hour day.  This is linguistically legitimate—it’s a fine interpretation of the Hebrew word “day” in Genesis—and it recognizes that it’s hard to measure a day before the invention of the sun in day four, anyway.  So, Old Earth Creationism opens up many possibilities to reconcile scientific claims about the age of the earth with a literal interpretation of Genesis.  Theistic Evolution takes further steps to accommodate evolution while still honoring God as the one who created heaven and earth and everything in them through the evolutionary process.  This is attractive because it eliminates the conflict between science and scripture, but it requires a very different way of reading Genesis.  They suggest that, like I did with the parable of the prodigal son earlier, perhaps we’re asking the wrong questions about Genesis so that we’re inventing an unnecessary argument, and even worse, we’re also missing what the first chapters of Genesis really are all about.</p>

<p class="intro">In the next installment, to be posted tomorrow, Pastor Swaim goes on to discuss the Genesis passage in detail.<br /><br />]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 27 Oct 11 05:00:06 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Swaim</dc:creator>
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        <title>Understanding Adam</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/understanding&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/understanding&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this paper, Pete Enns looks at from a unique angle to some: Adam is the beginning of Israel, not humanity. He follows through with how this line of thinking affects our reading of the Genesis account.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[In this paper, Pete Enns looks at from a unique angle to some: Adam is the beginning of Israel, not humanity. He follows through with how this line of thinking affects our reading of the Genesis account.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 19 Oct 11 13:33:48 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Pete Enns</dc:creator>
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        <title>Art, Worship, Creation, and Imaginative Engagement</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/art&#45;worship&#45;creation&#45;and&#45;imaginative&#45;engagement?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/art&#45;worship&#45;creation&#45;and&#45;imaginative&#45;engagement?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>We should not be ashamed of the fact that our faith integrates spirit and body; our faith calls us to regard the stuff of creation in all of its materiality as good, and thus offers the best starting point for the practice and pleasure of art.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">In this chapel presentation, given at <a href="http://www.letu.edu/opencms/opencms/_Student-Life/spiritual-life/chapel/Fall2011/windowsmedia/2011-09-30-KenMyers.html" target="_blank">LaTourneau University</a> in Longview, Texas, <a href="http://www.marshillaudio.org/About/KenMyersBio.aspx">Ken Myers</a>, founder of <a href="http://www.marshillaudio.org/">Mars Hill Audio</a>, addresses the importance of art in both our worship and our understanding of creation. While some view the realms of the church and the arts as completely separate, Myers notes that both have suffered from a “diminished appreciation for the meaning of creation”. Creation is not simply a collection of materials for us to manipulate; rather it is a reflection of God’s own creativity. Creation is “an epiphany”.<br /><br />
While some may wonder what a discussion on art and worship has to do with science and faith, we feel Myers’ message is important for all Christians to hear, especially for its thoughts on creation and on our worship of God, the Creator.</p>

<p><strong>Opening Prayer</strong>: “Will you join me in prayer as we focus our hearts and our minds on the Lord this morning? Let us pray. Take a minute and just speak to God yourself, and speak to him about your love for him and your thankfulness for his love and grace and mercy in your life—Father you are good and your love endures forever, your faithfulness to all generations. Thank-you for your faithfulness in our lives, thank-you for your grace that is sent to us, especially sent in the form of your son Jesus. Lord help us to continually appropriate that grace, to continually seek after you. Lord we ask that you would take this time to grow us, to spiritual form us. Amen”</p>

<p><strong>Ken Myers</strong>: “Morning. I am in east Texas. The original invitation was to give some lectures on the subject of beauty. I am lecturing in Tyler beginning tonight and tomorrow morning, and when an opportunity came up to speak to you all here at Le Tourneau, I suggested that I might want to talk about a related topic, and so my topic this morning is going to be about the arts and worship.”</p>

<p>“I started working at National Public Radio just before I turned twenty-two. I went to work in the arts and performance department, and I was editing interviews with and commentaries about some of the most creative people in the world. Now, during that time I was also attending an evangelical church I had been at since 5th grade, and that meant that I was spending Monday through Friday with people who were intensely involved in the arts, but pretty much indifferent to, if not hostile to, the practice of Christian worship, and on Sunday’s I worshipped with people who often regarded the arts rather nervously, if not with hostility. It was like when worlds collide, and it was my life. </p>

