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        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/any/Old Earth Creationism,Miracles/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest?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>2013-05-26T01:56:12-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
      <item>
        <title>Does Resurrection Contradict Science?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;resurrection&#45;contradict&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/does&#45;resurrection&#45;contradict&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>So what then does Resurrection mean? For Benedict it represents a new dimension of reality breaking through into human experience. It is not a violation of the old; it is the manifestation of something new.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The scientific case against resurrection is pretty straightforward: once dead you stay dead -- that's just the way it works. Coming back to life after having been dead (I mean <em>really</em> dead) would constitute a violation of natural law -- a miracle -- and miracles just don't happen. Fair enough. But in his recent book on the last days of Jesus (<em>Jesus of Nazareth Holy Week: From the Entrance Into Jerusalem to the Resurrection</em>), Joseph Ratzinger (aka Pope Benedict XVI) argues that reckoning Resurrection as resuscitation of a corpse is to misunderstand its true significance. Jesus' Resurrection, he contends, was an utterly singular event, straining the very limits of human understanding:</p>

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

<p>It ought to be upon questions such as those above that skeptics and believers respectfully engage one another, rather than the simplistic and often acrimonious sloganeering that has increasingly become the norm.</p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 29 Mar 13 12:58:35 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Matt J. Rossano</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 29, 2013 12:58</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Searching for Motivated Belief: Understanding John Polkinghorne, Part 2</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/searching&#45;for&#45;motivated&#45;belief&#45;understanding&#45;john&#45;polkinghorne&#45;part&#45;two?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/searching&#45;for&#45;motivated&#45;belief&#45;understanding&#45;john&#45;polkinghorne&#45;part&#45;two?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>To understand more clearly where Polkinghorne lies on the larger landscape of science and religion, let’s consider his approach to the Resurrection. Many contemporary thinkers, including some theologians and clergy, believe that “science” has somehow made it impossible to believe in the Resurrection, the deity of Jesus, and even belief in the transcendent God of the Bible.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In my last post, I presented John Polkinghorne’s attitude to scientific and religious knowledge and explained his approach to natural theology. Today, we briefly examine his theology of nature and his attitude toward the Resurrection.</p>

<h3>Understanding John Polkinghorne: Theology of Nature</h3>

<p>John Polkinghorne’s interest in natural theology is important, but what really sets him apart from most others is that he combines it with an equally strong interest in <strong>theology of nature</strong>, which is not the same thing. Where natural theology involves, “metaquestions about the pattern and structure of the physical world,” theology of nature involves, “metaquestions about how its historical process is to be understood.” Rather than “looking to the physical world for hints of God’s existence,” we look “to God’s existence as an aid for understanding why things have developed in the physical world in the manner that they have.” (<em>Belief in God in an Age of Science</em>, p. 13)</p>

<p>On this front, Polkinghorne advances a strongly Christocentric theology of creation, stressing Jürgen Moltmann’s notion of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0800628225/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0800628225&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;tag=thebiofou06-20">The Crucified God</a><img alt="" border="0" height="1" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=0800628225" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" width="1" /> . In the context of Polkinghorne’s theology of nature, the point is that the Creator is the crucified and resurrected second person of the Trinity. Since I devoted a <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-theistic-evolution-part-3">column to this before</a>, I won’t say more here, except to alert readers to the singular importance this particular idea has for him—especially when facing the problem of suffering. “The insight of the Crucified God lies at the very heart of my own Christian belief, indeed of the possibility of such belief in the face of the way the world is.” (<em>Belief in God in an Age of Science</em>, p. 44)</p>

<h3>Situating John Polkinghorne: The Resurrection of Jesus</h3>

<p>Many Christians today see science as posing dangerous threats to their faith, challenging their understanding of the Bible and undermining core tenets such as the bodily Resurrection of Jesus, the historical basis on which the Christian faith stands or falls. “Evolution” is <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-theistic-evolution-part-5">often identified as the problem</a>, but the real danger is unbridled naturalism. A commitment to naturalistic methods, known as “methodological naturalism,” (MN) has been an integral part of science and medicine since the ancient Greeks. Those methods have been highly successful at producing a coherent, often very convincing picture of nature and the history of nature.</p>

<p>Advocates of Intelligent Design and some other Christians <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-intelligent-design-part-3">reject MN</a>, but many Christians who work in the sciences and related fields (such as engineering, medicine, or the history and philosophy science) support MN as a properly grounded and properly limited way of understanding reality. In their view, a robust Christian faith is consistent with a commitment to MN, provided that the limits of scientific inquiry are not simply equated with the limits of rationally grounded belief. Polkinghorne fits squarely in this category.</p>

<p>To understand more clearly where Polkinghorne lies on the larger landscape of science and religion, let’s consider his approach to the Resurrection. Many contemporary thinkers, including some theologians and clergy, believe that “science” has somehow made it impossible to believe in the Resurrection, the deity of Jesus, and even belief in the transcendent God of the Bible.</p>

<p class="caption-left"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/spong_cover.jpg" /></p>

<p>A prime example is <a href="http://johnshelbyspong.com/">John Shelby Spong</a>, a retired Episcopalian bishop whose books have sold more than one million copies. Spong sees the bodily Resurrection as a figment of the disciples’ imaginations, a vestige of a theism that now we must throw away like a threadbare suit of clothes. For Spong, Christians today need to go <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060778423/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0060778423&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;tag=thebiofou06-20">"beyond theism"</a><img alt="" border="0" height="1" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=0060778423" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" width="1" />&nbsp;throwing out the baby of divine transcendence—the fundamental truth of monotheism—along with the bath water of the credulity and mythology of the pre-modern authors of the Bible and the ecumenical creeds. Spong’s message is that “Christianity must change or die,” and all in the name of “science.”</p>

<p>As Spong likes to say, his work is very controversial, and not just among rank-and-file Christians. Scholars have also railed against him. “I have been attacked in books from the religious right by such people as Alistair MacGrath [whose surname is actually spelled McGrath], N.T. Wright, and Luke Timothy Johnson,” he complains (<em>Why Christianity Must Change or Die</em>, p. xvi).</p>

<p>I understand (with much sadness) that we live in a highly polarized age. Nevertheless, it’s difficult for me to grant much credibility to an author who identifies <a href="http://users.ox.ac.uk/~mcgrath">McGrath</a>, <a href="http://ntwrightpage.com/">Wright</a>, and <a href="http://www.candler.emory.edu/faculty/faculty-bios/johnson.cfm">Johnson</a>&nbsp;as representatives of the “religious right.” Indeed, if anyone here is distorting the news it is Spong, not they. As the (late) great Catholic biblical scholar <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Raymond_E._Brown">Raymond Brown</a>&nbsp;once observed, “I do not think that a single NT [New Testament] author would recognize Spong’s Jesus as the figure being proclaimed or written about.” (<em>Birth of the Messiah</em>, note 321 on p. 704)</p>

<p class="caption-right"><img alt="" src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/resurrection_grunewald.jpg" /><br />
Matthias Grünewald, <em>The Resurrection</em> (a wing of the<br />
Isenheim Altarpiece, ca. 1515), Unterlinden Museum,<br />
Colmar, France</p>

<p>Polkinghorne certainly understands science far more than Spong does, and his conclusions about the implications of science for Christian beliefs are markedly different. With respect to the Resurrection, he is basically on the same page with his friend Wright, whose profound book, <a href="http://www.christendom-awake.org/pages/resurrection/wright_resurrection.htm"><em>The Resurrection of the Son of God</em></a>, he cites with appreciation. Belief in the Resurrection is well supported by the evidence, and the Resurrection, itself, is “the pivot on which the claim of a unique and transcendent significance for Jesus must turn.” Considering authors like Spong (although he does not explicitly name him), he adds, “it would be a serious apologetic mistake if Christian theology thought that operating in the context of science should somehow discourage it from laying proper emphasis on the essential centrality of Christ’s Resurrection, however counterintuitive that belief may seem in the light of mundane expectation.” (<em>Theology in the Context of Science</em>, pp. 135-6)</p>

<p>Amen.</p>

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>

<p>This is the Easter season, and I’ll return in a couple of weeks to begin examining Polkinghorne’s approach to the Resurrection more fully, using excerpts from the chapter on “Motivated Belief” from his recent book, <em>Theology in the Context of Science</em>.</p>

<h3>References</h3>

<p>Raymond E. Brown, <a href="http://yalepress.yale.edu/yupbooks/book.asp?isbn=9780300140088"><em>Birth of the Messiah: A Commentary on the Infancy Narratives in the Gospels of Matthew and Luke</em></a>. (1992).</p>

<p>John Polkinghorne, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0300099495/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0300099495&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;tag=thebiofou06-20">Belief in God in an Age of Science</a><img alt="" border="0" height="1" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=0300099495" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" width="1" /></em> (1998).</p>

<p>John Polkinghorne, <a href="http://yalepress.yale.edu/book.asp?isbn=9780300149333"><em>Theology in the Context of Science</em></a> (2009).&nbsp;My review for <em>First Things</em> online is <a href="http://www.firstthings.com/onthesquare/2009/07/the-motivated-belief-of-john-polkinghorne">here</a>.</p>

<p>John Shelby Spong, <em><a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0060675365/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&amp;camp=1789&amp;creative=390957&amp;creativeASIN=0060675365&amp;linkCode=as2&amp;tag=thebiofou06-20">Why Christianity Must Change or Die</a><img alt="" border="0" height="1" src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&amp;l=as2&amp;o=1&amp;a=0060675365" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" width="1" /></em> (1998).</p>
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        <pubDate>Thu, 14 Mar 13 08:00:44 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 14, 2013 08:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>A Plea to My Shepherds</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;plea&#45;to&#45;my&#45;shepherds?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;plea&#45;to&#45;my&#45;shepherds?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>... I would exhort these, my fellow conservative evangelical shepherds and thinkers, to set aside all reticence and fear, emerge from anonymity, and storm the forum of discourse, engaging this most pressing matter with vigor, equanimity, and humility. In doing so, know upfront that there will be few handrails to guide; you will not be building upon an extensive precedence of published conservative thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>As I mentioned in my <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/scripture-vs-the-facts-working-through-a-crisis-of-understanding/">last post</a>, I’m deeply troubled by my fellow conservative evangelicals’ skepticism – even hostility – towards much of modern science, and believe that barring change, this disposition will prove spiritually catastrophic to our children and grandchildren, who are today being taught that assertions of an ancient universe and macro-evolution are unequivocally incompatible with the Cross of Christ, and tomorrow will enroll in universities that powerfully demonstrate the integrity of these scientific claims, thereby setting the stage for devastating crises of faith for countless thousands of young believers.</p>

<p>That said, I genuinely empathize with those who are reluctant to abandon traditional theological concepts for newer, still- developing ones. Given spiritual leaders’ biblical mandate to protect their families and congregations against error, a responsibility for which God will hold them strictly accountable (James 3:1), I respect their refusal to expose their flock to ideologies they regard as conflicting with the Word of God.</p>

<p>I further understand pastors and theologians’ resistance to tethering theology—which is meant to provide a solid epistemological foundation—too closely to that intrinsically dynamic endeavor called science. All humans need ideological stability, perhaps especially so with respect to spiritual matters. Recognizing this, pastors rightly ask why they should abandon or substantially revise an internally-consistent systematic theology that has served the church with relative stability for many hundreds of years. Science, on the other hand, is a realm for adventurers, groundbreakers, and ideological athletes intent on not just polishing or expanding today’s body of knowledge, but shattering it when necessary. Resounding with the jousts and clashes of competing ideas and arguments, and the stunning reversals of ideas once widely held, science often appears to be a messy–even tumultuous–business. Spiritual shepherds are insistent that the epistemological dynamism that necessarily characterizes science never become the mainstay of the Christian experience, which must be fundamentally stable and dependable. They see wisdom in maintaining a safe distance between the Church and the choppy waters of science.</p>

<p>The question, then, is whether the waters of scientific thought, particularly with respect to the age of the earth and evolution, have sufficiently smoothed out to warrant conservative thinkers’ taking a deeper look. Of course, the catch-22 here is that this can’t be answered without actually embarking upon an expedition of exploration and investigation, much as I recently did. Once undertaken, however, the conservative explorer will likely be confronted by a formidable problem:</p>

<p>As I can personally attest, navigating the crowded forum of wildly-differing ideas as to how to resolve the faith-science divide can be terribly daunting. Making this especially disconcerting for the conservative is the sobering reality that amidst the chorus of conflicting theories, one finds very little <em>substantive</em> published input from respected conservative theologians. As a result, the conservative seeker is sure to find herself awash in an ocean of seemingly novel theological “solutions” that are fundamentally antithetical to her evangelical sensibilities. This is likely to result in the impression that there is in fact no way to reconcile the findings of modern science with the key doctrines of orthodox Christianity, and hence the termination of the endeavor. Not only was this dynamic a constant challenge to me, but has proved a stumbling block to many would-be seekers that I personally know.</p>

<p>Whence then change? I believe the breakthrough will begin with a particular subgroup of conservative evangelical pastors, elders, and theologians. I know firsthand that there are many who, truth be told, have not been entirely at peace with their fellow conservatives’ summary rejection of—and apologias against—the findings of mainstream science. They have a gnawing sense that devastation looms for the Church and her children unless detachment yields to engagement, and rhetoric to substance. These have likely admitted to themselves that despite stridently asserting anti-evolution/old-earth views, they actually don’t understand these views in depth (nearly every conservative pastor and elder I’ve spoken with has conceded this). To date, these shepherds and thinkers have remained silent about their misgivings, reluctant to be perceived by their congregations and peers as betraying true Christianity. Given the astonishing fruitfulness of modern science and the comparative barrenness of young-earth creationism, I believe these evangelical leaders may now finally regard themselves as justified in stepping forward and publicly questioning whether the latter is in fact the view that a truth-revealing God would have His people believe.</p>

<p>Indeed, if I may, I would exhort these, my fellow conservative evangelical shepherds and thinkers, to set aside all reticence and fear, emerge from anonymity, and storm the forum of discourse, engaging this most pressing matter with vigor, equanimity, and humility. In doing so, know upfront that there will be few handrails to guide; you will not be building upon an extensive precedence of published conservative thought. Rather, you will be pioneers, with the open prairie of contemplation and consideration before you and the Word of God as a faithful, orienting star. The journey will be at times confounding, often scary, and never without challenge. Yet only through such robust, self-critical analysis will you find yourself in a posture where God can correct and refine all that He would, and only after which will you be able to pass on to your flocks a cogent, truly harmonious portrait of our Lord and His Creation that finds rich consistency between His written and natural revelations. I firmly believe that the fuller, more deeply informed portrait of the Lord and His universe that emerges from this investigation will fill your congregations with an unprecedented new sense of awe at our beloved God as Creator, and profoundly enhance their worship of Him. This has certainly been the result of my own journey.</p>
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        <pubDate>Wed, 27 Feb 13 04:00:32 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Stephen Blake</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 27, 2013 04:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Creator of the Stars at Night</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/creator&#45;of&#45;the&#45;stars&#45;at&#45;night?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/creator&#45;of&#45;the&#45;stars&#45;at&#45;night?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The God who created the cosmos is the God who came to us as a child in Bethlehem.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<br /><p>Tonight and tomorrow, Christians around the world stop to remember and celebrate the birth of Jesus in Bethlehem just over two thousand years ago.  The familiar narrative of Joseph leading Mary to the stable to give birth to the Messiah, of the angels telling the shepherds in the fields of the great event that was happening nearby, and of the three men from the east who came to pay homage to the new King of Israel is re-told or acted out in countless churches, schools and homes.  And from countless pulpits, the message goes out that those events are not just a quaint story and an excuse to give gifts, but the central mystery of our faith—that God himself became one of us in order to redeem us and the cosmos from our bondage to sin and death. That mystery—that the Creator God is also the Redeemer Christ—has been to focus of our worship since the first days of the church, and is the subject of the 7th-century Latin hymn Conditor alme siderum, presented here in a new setting from Alex Mejias and <a href="http://highstreethymns.com/" target="_blank">High Street Hymns</a>.</p>  

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


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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

<p class="intro">Alex Mejias is the founder and director of <a href="http://highstreethymns.com/" target="_blank">High Street Hymns</a>, a non-profit music ministry that exists to spread the Gospel and worship the Triune God in spirit and truth through hymns, psalms and spiritual songs. Alex grew up in New Jersey and outside Washington, DC, receiving a BA in Religious Studies from the University of Virginia and a J.D. from the University of Virginia School of Law.  For the past 15 years he has been leading worship for churches and ministries, writing and recording both new and old hymns, and touring the east coast as a singer-songwriter.  Alex is also committed to the power of the creative arts to advance the Gospel and promote justice and healing in the name of Christ, serving, supporting, and collaborating with several other non-profit ministries.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 24 Dec 12 10:34:31 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Dec 24, 2012 10:34</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Willing to be Wrong</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/willing&#45;to&#45;be&#45;wrong?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The debate is often not about evidence, but about making sure that others do not transgress our interpretive boundaries and insist that we&apos;re wrong. We&apos;ve bitten from the tree of knowledge and we love its taste.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>What we know</h3>