<p>“During this period in my life on Sundays, I spent time with people who believed in creation, while during the week I worked with people who believed in creativity, and often their lives didn’t seem to overlap. My church friends were deeply committed to the first clause of the Nicene Creed: ‘I believe in one God, the Father Almighty, Maker of heaven and earth and of all things visible and invisible.’ These people believed in a creator. They described the world as a creation, but, in general, like most Christians for most of the Church’s history, they were often more eager to defend the fact of creation than they were to explore the consequences of creation’s nature and meaning in their everyday lives. </p>

<p>“My colleagues at NPR, on the other hand, and the people with whom I was pursuing my vocation, were all people who did not believe there was a maker of all things—they believed in nature, but not creation, and certainly not a creator. But they did believe, and sometimes in an almost religious way, in creativity. In fact, some of them were willing to ascribe almost redemptive power to creativity as made evident in the arts. The arts made life worth living. The arts fulfilled meaning in otherwise meaningless lives. In a world that was essentially chaotic, in which everyday life was dominated by bureaucratic, mechanistic institutions, the arts were great refreshment. They were a source of hope and joy and peace and even possibly moral guidance. The arts rendered us human, many of my friends believed, and delivered us from mere bestial or mechanistic existence. Some of them may have gone so far as to say that the arts imparted a spark of divinity into our lives.”</p>

<p>“Now I was used to living between these two worlds—I majored in film studies as an undergraduate, and I didn’t have a lot of colleagues in my department at the University of Maryland who took religion very seriously either. And I dealt with this conflict early on by starting to read as much as I could lay my hands on about Christianity and the arts. In 1975 (when I started at NPR), there wasn’t a lot written—you all are lucky that there is a lot more great stuff to read now on subjects like that—but I was beginning what turned out to be a life time of reading and study and writing and interviewing to try to understand how we had gotten to the point: how was it that the Church had generally allowed its concern with redemption to eclipse the theme in both Old and New Testaments of the goodness and givenness of creation? Why didn’t we attend to the structure and form of creation that much? …and how was it that modern western culture outside the Church had abandoned its belief in a creator, in a creation that was ordered and given meaning by its maker even while it tried to sustain a belief in human dignity and creativity?</p>

<p>“And over the years, as I have studied this and read about it and thought more about it, I came to realize that both the church and the world of the arts suffered from a diminished appreciation for the meaning of creation. Modern Christians often assume that they could relate to God apart from any deliberate relation to the stuff of creation, and modern secularists assume that they can relate to creation without recognizing or honoring the creator in any way. For both sides, creation is just a lot of raw material; creation isn’t inherently meaningful. It is meaningless and awaits our creativity to achieve significance. Modern Christians, moreover, have tended to pursue an understanding of God that was more and more abstract. It focused his attributes, on invisible realities rather than history, and as theology has aspired to be more like a science, it has assumed that we can think about God apart from his relationship with creation.</p>

<p>“ Of course, God’s identity is not determined by creation, but it is through God’s actions in and through creation that we know him. The Psalms make this very clear. He reveals himself through creation and his supreme revelation of himself involved his entering into creation in a sensory and perceivable way. Creation is an epiphany, it is a revealing…it is a revelation. The heavens declare the glory of God, and God’s eternal power and divine nature can be perceived in the things he has made…that is a remarkable statement. Throughout the Scriptures, especially in the wisdom literature and the Psalms, creation is depicted as an active and evident witness to God’s identity, and all of creation bears witness to God in a chorus of worship. In Psalms 89 we read the very heavens shall praise thy wondrous works and thy truth in the congregation of the saints. The heavens and the earth are depicted as testifying to God’s nature and to his coming triumph over evil. In Psalm 96 we read ‘let the heavens be glad, let the earth rejoice, let the sea roar and all that fills it. Let the fields exult and everything in them, then shall all the trees of the forest sing for joy before the Lord for he comes to judge the earth. He will judge the world in righteousness and the peoples in his faithfulness.  Creation bears witness that those with ears to hear can hear, but to hear we have to approach creation with a well-ordered imagination.”</p>

<p>“There is a wonderful poem by Gerard Hopkins “God’s Grandeur,” and I mean it is wonderful in the strictness sense. It is full of wonder. He begins by insisting that the world is charged with the grandeur of God, and he goes on to suggest that modern men and women fail to perceive the grandeur of God. They fail to perceive what is revealed there because we are so preoccupied with practical things. All is seared with trade, bleared, smeared with toil, and all wears man’s smudge and shares man’s smell. We are too preoccupied with getting things done to actually attend to the glory present in creation, and as I have suggested, where the Scriptures present creation as an epiphany, a revelation, modern culture and a lot of modern Christians see creation as a lot of raw material resources. It is inert, meaningless stuff awaiting our creativity to become meaningful.</p>
 