<p>Genesis is one of my favorite books of the Bible. I read through it probably once every few months and repeatedly grind my Hebrew language skills on its opening chapters. Unlike Leviticus (at least in the opinion of <em>most</em> people I know), the Genesis narrative is exciting and adventurous. Some of our favorite stories come out of the book: Noah and the Ark, The Tower of Babel, Abraham and Isaac, Joseph and the Coat of Many Colors, and so on.</p>

<p>But no story is perhaps as infamous and well known as the creation account (or accounts) as presented in Genesis 1-2. Almost every Christian or Jew, even those less than devout, know the opening words to the tale: “In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth.” We know that God created the earth in six days. We know Eve was taken from Adam's rib for a companion. We know that God called the general creation “good”, the special creation of man “very good” and, at the very end of it all, took a day of rest (which I'm sure most of us would call “very good.”)</p>

<p>Of course, we know all of this. Yet we challenge it (and are challenged by it), continually, when we consider the variety of interpretations of how this story intersects the world as described by science. With Genesis, are we dealing with a literal scientific account, where “day” means 24-hours; are we dealing with metaphorical “days” in which epochs or periods of time or even processes are being described; or are we readers of a creation mythology from the Ancient Near East that doesn’t have anything directly to do with material origins? Interpretations go on and on, as anyone who has spent any time at all studying the creation debate knows. By and large, however, we can probably categorize Genesis interpreters into three camps: the Young Earth Creationists, the Old Earth Creationists, and the Theistic Evolutionists.</p>

<p>Now, I have the unique benefit of falling into all of these individual camps at one point or another in my life, sometimes even mixing them up. I have made a strong transition from being a die-hard Young Earth Creationist to being convinced that the evolutionary story is, in fact, the more substantiated and evidenced position. I say this with no pride, since my own transition involved many agonizing questions, a whole lot of reading, and a significant internal spiritual battle: what I believed about when and how the earth was created would not only change the way I read Scripture, it would also change certain aspects of how I viewed the Creator. </p>

<p>While I've certainly learned a lot of information on my journey, it was not an accumulation of facts that has kept me following Christ through all the ups and downs, but Jesus himself, and the knowledge that truth is not something which the Christian should find spiritually threatening.  Nevertheless, those same ups and downs—and my internalization of each of these views on creation in turn—has provided me with one simple realization about the debate over scripture and evolution: most of us are not so committed to finding the truth about Genesis and creation as we are to sustaining and maintaining our own interpretive boundaries and the boundaries of the communities which influence us. In other words, the debate is often not so much over Genesis—or even over whether we can all follow the same God when we believe different things about how he created—it's over our own ability to be right. I know this because admitting that I was wrong was the most difficult part of my own transition.</p>

<h3>Interpretive communities</h3>

<p>While I am pretty convinced of the truth of an evolutionary portrait of reality and an ANE reading of Genesis similar to that espoused by scholars like Peter Enns or Bruce Waltke, I can still make this claim about interpretive communities because my intention is <em>not</em> to dissuade others from debating the issues involved, but to ask that we simply recognize our own limits and check them as often as possible.  This is part of following Jesus, is it not? Unfortunately, vigorous debate often deteriorates quickly into screaming matches where proponents of one position or another simply are talking heads, speaking past each other and forgetting our fellowship in Christ. We play into the same interpretive competition that the Pharisee and Sadducee scribes were well known for, each claiming to have a proper interpretation of the Scriptures, but all the while forgetting that interpretive arguments matter exceptionally little if a genuine search for God is not at the forefront.  This is certainly not to insist that the discussions cease, but rather, to insist that these discussions can only be propelled forward if individuals—of whatever stripe—step outside of their own interpretive boundaries and communities and humbly present themselves before God, seeking His truth alone. It is to insist that “system maintenance” must die along with the self, because only then can we allow Scripture to interpret itself. Unfortunately (and this is an issue that goes <em>way</em> beyond the Genesis text), too many of us are more committed to a specific model than we are committed to seeking God’s truth, whatever inconvenience to us that truth proves to be. </p>

<p>In 2006, for instance, I heard a popular and well-trained Young Earth paleontologist make the following statement: “If all the evidence turns against young earth creationism, I will still believe it because that's what the Bible says.” I followed up with him in a conversation a year later over lunch and quickly realized that I did not misunderstand his statement.  For him, the parameters of his convictions were set in concrete and the truth of the overarching story of Christianity rested on these parameters not being crossed. In his view, the Bible absolutely and fundamentally teaches a universe which came into existence 6,000-10,000 years ago; to deny that is to deny Scripture, and if evidence turned up to the contrary one <em>must</em> not alter those parameters but, instead, search (perhaps in vain) for counter-evidence or be willing to live in blind faith. For this paleontologist, confident Christianity hinged on the stability of those borders of interpretation. Transition wasn't allowed. </p>

<p>But I have heard and read statements coming out of the two other camps of thought that share this kind of certainty over interpretation, too. There is a sense of doing injustice to scripture, thereby doing an injustice to Christianity, and, thereby again, doing an injustice to God if one strays from the preferred reading. One Old Earth Creationist remarked in a popular book that an interpretation of Genesis that allows for evolution is a “contradiction in terms” and it's an unfortunate thing to “blame God for it.” Genesis, in the mind of this thinker, specifically precludes any interpretation which leads to the sort of story evolution tells. To think otherwise is to “blame” God for something which he intentionally tells us is otherwise against his nature.</p>

<p>I have equally heard some theistic evolutionists deride—in a very spiritually shallow and personally offensive way—those who do not accept an evolutionary viewpoint. As one who went through an interpretive evolution on biological evolution, I can say confidently that I believe my own transition would have been much easier both intellectually and spiritually if not for feeling as if certain theistic evolutionists accused me of intentionally lying or being mentally ignorant. It seems that all three camps are at least sometimes plagued by the issue of pride—especially in the cases of a few strong advocates. But pride is nothing less than the cement by which interpretive barriers are built, helping them become unmovable walls that protect the interpretive communities within.<sup>1</sup> </p>

<p>On the other hand, one of the great benefits of the fall of positivism (or verificationism) and the rise of postmodernism was the realization that total objectivity among individuals is a false conception. And, since individuals make up communities, neither are camps of thought above error and immune from being wrong. Yet way too many Christians continue to approach Genesis as if we can interpret it on its own terms, completely and totally, without reference to our own location in history and culture. We're still functionally positivists. But it is an illusion that we’re above the interpretive fray, and we must realize time and again that we are subjective individuals, affected by a number of factors and people. We are deeply influenced by those that speak into us, those that we trust, and those that we find credible. As W. Randolph Tate writes, </p>


<blockquote>Interpretations...must be consistent with the established interpretive framework of the interpretive community. The worldview of the interpretive community sets the parameters within which interpretations are accepted or rejected.<sup>2</sup></blockquote>

<p>The Bible takes a slightly different angle and puts it this way: “for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God.”  In other words, we are not objective data-interpreting individuals but fallen men and women, even as followers of Jesus. </p>

<p>So it’s when groups of folks line up on either side of an issue and make their positions part of their identity that the debate over interpreting Genesis reaches a near stalemate. It's communities against communities, PhDs against PhDs, experts against experts, and—perhaps more internally—interpretive parameters against interpretive parameters. The truth is that as long as we are first and foremost committed to maintaining the community in which we are involved, there will be very little chance of us getting at the real issues and the best conclusions, much less giving an adequate witness to our God, both Creator and Redeemer.</p>


<h3>New eyes, fresh air</h3>

<p>I mentioned earlier that I spent time in all three major camps of thought on this issue. I was a hard-lined Young Earth Creationist, debating on forums and writing creationist papers in college. I argued for the existence of modern-day dinosaurs, major flood geology, and so on. I was convinced I was right, that defending the truth meant digging my heels deeper into the sand. But two questions plagued my thoughts: first, I asked whether Christianity fell to pieces if I was wrong. Second, I asked whether I was committed to Christ or, rather, to myself and my interpretations. With that as my first major paradigm shift, I eventually came to accept an Old Earth view. I sat comfortably within the Old Earth view for several years, but the Lord was still at work in me, and, once again, brought those two questions to my mind.  Back to the books I went, back to the Bible I went, and back to prayer I went.  </p>

<p>Through months of extremely difficult and heart-rending transition, I found myself considering a particular reading of Genesis that I would have regarded as unacceptable as a YEC. But then I was confronted with this even more important point about Christianity: often God finds what is unacceptable to us very acceptable to Him! That included me, personally, and I felt the warmth of God’s grace flow over me. In the wake of that change of heart, people accused me of rejecting my background, my Christian education, and my interpretive communities. And, yet—whether I was right or wrong—I knew God accepted my path towards this new reading of Creation as a genuine search for Him. My spiritual struggle—contrary to what I thought while it was happening—was not a struggle to reject bad data and exegesis, it was a struggle to reject myself. </p>