<p>“So, the world is commonly regarded as material to which we do something, and not a source from which we receive something. I think that this attitude toward creation is contrary to how we should pursue the Arts, but also to how we ought to proceed in worship. Our worship should recognize that God the Maker of all things reveals himself in what he has made and that he calls us toward a receptive and grateful posture toward creation, not just toward the redemption he has provided…and that is really the posture of faithful artists. Both worship and the arts serve the function of reorienting our minds, our imaginations, and our practices so that we can properly perceive what creation is and what our position in creation should be. Art is a way of admiring and marveling and wondering at, as well as engaging in, meaningful and wonderful creation. God presents us in creation with materials and forms that artists transform, but they are always tethered to some order that is implicit in creation itself.</p>

<p>“Theologian Peter Lighthart has observed that the artist is always transforming, but this transfiguration is an attempt to get at dimensions of what is really there. It is not an abandonment of what is really there. Even if the artist is aiming at fantasy, art attempts to highlight patterns, correspondences, and dimensions to reality that are usually missed in our everyday experience and to force us to look again at the sunflower or the pipe or the chair. As the Russian formalists say, one of the purposes of art is to de-familiarize the familiar. The reason we do that is so that we can see it for what it is. It has become too familiar for us to recognize what it is. The artist is always responding to the reality of creation in some way—even the most abstract artistic forms—and the best artists are open to receiving something from creation before they can transfigure it. An artist has to sense creation with an exceptional acuity.</p>

<p>“Catholic philosopher Joseph Piper has a little book of essays called “Only the Lover Sings”—art and contemplation—only if you love something do you sing about it. Only if you delight in it, do you rejoice in it, and he is talking about the kind of rejoicing that is evident in works of art. He says there that to contemplate means first of all to see, not to think, and he is advocating a contemplative approach to creation so that we can see what it is, and then express what we have seen…a kind of seeing that is receptive and open, and not just accurate. That is the kind of seeing that is practiced by artists, and it is not unlike the tradition of contemplative prayer in the Christian tradition, and that gives us a link between worship and the arts. </p>

<p>“When I say the artist perceives creation, I don’t just mean trees and birds and colors and sunsets, but I mean all of the components of creation—shapes and sounds and textures—as well as various human activities within creation: the way our bodies inhabit space and time, the way words work with all their intriguing textures and resonances as well as the shape of our inner life—what sorrow feels like or sounds like or looks like. Memory, grief, affection—all of the aspects of nature and human nature have to be attended to lovingly and then reassembled or reconfigured or remixed in some way. Human creativity is not as God’s creativity ex nihilo—creation out of nothing—it is creation out of something, and it is a something that God, the God that we worship, has already blessed with meaning. Creation is meaningful revelation, and its revelation can be perceived as we are imaginatively involved with the stuff of creation. The God we worship, the maker of heaven and earth, has made as creatures whose lives are fulfilled when we engage creation well.”</p>

<p>“I have to confess that I get nervous when I hear Christian artists or other religious artists talk about the relationship between faith and art only as if art is an expression of spirituality or art is a gateway to the transcendent. It may be that, but I think they run the risk of presenting Christianity in disembodied terms. We should not be ashamed of the fact that our faith integrates spirit and body, but our faith calls us to regard the stuff of creation in all of its materiality as good, and thus offers the best starting point for the practice and pleasure of art.</p>

<p>“Christian worship has always been involved imaginatively with the stuff of creation. The poetry of the Psalms was recited by our Lord and his disciples so that he was engaged with the sound of words as well as the meaning of words. Music was a part of Christian worship—at least since choirs of angels greeted the nativity of the incarnate Christ and possibly earlier. Whether Mary sang her wonderful song which we call the Magnifica, a wonderful song inspired by her miraculous pregnancy or whether she simply spoke it we don’t know, but it is still sung week after week in churches around the world. Artful expressions and worship have been present in less obvious ways. It is notable that the communion table contains bread and wine, not wheat and grapes. It is not organic material in its most natural state that serves as a memorial meal that unites us with God, bread and wine are the products of human creativity. They are not simply of the natural blessing of God’s harvest, even grain and grapes require attention and care to bring them to fruition. Wine is an even more artful product and bread demands attentiveness to the details of creation. Bakers and vintners are not people we usually think of as artists, but what they do has a lot in common with what artists do: they take the stuff of creation and transform it into something newly delightful and beautiful. Bread, wine, and art all serve practical purposes, but they often go beyond necessity toward delight.</p>