<p>While the “facts” were important, that spiritual struggle was even more so for me. What was God showing me in the midst of it all? Was thinking differently about the creation making me appreciate the Creator less, or more?  Did reading Genesis differently mean only that I had been wrong, or that it was somehow less true? What did any of this have to do with my sense of calling to love and serve God and my fellow men?   In a way, I’m still figuring this out. But I can absolutely testify that the struggle transformed every single one of these questions. Indeed, for the first time, I believe I saw God as much <em>this-worldly</em> as <em>other-worldly</em>. I saw nature as intimately intertwined with itself, still being woven together by God’s hand. I saw Scripture as a beautiful expression of God’s desire that man should participate in creation. I saw that my fellow men and my fellow Christians were all on a journey, much the way I was. And I saw myself as a flawed, stubborn, and prideful man, yet forgiven for the times I’ve pitted myself and my presuppositions about Scripture against God, its author. </p>

<p>As settled as I am now, I have not forgotten that the common ribbon which ties together all of these transitions is my commitment to keep asking questions within my own circle, too—realizing that God still has much to teach all of us.  I have learned the continuing importance of stepping outside of my camp and making sure I haven’t become merely a product of or a willing prisoner to thinking a certain way, unwilling to consider that it and I might be incorrect. I came to realize that <em>everyone</em> (including myself, of course) has stories and life experiences that become the framework in which they read Genesis 1-2.  And if I stopped pretending that I, myself, could be perfectly objective, then I also had to stop pretending that those in the community that I trusted were <em>necessarily</em> objective, themselves. </p>

<p>Ultimately, I had to be willing to be wrong and to see that my friends might be wrong, too. That’s not something that any of us are “naturally” very good at, but it is possible when we realize that the world does not depend on <em>us</em> being right, but upon Jesus being right. For me, seeking truth rather than presupposition requires that we all be able to approach the communities that have influenced us deeply, and ask not just “what” they say but “why” they say it.  We all have to guard our hearts even more than our heads.  Frequently reminding myself to walk back to the edge of my own camp—to follow Jesus’ example and withdraw to a solitary place—has shown me that there is room to breathe outside our familiar interpretive parameters.  At certain times, I have found it to be the most refreshing air I've ever tasted.</p>

<h3>Notes </h3>

<p class="date">1. Though, admittedly, the theistic evolutionists tend to have a greater sense of leeway when it comes to how the claims of Genesis 1-2 affect Christianity as a whole. It would be an odd thing to say that to <em>not</em> interpret Genesis 1-2 as an evolutionary metaphor is to reject Christianity. As far as I know, most Christian evolutionists are very much willing to acknowledge that Young and Old Earth Creationists are still within appropriate spiritual bounds, even if not scientific ones. It seems to me that if individual theistic evolutionists choose an issue about which to be rigid, it’s the Fall and the existence of Adam.<br />

2. Tate, W. Randolpy. <em>Biblical Interpretation: An Integrated Approach</em>. Peabody, MA: Hendrickson, 2008, p 222.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 29 Sep 12 14:22:49 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Randal Hardman</dc:creator>
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        <title>Did David Hume &quot;Banish&quot; Miracles?</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/did&#45;david&#45;hume&#45;banish&#45;miracles?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>“I flatter myself,” Hume triumphantly proclaimed, “that I have discovered an argument . . . which, if just, will, with the wise and learned, be an everlasting check to all kinds of superstitious delusion, and consequently, will be useful as long as the world endures.”</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Alvin Plantinga’s series on <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/divine-action-in-the-world-part-1">Divine Action in the World</a> gives considerable attention to the question of miracles and whether they are “contrary to science”.  To follow up on this contentious issue, we’d like to feature this excerpt from Rick Kennedy's book <a href="https://wipfandstock.com/store/Jesus_History_and_Mt_Darwin_An_Academic_Excursion" target="_blank">Jesus, History, and Mount Darwin: An Academic Excursion</a>.  During Rick’s climb into the Evolution Range of the High Sierras of California, he reflected on why historians are so loath to accept accounts of supernatural events.  Many academics point to the Enlightenment scholar David Hume as offering the most compelling argument against the possibility of miracles.<br><br>

For more of Rick Kennedy’s reflections, see his full BioLogos <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/mount-darwin-series">series</a>.</p>

<h3>Keeping History Safe</h3>

<p>In the cold morning air with the sun not yet over the ridge, the place to begin preparation for summiting Mount Darwin is to ponder the reasonableness of miracles.  Many <em>Totalizers</em> would like to ban miracles from university consideration and inquiry.  Trouble is: human history is awash with credible people reporting miracles. </p>

<p>Modern academic tradition tends to try and maintain order. For historians it behooves us professionally to avoid accounts of alleged spiritual events.  We find comfort in a little logical gymnastics that keeps history safe for us to wander in, a deceptively formulaic avoidance method that helps us avoid what people are telling us about extraordinary events in the past.</p>

<p>David Hume popularly articulated this logical gymnastics in an essay titled “Of Miracles” that was eventually printed in <em>Enquires Concerning Human Understanding</em> (1748). “I flatter myself,” Hume triumphantly proclaimed, “that I have discovered an argument . . . which, if just, will, with the wise and learned, be an everlasting check to all kinds of superstitious delusion, and consequently, will be useful as long as the world endures.” </p>

<p>His everlasting check on superstition begins with a circular argument that because miracles can’t happen, a reasonable person should not even listen to reports of them. Hume taught that though the normal job of a historian was to listen to the testimony that comes down to us from the past, there is a point at which you can close your ears. Hume knew that historical testimony can get wild, so he came up with a way to domesticate the wildness, a way to make history a zoo rather than allow it to be a jungle. His “Of Miracles” has been tremendously influential in the discipline of human history over the last two hundred and fifty years, not because his ideas are strong, but because his ideas are useful. Get rid of “superstitious delusions,” and the discipline of history can be turned from a safari into a form of home economics.
Hume’s domestication of history is seductively simple. Instead of following the Aristotelian tradition of linking the credibility of hard-to-believe testimony to the credibility of the testifier, Hume recommended disregarding the testifier and focusing only on the testimony. This effectively removed the persuasive power from hard-to-believe testimony. Miracles need the credibility of an eyewitness in order to have persuasive power. Hume cut the power source from the unwanted testimony.  </p>

<p>Essentially, Hume adopted the modeling technique that Darwin later used and is best seen in Global Positioning System (GPS) units. Hume recommended gathering testimony from the past and every region to create a general model of what humans generally experience. Using this mass of information, one should generalize standards of common experience. Now if anyone reports a miracle, the alleged event can’t be true because it does not conform to the generalized standards of common experience. (Of course, Hume had already refused to allow that any reports of miracles could be used even to generalize common experience.) It’s tricky. Its logic is circular. But it works to weed out awkward, quirky information. It is as if a domineering GPS unit created a sphere to serve as an abstraction for the earth, then insisted that the earth can’t have wobbling poles and flattening in the upper latitudes because the sphere in the GPS shows it can’t be true. Given a useful and trustworthy GPS, don’t listen to a scientist who might tell you something different than what the GPS tells you.</p>

<p>The circularity of this argument has been noted ever since Hume first proposed it, but Hume was a good writer and said what a lot of people wanted to hear.  Miracles are impossible so miracle reports can’t be true. Don’t even listen to reports of them.</p>

<h3>Balancing Likelihoods</h3>

<p>Also embedded in Hume’s essay is the awkward “rule of logic,” most often called “Balancing Likelihoods.” By combining math and logic in an odd way, Hume’s “Of Miracles “ offered another way for historians to avoid thinking about miracles.  Balancing Likelihoods has many names but is probably best stated by David Hackett Fischer, in his <em>Historians’ Fallacies: Toward a Logic of Historical Thought</em>, as “the rule of probability:”</p>

<blockquote><p>“[A]ll inferences from empirical evidence are probabilistic. It is not, therefore, sufficient to demonstrate merely that A was possibly the case. A historian must determine, as best he can, the probability of A in relation to the probability of alternatives. In the same fashion he cannot disprove A by demonstrating that not-A was possible, but only by demonstrating that not-A was more probable than A. This is the rule of probability.”</p></blockquote>

<p>This seems to be practical but is impossible.  Balancing Likelihoods, in the way described by Fischer, cannot be used by historians in any normal practice. It is a talisman to keep history mentally safe from the wildness that is reported to exist.  Logicians, especially mathematicians, have long criticized intellectual constructions like this.  The “probability” that Fischer writes about is seemingly mathematical, but the math is simply implied to give a sense of strength to human feelings.</p>

<p>Before Hume wrote “Of Miracles” probabilistic logic had been advancing rapidly and there was a great hope that mathematical analogies would strengthen human thinking—even Christian apologetics.  “Pascal’s Wager,” the most famous mathematical apologetic from the seventeenth century, equated eternal salvation with mathematical infinity and then applied it to a gambling formula.  Antoine Arnauld, in <em>The Port-Royal Logic</em> (1662), and John Locke, in his <em>Essay Concerning Human Understanding</em> (1690) and <em>Discourse on Miracles</em> (1706), carried probabilistic math and logic into the handling of reported miracles.  A half-century later, however, Hume reacted against Arnauld and Locke’s teachings that mathematical analogies could help in the discussion of the credibility of miracles.  Hume insisted that to handle a reported miracle, a historian had to create two separate ratios, pro and con, for believability. The ratios were then to be weighed against each other. This is Fischer’s “rule of probability” quoted above. In the language of Hume’s era, this was proclaimed as the “calculus of good sense.”</p>

<p>Lorraine Daston, in <em>Classical Probability in the Enlightenment</em> (1988), offers an excellent study of Hume and the many eighteenth-century mathematicians who wanted to help bring rigorous quantitative thinking to what today would be called the humanities. Daston writes that by the 1840s, mathematicians realized that “the ‘calculus of good sense’ had become antithetical to good sense,” and that today most of what these early probabilists were trying to do is considered “patently absurd.”</p>

<p>In 1901, one of America’s preeminent philosopher-mathematician-logicians, Charles Sanders Peirce, wrote three essays attacking the way historians had adopted Hume’s bad logic: “A Preliminary Chapter, Toward an Examination of Hume’s Argument Against Miracles, in its Logic and in its History,” “Hume’s Arguments Against Miracles, and the Idea of Natural Law,” and “On the Logic of Drawing History from Ancient Documents especially from Testimonies.” Peirce showed that historians are in error when they talk of judging testimony by balancing probabilities because “in a scientific sense, there are no ‘probabilities’ to be judged.”</p>

<p>Probability, Peirce wrote, “is the ratio of the frequency of occurrence of a specific event to a generic event.” A testimony “is neither a specific event, nor a generic event, but an individual event.” Peirce further pointed out that what people were justifying by claiming Balancing Likelihoods was really simply relating “what they prefer to do” to what they don’t prefer. “Likelihood is merely a reflection of our preconceived ideas.”</p>

<p>Historians like me who teach in universities about the reasonable credibility of Jesus’ resurrection need to be students of Peirce not Hume on the subject of assessing the credibility of reports that come down to us from ancient history. Dealing wisely with reports of events verging on the incredible is just part of the normal job of being grounded in the social study of our complex human past.</p>

<p>“Come to history as a doubter,” Richard Marius advises in a historical methods manual. “Skepticism is one of the historian’s finest qualities. Historians don’t trust their sources. . . . Nothing is quite so destructive to a historian’s reputation as to present conclusions that prove gullibility.”</p>

<p>But Marius is wrong. In practice, historians have to trust more than doubt. In practice, historians, especially ancient historians, can’t rely on doubting. Historians have to be close listeners, discerning listeners, wise listeners, who sometimes have to make harmonies and stretch for belief.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 05 Sep 12 05:00:44 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Rick Kennedy</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Divine Action in the World</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/divine&#45;action&#45;in&#45;the&#45;world?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this talk, Professor Plantinga addresses the fact that many contemporary thinkers—including many theologians—believe that God cannot perform miracles, providentially guide history, or interact in the lives of people, as these activities would be contrary to science.   Plantinga, on the other hand, makes the case that this popular view is mistaken; excluding divine action in the world is not a central feature of natural science itself, but a philosophical or theological preference that has been added on to science (and can just as readily be removed).   Plantinga concludes that it is completely logical to accept the miracles of the Bible and support contemporary science.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>My talk is entitled “Divine Action in the World.”  I want to talk about a certain kind of objection to Christian belief that some people raise. They claim that central thoughts, central doctrines of Christianity, are contrary to science, and therefore, are suspicious or incredible or such that one can’t sensibly hold them—can’t be rational in accepting them.</p>

<p>There are several different kinds of arguments that people bring along these lines; I want to talk about just one. So first… the Heidelberg catechism, one of the forms of unity of the church I go to (the Christian Reformed Church), says </p>

<blockquote>Providence is the almighty and ever-present power of God, by which he upholds as with his hand heaven and Earth and all creatures and so rules them, that leaf and blade, rain and drought, fruitful and lean years, food and drink, health and sickness, prosperity and poverty. All things, in fact, come to us not by chance, but from his fatherly hand.</blockquote>

<p>And part of the way it comes to us—not by chance, but from his fatherly hand—part of the way God has designed our world, is that there is a great deal of regularity and dependability in our world. Of course, if it were not for this regularity and dependability, we couldn’t do the things that we actually do. I mean, for example, if I just wanted to walk off the stage—if, for example, all the sudden those stairs over there suddenly turned into a ladder going up—well, that would make it really difficult.</p>

<p>If you are trying to build a house, for example, you have this hammer, but all the sudden the hammer turns in to a goose or a pigeon. Again, that would make things really difficult…or if the nail turned into a worm…or if you get in the car and turn the key and the car turns into a camel, things would be really hard, much harder than they are. This regularity and dependability in our world is an essential condition of our being able to live in the world in which we actually do.</p>

<p>If the world were irregular enough, we would not even be able to live in it, but there are also, according to classical Christianity here (the Heidelberg catechism, for example) there are also special divine actions; sometimes God does things specially. There are miracles in Scripture: the parting of the Red Sea, for example, Jesus walking on water, Jesus changing water into wine. There are miraculous healings: Jesus rising from the dead, Jesus raising Lazarus from the dead, and so on. And according to classical Christians, many of them, perhaps most of them, are special divine actions. God, for example, responds to prayers. He works in the hearts and minds of his children to effect sanctification. There is, what Calvin called, the internal testimony or witness of the Holy Spirit, and there is what Thomas Aquinas called the internal instigation of the Holy Spirit. So, these things are all special actions on the part of God. God constantly causes events in the world. Ok, so far fair enough—what is the problem?</p>

<p>Many theologians seem to think there is a science-religion problem here. I don’t think any of the theologians of Biola think this, (I don’t know, but I doubt it) but many theologians do. For example, Rudolf Bultmann says, “The historical method,” which of course he thinks that is the method we should use, “includes the presupposition that history is a unity in the sense of a closed continuum of effects in which individual events are connected by the succession of cause and effect. This continuum, furthermore, cannot be rent by the interference of supernatural, transcendent powers.”</p>

<p>That’s what he says. Alright, there is this continuum that cannot be rent by the interference of supernatural (that would be God) or transcendent powers. So, it is a little bit like the laws of the Medes and Persians. You probably remember Daniel. Daniel was a favorite of King Darius, and well, the other courtiers became jealous of Daniel (they didn’t like it that the king liked him so well). So, they came to the king and said, “Oh king, live forever, we think it would be a great idea if you passed an edict to the effect that you alone can be worshipped. Everybody has to worship you and nothing else.”  Well the king thought that over for a minute, and that sounded pretty good to him so he said, “I guess that it is a pretty good idea.” So he made this edict; he made this declaration: “Only King Darius is to be worshipped—no one else, nothing else.”</p>

<p>These courtiers knew that Daniel worshipped God, and they thought probably Daniel would keep right on worshipping God despite this edict. So they were watching Daniel, and he was, in fact, worshipping God. So they came to the king.  Now the penalty for worshipping something else was to be thrown into the lion’s den and they said, “Well, king live forever, looks like Daniel has been violating this edict. You have got to throw him in the lion’s den.”</p>

<p>Well, the king didn’t want to do this because he really liked Daniel. He thought this was a miserable way to proceed, and he didn’t want to do it, but then they said to him, “O king live forever, and remember a law of the Medes and Persians cannot be abrogated, even by the king himself.” So once it’s put in place, not even the king himself can change it or abrogate it or go against it.</p>

<p>That is sort of the suggestion that you get here from Bultmann. Bultmann thinks, “Maybe God created the world and set it up in a certain way, but once he did that, not even he can interfere in it”—he uses that word interference—“not even he can do anything in it. He just has to keep hands off.” It is like the law of the Medes and the Persians.</p>

<p>Another theologian who agrees is John Macquarrie, who says,</p>

<blockquote>The way of understanding miracle (and that would be one kind of special divine action) that appeals to breaks in the natural order and to supernatural intervention belongs to the mythological outlook, and cannot commend itself in a post-mythological climate of thought. The traditional conception of miracle is irreconcilable with our modern understanding of both science and history. Science proceeds on the assumption that whatever events occur in the world, can be accounted for in terms of other events that also belong within the world, and if on some occasion, we are unable to give a complete account of some happening, the scientific conviction is that further research will bring to light further factors in the situation that will turn out to be just as imminent and this worldly as the factors already known.</blockquote>