<p>“Again, theologian Peter Lighthart has observed that art is a making that imitates the making of God, and it is most God-like when it is purely gratuitous, when it is not meeting a need—creation is gratuitous, it is not something that God needed to do, but we rejoice and give thanks both in worship and in the arts that he chose to do so. In worship, we honor the creator for the gift of creation and of salvation. In works of art we imitate God’s act of delighted and gratuitous making, and in the Lord’s Supper we receive a great feast, a table set for us not because we deserve it or even because we need it. God’s salvation could have been less extravagant, more perfunctory than a feast, just as the wine that Jesus made from water could have been merely passable rather than a really good wine. The wedding guests thought it was any way, and the inspired texts of the gospel seem to remind us of that. The gifts that God has given are given generously as well as gratuitously. Now, when we receive a great gift, we are delighted in the gift, and in the generosity of the giver, and so it is with a reception of a powerful work of art. </p>

<p>“When I hear the thoughtful and attentive performance of a carefully crafted piece of music or when I watch a masterfully constructed film, I often have a sense of gratitude not just to the performers and the composer or the director, but to God! I am grateful to live in a world where such joys are possible. The gratitude felt by the recipients of a gift resonates with the delight known by the giver of the gift. It is win-win, and that is a pattern built into creation since creation is the work of a dynamic three-personed God and the members of the Trinity enjoy an eternal giving and receiving of love among themselves. The doctrine of the Trinity reminds us of the personality and dynamism of God…qualities suggested in the ancient term applied to the Trinity by theologians [is] perichoresis. Perichoresis refers to the mutual indwelling of the persons of the Trinity, and by extension it refers to God’s relationship to the world whereby everything is in him and has its being in him. The ‘chor’ in perichoresis, by the way (if you have studied any Greek), may recognize that it shows up in our word choreography. Perichoresis literally means dancing around. So, the relationship among the persons of the Trinity is a dance—Father, Son and Holy Spirit dancing around each other and the Christian life which involves God in us and we in God is our entry into that dance.”</p>

<p>“What I am trying to do with all this theology is to make a case that artistic and imaginative and creative activity is not simply a pleasant and rewarding ornament that we might use to decorate our worship services or to increase enthusiasm to make them less boring, artistic activity is evidence to us of the kind of creatures we are, the kind of creator that God is, and the kind of world that we live in, a world that he has placed us in to love and serve him and others as we exercise our stewardship over that world. Since worship is in the words of one writer “the school of the Church,” our hearts and our minds are shaped through the experience of worship to properly perceive things as they are, and not only spiritual things, but all aspects of creation. After all, when Jesus commissioned the Church with the task of making disciples, he begins by declaring his authority over heaven and earth, not just their spiritual lives…and when we pray the Lord’s Prayer, we ask that God’s rule over all earthly things would become more and more evident on earth as it is in heaven. And so in worship we learn to perceive and name reality in a Christian way, and works of imagination can assist in those lessons.</p>

<p>“Since I have already mentioned the subject of music briefly, an observation from theologian and musician Jeremy Begby is appropriate here. In his book Resounding Truth: Christian Wisdom in the World of Music, Begby notes that in the western musical tradition guided by the Church quote “we have been placed in a world vibrant with its own God-given integrities and with the opportunity of interacting fruitfully with those integrities and that music is one means we have been given to do just that. When churches order their ministry of music with those kinds of integrities in mind, then music becomes a tool to reshape our imagination and to renew our minds.</p>

<p>“Art provides us with ways of perceiving reality aright. Not all art does this, or very well, and not all of us have allowed our imagination to be encouraged that kind of perception—we are in too big a hurry or it doesn’t seem practical enough; we have other things on our plate. Just as our thinking can be taken captive to worldly conclusions, so our imaginations can become preoccupied with novelty or with the merely interesting or with something that is trivializing or flattering. Just as we can surrender our bodies and the various consequences and configurations of our life in the body to patterns of disobedience, so we have the opportunity to present out bodies and all that we do in our body life in worthy and thoughtful sacrifice to God. The orienting of all aspects of our embodied life to God is the worship that we owe him. </p>

<p>“We learn that from Romans 12. And so, the use of our hands and our eyes and our ears and our voices in creativity activities that resonate with God’s own music in creation is a most suitable offering to bring him. In Romans 12, Paul warns about being conformed to this world and in no matter are we more in danger of worldly conformity than in our posture toward creation. All sorts of intellectual and social pressures suddenly persuade us to ignore the Biblical testimony of God’s identity as creator as well as the nature of our engagement with creation. The rationalism of the Enlightenment, which guides modern science and technology, encourages us to assume a god-like stance over the material world and at the other extreme, modern materialism suggests that we are at the mercy of something utterly different and incomprehensible. </p>

<p>“The Gospel picture of creation is radically different. Theologian Colin Gunton has said that we can know the world, not infallibly, not with a name of a kind of omniscience because we are both a part of it and able to transcend it through our personal powers of perception, imagination, and reason…and perception, imagination, and reason come together most intensely in artistic modes of knowledge and expression. The world is a creation intended for us to inhabit. It is not simply a meaningless, cosmic accident, and thus art can be powerful, it can resonate deeply in our lives, and even people who believe that the world is the product of a cosmic accident often cannot help when they work creatively to behave that way. Imaginative expressions in the visual arts and poetry and music have existential power because at some level, they convey to us something about the various connections and likenesses that God has placed in creation. </p>

<p>“This is especially evident, I think, in poetry where metaphor is involved in the recognition of likenesses, and it is an idea that came up in a conversation that I enjoyed a number of years ago—someone less famous than Johnny Cash—Richard Wilbur, who is probably our greatest living poet. Wilbur and I talked about the centrality of metaphor and poetry, how poetry works by likening one thing to another. In Psalm 1, a righteous person is compared to a tree sustained by its life and fruitfulness in life-giving water. The power of metaphor, Wilbur observed, “puts almost every poet in danger of being religious. If anything can be compared to anything else, if the world can be seen as a linkage of similes and metaphors and figures, then poetry itself comes very close to declaring that all things are co-natural, that they are of one nature and that brings you to the threshold of saying all things have had a maker.” Wilbur went on “I remember ages ago reading the final book of poems by poet Joseph Warren Beach, who claimed to be an atheist, and I took it around to him and he was in Cambridge at that time, and I said Joseph look at these two lines. Don’t you think that they amount to a religious affirmation? He read them and said ‘well, I can see that they do. I must say that I seem simply to have submitted to the spirit of poetry at that moment. It is an awesome thing to submit to the spirit of poetry even if for a moment.’”</p>

<p>“Worship that avoids imaginative expressions runs the risk of reducing our religious experience to mere ideas or mere therapy, when in fact our religious experience is rightly understood as cosmic. The scale of the Christian story incorporates the intensely intimate and the vast incomprehensibles of the cosmos, and we need works of imagination to convey that whole story to us, to refresh our gratitude to God, to reorient our engagement with all that he has made, and to baptize our imaginations. Art that resonates with the order in creation conveys to us a deeper character of our creator and the character of the order he has placed there.</p>

<p>“In Isaiah 45, there is this wonderful passage where we read of God: “For thus says Yahweh, the creator of the heavens, he is God who shaped the earth and made it, who set it firm. He did not create it to be chaos; he formed it to be lived in. I am Yahweh and there is no other. I have not spoken in secret, in some dark corner of the underworld; I did not say offspring of Jacob search for me in chaos. I am Yahweh. I proclaim saving justice; I say what is true.” In closing, I want to comment on that observation from Eugene Peterson in his recent book Christ Plays in Ten Thousand Places. He says at the beginning of that book…and that line by the way “Christ plays in ten thousand places” is from a poem by Gerard Manly Hopkins—I think it is the poem the “King Fisher,” which is about the glory evident in a bird…Peterson writes, ‘it is the task of the Christian community to give witness and guidance in the living of life in a culture that is relentless in reducing, constricting, and enervating life’ [repeated once more].</p>

<p>“I think that with that task in mind the Church and its ministry in discipleship and mission should proceed in three steps. First, we need to identify the ways the culture around us has misshaped or misunderstood how to live life well in God’s creation, how it has sundered what should be united. Second, the church in its teaching and discipling should encourage the convictions and practices necessary to restore a proper wholeness to life, which includes recognition of all the glories and wonders of creation. Third, motivated by the need to love our neighbors, care for widows and orphans in their misery, and having demonstrated to the world the ways in which redeemed humanity is a fulfilled humanity, the church has to find the false gods under whose captivity people are suffering. I am afraid in our time there are a lot of false ideas that penetrate the world of the arts, and part the task of the church is to recognize those false ideas so that we can, in fact, be liberated. This is a problem that should concern the church, and not just those in Christian arts—thank-you very much.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 15 Oct 11 02:20:34 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ken Myers</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Oct 15, 2011 02:20</dc:date>-->
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