<p>Ok again, no room there for special action. And the third thinker here, Langdon Gilkey (still another theologian), says something similar, but I will pass. I will not read that one in the interest of saving a little bit of time, but these three theologians, plus many others want to assert that there is something wrong with the idea of God acting in the world, acting in the world in a way that goes beyond creation and sustaining, or creation and holding things in existence. So they think, “Ok, God created the world; God sustains it in existence”…that is ok with them, but anything beyond that, God performing any miracles, raising Jesus from the dead, or for that matter working in somebody’s heart and mind in a special way, that, they say, is a real problem.  The question is, what is the problem?</p>

<p>Well, the next little bit here…according to the Christian and theistic idea, God is a person; he has knowledge, loves, and hates. He has aims and ends. He acts on the basis of his knowledge to achieve his ends. He is all-powerful, all-knowing, and wholly good. Thirdly (noted above by the Heidelberg catechism), God has created the world. Fourth is God conserves and sustains and maintains in being this world he created, but fifth, at least sometimes, God acts in a way going beyond creation and conservation in miracles, but also in his providential guiding of history, his working in the hearts of people, his internal instigation of the Holy Spirit, and so on, and it is with that fifth category that these people have a problem. It is God’s special action in the world—action beyond conservation and creation—and miracles would be an example.</p>

<p>So we might think of these theologians as endorsing what we could call hands off theology. God has got to keep his hands off. God could create the world. God conserves the world, sustains it in being, but he can’t do anything else—that is as far as he could go. It is hands off theology, and Bultmann, even in this context, even talks about interfering. I mean if God did something in the world that would be interfering, which, when you think about it, is a sort of strange thing to say—I mean if God created the world, he is the omnipotent, omniscient, holy, good creator of the world—when you accuse someone of interfering, you are saying they are doing something they should not be doing, right?</p>

<p>So Bultmann thinks if God did something in the world that would be interfering, and he should be ashamed of himself. Ok, now why is this a problem? Their suggestion is that somehow it is contrary to science. It is contrary to science the suggestion that God acts specially in the world. I didn’t read that bit, but Gilkey says, "The causal nexus in space and time which the enlightenment science and philosophy introduced into the western mind is also assumed by modern theologians and scholars. Since they participate in the modern world of science, both intellectually and existentially, they can scarcely do anything else.”</p>

<p class="intro">From a presentation sponsored by Biola University’s <a href="http://cct.biola.edu/" target="_blank">Center for Christian Thought</a>, and delivered February 12, 2012 at EV Free Church, Fullerton, CA.  Used by permission.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 04 Sep 12 04:00:33 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Alvin Plantinga</dc:creator>
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        <title>David Lack: Evolutionary Biologist and Devout Christian</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/david&#45;lack&#45;evolutionary&#45;biologist&#45;and&#45;devout&#45;christian?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/david&#45;lack&#45;evolutionary&#45;biologist&#45;and&#45;devout&#45;christian?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Charles Darwin’s personal struggles and ultimate rejection of Christianity are well documented, and people are eager to link his loss of faith to his evolutionary theory.  David Lack, on the other hand, began his scientific career as an agnostic, but shortly after publishing his famous book on the evolution of &quot;Darwin&apos;s finches&quot;, he converted to Christianity.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>David Lack</h3>

<p>In my previous <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/david-lack-and-darwins-finches" Target=”_blank”>essay</a>, I discussed “Darwin’s finches” and how surprisingly little Charles Darwin himself had to say about them.  In fact, it was actually the British ornithologist David Lack (1910-1973) who conducted the critical research that immortalized the finches in biology textbooks and popular lore.  In 1973, the eminent German zoologist <a href="http://www.achievement.org/autodoc/page/may1pro-1" Target=”_blank”>Ernst Mayr</a> wrote:</p>

<blockquote>Already well known among professional ornithologists, his work on the Galapagos finches gave David Lack world fame… There is no modern textbook of zoology, evolution or ecology which does not include an account of his work.<sup>1</sup></blockquote>

<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/320px-Ernst_Mayr_PLoS.jpg" alt="Ernst W. Mayr" height="218" width="320"  /></br>Ernst W. Mayr</p>


<p>Decades have passed since Mayr wrote these words, and David Lack’s name has largely faded from public discourse.  On the other hand, the Galapagos finches have become one of the most recognized symbols of evolution in the world today.  Does it really matter whether Lack or Darwin gets credit for describing the evolution of these remarkable birds?</p>

<p>Insofar as evolutionary theory contrasted with religious belief, it makes a <em>big</em> difference. In a culture that is eager to equate evolution with atheism, it should come as no surprise that these birds are only known as “Darwin’s finches”.  Darwin’s personal struggles and ultimate rejection of Christianity are well documented, and people are eager to link his loss of faith to his evolutionary theory.  David Lack, on the other hand, began his scientific career as an agnostic, but shortly after publishing his famous book on the evolution of Galápagos finches, he converted to Christianity! <sup>2</sup></p>

<h3>A Christian at the forefront of evolutionary biology</h3>

<p>Lack’s Christian conversion did not mark the end of his scientific achievements, either.  In fact, he continued as a prolific researcher until just weeks before he died.  Among his many achievements, he was Director of the Edward Grey Institute of Field Ornithology (1945-1973), Fellow of the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Royal_Society">Royal Society</a>, and President of both the International Ornithological Congress (1962-66) and the British Ecological Society (1964-65).  His fellow scientists held him in great esteem:</p>

<blockquote>He was described as one of the most outstanding among world ornithologists; he was certainly this, but he was also one of the world’s leading evolutionists.  All the time one saw developing his use of birds as material for the study of wider, deeper, biological problems.<sup>3</sup></blockquote>

<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Lack_Chimney.png" alt="David Lack in search of Chimney Swifts" height="206" width="288"  /></br>David Lack at the International Ornithological Congress, 1962.</p>

<p>Clearly David Lack was an outstanding scientist, and his commitment to Christianity did not tarnish, hinder, or undermine his research on evolution.  But we might also ask, what was Lack like as a Christian?  Did he keep his faith hidden from view, afraid that it might compromise his reputation as a scientist?  Ernst Mayr, who interacted with David Lack professionally and personally for nearly 40 years, had this to say:</p>

<blockquote>I have known only few people with such deep moral convictions as David Lack. He applied very high standards to his own work and was not inclined to condone shoddiness, superficiality and lack of sincerity in others. This did not always go well with those who preferred to compromise in favour of temporary expediency. David had been raised in an environment in which great stress was layed on moral principles and this attitude was later reinforced by his Christian faith. This explains his extraordinary unselfishness and modesty, and his great devotion to his family, to his students, to his friends, and to all the things that he lived for. The equanimity, indeed serenity, with which he faced death after his terminal cancer had been diagnosed is further evidence of the strength which his faith gave him.<sup>4</sup></blockquote>

<p>Like Asa Gray<sup>5</sup> before him, and Francis Collins<sup>6</sup> after, David Lack was an sincere, devout Christian, as well as a leading scientist who employed evolutionary theory to make brilliant discoveries about the natural world.  Though Lack did not see any conflict between his scientific and Christian beliefs, he was sympathetic to the concerns of his fellow Christians.  Therefore, ten years after publishing his masterpiece on <em>Darwin’s Finches</em>, Lack wrote another book entitled <em>Evolutionary Theory and Christian Belief: The Unresolved Conflict.</em></p>

<p>Originally published in 1957, this book deals with the very same science and faith questions that Christians struggle with today— topics like randomness and chance, death in nature, miracles, and evolutionary ethics.  While it would be unreasonable to expect anyone to completely resolve these matters, Lack offered numerous insights both as a devout Christian and one of the world’s leading biologists.</p>

<p>Let’s take a brief look at how Lack addressed some of these questions.
</p>

<h3>Blind Chance or Divine Plan?</h3>

<p>Evolutionary theory does not invoke supernatural forces in explaining the history of life on Earth; instead, it relies on naturally-occurring processes to account for the vast diversity of life.  Additionally, it explains animal behavior largely in terms of survival and reproduction, without appealing to any higher purpose of life.  Taken together, does this imply that God is absent, and that our lives are ultimately meaningless?</p>

<p>David Lack responded,</p>

<blockquote>Behind the criticism that Darwinism means that evolution is either random or rigidly determined lies the fear that evolution proceeds blindly, and not in accordance with a divine plan.  This is another problem that really lies outside the terms of reference of biology.  It is true that biologists have inferred that, because evolution occurs by natural selection, there is no divine plan; but they are being as illogical as those theologians whom they rightly criticize for inferring that, because there is a divine plan, evolution cannot be the result of natural selection.<sup>7</sup></blockquote>

<p>When rendering judgment on the ultimate meaning of life, biologists are speaking from their person beliefs, not from scientific authority.  Moreover, Lack pointed out that many science enthusiasts have employed the concept of “randomness” in ambiguous and misleading ways:</p>

<blockquote>Mutations are random in relation to the needs of the animal, but natural selection is not.  Selection, as the word implies, is the reverse of chance.<sup>8</sup></blockquote>

<div class="see-also">See more about <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-is-god-just-playing-dice2">randomness and divine governance</a>.</div>

<p>In support of his view, Lack pointed out that <a href="http://www.mapoflife.org/about/convergent_evolution/?section=0">convergent evolution</a> has produced uncanny resemblances between distantly-related species across the world, notably among marsupials in Australia.  Different evolutionary trajectories can lead to very similar results.<sup>9</sup></p>

<h3>Death in Nature</h3>

<p>After addressing concerns about the seeming “randomness” of evolution, Lack turned to another great concern, the role of death in natural selection:</p>

<blockquote>Various writers–some Christian and others agnostic–have been troubled about natural selection not only because it seems too random, but also because it is so unpleasant.<sup>10</sup></blockquote>

<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/fossilgraveyard_square.jpg" alt="" height="247" width="250"  /></br>Image courtesy John Marsh Photography via Flikr</p>

<p>Genetic mutations are generally harmful, and for evolution by natural selection to produce new forms of life, an awful lot of organisms must die.  For many Christians, it is inconceivable that a loving and merciful God would allow death on such a vast scale.</p>

<p>But Lack also pointed out that rejecting evolutionary theory doesn’t actually get rid of the problem of death.  Regardless of what we think about evolution, the brute fact of <a href="http://science.nationalgeographic.com/science/prehistoric-world/mass-extinction/">mass extinction</a> remains.  Fossils of innumerable animals, plants, and microorganisms clearly demonstrate that the vast majority of species that have ever lived are now dead.  It may be quite troubling for us to observe that our planet is a giant graveyard of natural history, but rejecting evolution will not change this fact. 

<p>Some Christians conclude that death could not have been part of the divine plan; instead, it must be the work of the devil, or the result of human sin.  But this interpretation contains an implicit assumption that death is always evil.  Is this really true?  David Lack offered two intriguing insights:</p>

<div class="see-also">See more on <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/death-before-the-fall">death and the Fall</a>.</div>

<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/greencourtship.jpg" alt="" height="241" width="240"  /></br>Blue-cheeked Bee-eater (Merops persicus) pair in<br /> courtship, seen in Basai, Gurgaon, India.<br /> Image courtesy <a href="http://www.flickr.com/photos/kkoshy/">Koshy Koshy</a>.</p>

<ol><li>For a population to maintain a stable size, all births must be balanced by a corresponding number of deaths.  A world in which no animals die is a world in which no animals are born.  That means no reproduction, no courtship, and by implication, no singing birds—much to the dismay of ornithologists and people in love! </p>

<li>Some people, taking cues from Isaiah 11:6-7, suppose that in a perfect world, animals only eat plants.  But in fact, plants themselves depend on the bacterial decay of dead organisms.  If animals didn't die, then essential nutrients would disappear from the ground, and plants could not continue to grow. Eventually, there would be nothing left for animals to eat, and all life would cease.<sup>11</sup></li></ol>

<h3>Miracles</h3>

<p>Many Christians are uncomfortable with evolutionary theory because it denies a miraculous, supernatural origin of life.  They fear that if those miracles are denied, it might lead people to reject the possibility of miracles altogether, including the central feature of the Christian faith—the resurrection of Jesus from the dead.</p>

<p>As a devout Christian, David Lack certainly affirmed the fundamental tenets of the gospel.  But at the same time, he explained to his readers that invoking miracles to account for unusual features of the natural world is not particularly helpful when trying to deepen our understanding of God’s great multitude of creatures:</p>

<blockquote>[The biologist's] research depends on repeated observations.  It need not, as popularly supposed, consist solely, or even mainly of measurements and experiments, but unless events are repeated, they cannot be assessed by science.  Hence truly unique events come outside the domain of science, though biologists are not usually convinced when told they must, therefore, leave such problems as miracles to others.   For one of the chief ways in which research has advanced is through the discovery of apparent exceptions to the known rules, and if further study shows the exceptions to be replicable, new regularities are revealed from which modified rules can be propounded.  This method has been so successful that the biologist tends to doubt whether there are any types of irregularity, or seeming irregularity, that will not yield to it.<sup>12</sup></blockquote>

<p>But just because a scientist cannot repeat a particular event doesn’t mean it didn’t happen.  Both natural history and human history contain unique events that only happened once.  As we peer into the past, the difficulty of discerning fact from fiction inspires us to further investigate the mysteries that surround us.
</p>

<h3>Conclusion</h3>

<p>David Lack’s book <em>Evolutionary Theory and Christian Belief</em> was quite insightful, but his enduring achievements took place in evolutionary biology, a place where many Christians are afraid to tread.  While it is significant that he himself found no contradiction between his faith and his science, perhaps the greatest testament to the compatibility between Christian faith and evolution is the life he led as a believer in both.  As we saw in Ernst Mayr’s candid praise, Lack reflected the light of Christ through both his personal and his professional relationships.</p>

<p>Today, many voices in our culture still insist that evolution is incompatible with a sincere faith in Jesus, but a careful look at history demonstrates otherwise. In the future, perhaps more people of faith will have confidence to study biology knowing that one of the most iconic symbols of evolution—the Galapagos finches—owe their fame in large part to a devout Christian named David Lack.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1.  Mayr (1973) “David L. Lack.” <em>Ibis</em>: 433.<br>
2.  Larson, E. J. <em>Evolution's Workshop: God and Science on the Galapagos Islands</em>. New York, Basic Books, 2001: 218.  See also Lack, David. (1973) “My life as an amateur ornithologist.” <em>Ibis</em>: 431.<br>
3.  Alister C. Hardy (1973). "David L. Lack." <em>Ibis</em>: 436.<br>
4.  Mayr (1973) “David L. Lack.” <em>Ibis</em>: 433.<br>
5.  For more about Asa Gray, see the BioLogos FAQ “<a href="http://biologos.org/questions/christian-response-to-darwin">How have Christians responded to Darwin’s Origin of Species?</a>”<br>
6.  See Francis Collins’ autobiography <em>The Language of God: A Scientist Presents Evidence for his Belief</em> (New York: Free Press, 2007)  (<a href="http://biologos.org/resources/books/the-language-of-god">book info</a>)<br>
7.  Lack, David. <em>Evolutionary Theory and Christian Belief: The Unresolved Conflict</em>. Methuen & Co., 1957: 67.<br>
8.  Lack, p65.<br>
9.  For more on convergent evolution and the possibility that evolution could be compatible with some form of divine purpose, see the work of Simon Conway Morris, especially <em>The Deep Structure of Biology: Is Convergence Sufficiently Ubiquitous to Give a Directional Signal?</em> Templeton Press, 2008.<br>
10.  Lack, p72.<br>
11.  Lack, pp75-76.<br>
12.  Lack, p82.</p><br>
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        <pubDate>Tue, 07 Aug 12 04:00:24 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Thomas Burnett</dc:creator>
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        <title>Gracious Dialogue</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/gracious&#45;dialogue?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/gracious&#45;dialogue?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Our desire to engage in gracious dialogue with fellow believers who reject biological evolution has been receiving increased attention in both the Christian and secular press.  More importantly, we are being joined in this reconciling project by our brothers and sisters in Christ who have often been defined primarily as our “opponents”.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>There are two main reasons why it is critically important that science & faith conversations between Christians be conducted with grace and humility.  First, as all of us see “through a glass darkly,” we need the insights of the entire Christian community (from scientists, to theologians, to Biblical scholars, to pastors to poets) in order to achieve the best understanding of the world God called us to cultivate and rule as his regents. No one discipline or perspective is sufficient in itself, whether focused on God’s Word or God’s world.</p>

<p>But it is also important that we engage believers who disagree with us (on human origins, especially) with charity and humility as a witness to our common identity in Christ—that we may be known by our love for each other in tandem with our demonstrated love for the secular world that does not yet claim Christ as Lord and Savior.</p>  

<p>While the BioLogos Foundation is committed to both of these aspects, we are especially pleased that our desire to engage in gracious dialogue with fellow believers who reject biological evolution has been receiving increased and very favorable attention in both the Christian and secular press.  More importantly, we are being joined in that reconciling project by those who have often been defined primarily as our “opponents,” rather than as brothers and sisters in Christ.</p>

<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/CT_Cover.png" alt="" height="189" width="139" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" />

<p>First, <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2012/july-august/a-tale-of-two-scientists.html?paging=off">A Tale of Two Scientists</a>, the cover story of Christianity Today’s July-August 2012 issue, featured the accounts of BioLogos Foundation President Darrel Falk and Todd Wood, Director of the Center for Creation Research at Bryan University.  Though Wood does not accept biological evolution on theological grounds, both men recognize its strength and explanatory power. But more importantly, both reject the warfare model between science and faith (and between Christians who think differently) as being, in Wood’s words, “detrimental to the Church.” </p>

<p>Second, our Southern Baptist Voices series has become a model for how such dialogue can be pursued, even in the sometimes no-holds-barred context of the web.  Several installments in our ongoing dialogue with Southern Baptist theologians have been covered by the Erin Roach of the Baptist Press (on <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=37901">May 25th</a> , <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=37981">June 6th</a>, and <a href="http://www.bpnews.net/bpnews.asp?id=38198">July 3rd</a>) and on on July 19th by Lillian Kwan of the <a href="http://www.christianpost.com/news/evangelicals-debate-theistic-evolution-historical-adam-78570/">Christian Post</a>.  And just this past week, Associated Press reporter Travis Loller highlighted the series in an article picked up by the <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/07/18/evangelical-scientists-debate-evolution_n_1683480.html">Huffington Post</a>, the <a href="http://www.washingtonpost.com/national/health-science/evangelical-scientists-debate-evolution-online-with-southern-baptist-seminary-professors/2012/07/18/gJQAqBsstW_story.html">Washington Post</a>, and many other news outlets across the country. </p>

<p>To make it easier for readers to find the entire Southern Baptist Voices series and join in the conversation themselves, we’ve launched a new landing page here: <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/sbv">Southern Baptist Voices</a>.  It is our hope and prayer that this initiative will set the stage for future dialogue between evolutionary creationists and those who hold other perspectives, as well.</p>


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        <pubDate>Sat, 21 Jul 12 12:50:42 -0700</pubDate>
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        <title>Series: Science and the Bible: Concordism</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;concordism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;concordism?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Davis identifies core tenets or assumptions about the view of concordism, beginning with propositions about the Bible before concluding with a short historical commentary.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The word “concordism” is found in neither <a href="http://www.merriam-webster.com">Merriam Webster</a> nor the <em>Oxford English Dictionary</em>, yet it’s often used in contemporary works dealing with origins. Derived from the word “concord,” meaning a state of harmony, “concordism” has been used sparingly in English for more than a century. However, its prominence today comes from a thoroughly scholarly book written shortly after World War Two by the late Baptist theologian <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Bernard_Ramm">Bernard Ramm</a>, <em>The Christian View of Science and Scripture</em> (1954). As Ramm defined it, concordism “seeks a harmony of the geologic record and the days of Genesis,” by which he really meant an old-earth creationist approach. </p>

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

<h4>The Gap Theory</h4>

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

<h3>Looking Ahead</h3>
<p>Our look at concordism concludes on July 3 with some conclusions about the OEC view and further historical comments. I’ll pay attention to your comments in the meantime.</p><br> </br>
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        <pubDate>Mon, 16 Jul 12 05:00:05 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: The God Who Acts: Robert John Russell on Divine Intervention and Divine Action</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;god&#45;who&#45;acts&#45;robert&#45;russell&#45;on&#45;divine&#45;intervention&#45;and&#45;divine&#45;action?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/the&#45;god&#45;who&#45;acts&#45;robert&#45;russell&#45;on&#45;divine&#45;intervention&#45;and&#45;divine&#45;action?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Does God need to supernaturally &quot;intervene&quot; in order to bring about the diversity of life that we observe today? Is that kind of action different from God’s ordinary action?  We begin our three&#45;part series with Robert John Russell’s description of how views of divine action have changed throughout history, excerpted from his book Cosmology: From Alpha to Omega.  Part 2 addresses why “intervention” in the natural world is a problem philosophically, theologically, and scientifically; and Part 3 explains Russell’s own theory of divine action in the natural world.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Introduction</h3>

<p><em>(Written by the BioLogos editorial team)</em></p>

<p>In a recent lecture in Washington, D.C., Intelligent Design advocate Stephen Meyer noted that scientists and theologians are generally uncomfortable with the idea of "supernatural intervention" in natural processes such as evolution.  He then posed the question, “What's so bad about supernatural intervention?”  Meyer’s comment touches on a point of particular tension among Christians engaged in understanding how our science and our theology interact: the nature of <em>divine action</em>.</p>

<p>Much of the confusion in this area, however, stems from the inexact meaning of <em>intervention</em>, which—like evolution or Darwinism—implies different things to different people.  All Christians affirm that God works powerfully in the world, doing extraordinary acts of creation and salvation.  In common conversation, then, <em>intervention</em> tends to mean simply “acts that are recognizably or obviously God’s,” whether as dramatic as the parting of the Red Sea or as subtle as an individual believer hearing a clear call to repentance or to mission from the Lord.  Even in this most casual sense, <em>intervention</em> tends to mean special occasions of God’s providential care, rather than his ordinary sustaining work.</p>

<p>But to Christian scientists and philosophers trying to understand God’s action in creation—especially how he might go about his sustaining role—<em>intervention</em> has another connotation: namely, that recognizing something as “divine action” requires it to be in violation of the natural laws which God himself established.  Put another way, many Christian thinkers associate the word <em>intervention</em> with the idea that to act <em>in</em> the world God “must” act from <em>outside</em> the world. That view is a central tenet of deism, not Christianity.  One response to Meyer’s comment, then, is to ask whether <em>intervention</em> is the only (or even a helpful) way of thinking about God’s work in biological creation.  Is there another way of talking about “divine action” that does not restrict God's work to only extraordinary events?  Can we conceive of divine action in a way God is never absent, distant, or in any way removed from the creation he sustains at every moment?</p>

<p>Finding such an alternative vocabulary to talk about the different ways God acts in his creation is the purpose of this short series introducing the work of theologian and physicist Robert John Russell.  Russell’s book <em><a href="http://store.augsburgfortress.org/store/product/3874/Cosmology-From-Alpha-to-Omega" target="_blank">Cosmology: From Alpha to Omega</a></em> explores the history of Christian thinking about divine action and proposes one model for how we might understand it in light of Scripture, the traditions of the church, and contemporary scientific explorations of the material world.</p>

<p>To be clear, Russell argues that God does unmistakably act in the world.  He singles out the bodily resurrection of Jesus not only as a prime example, but as a truly unique event distinct even from Christ’s other miraculous acts during his ministry on earth.  That is, the resurrection was an in-breaking of God’s new reality into the present one, something “beyond miraculous.”  This series, though, offers his perspective on the more basic issue of how God might be at work in what we have called the “ordinary processes” of his world. </p>

<p class="intro">We begin our three-part series below with Professor Russell’s description of how views of divine action have changed throughout history (excerpted from Chapter 4 of <em>Cosmology: From Alpha to Omega</em>).</p>

<h3>Historical background to the problem of divine action</h3>

<p>The notion of God’s acting in the world is central to the biblical witness. From the call of Abraham and the Exodus from Egypt to the birth, ministry, death and raising of Jesus and the founding of the church at Pentecost, God is represented as making new things happen. Through these “mighty acts,” God creates and saves. Rather than seeing divine acts as occasional events in what are otherwise entirely natural and historical processes, both the Hebrews and the early Christians conceived of God as the creator of the world and of divine action as the continuing basis of all that happens in nature and in history.</p>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/john_calvin.jpg" alt="" height="299" width="220" style="float:right; margin:0px 0px 10px 10px;" />The view that God works in and through all the processes of the world continued throughout Patristic and Medieval times. For example, God was understood as the first or <em>primary cause</em> of all events—where all natural causes are instrumental or <em>secondary causes</em> through which God works. The conviction that God acts universally in all events, and that we act together with God in specific events, was maintained by the Reformers and the ensuing Protestant orthodoxy. John Calvin (1509-1564) argued that God is in absolute control over the world and at the same time maintained that people are responsible for evil deeds. Questions about human freedom and the reality of evil were seen more as problems requiring serious theological attention than as reasons for abandoning belief in God’s universal agency.</p>

<p>Moreover, faith in God the creator was articulated through two distinct but interwoven doctrines: <strong>creation</strong> and <strong>providence</strong>. The doctrine of <strong>creation</strong> asserts that the ultimate source and absolute ground of the universe is God. Without God, the universe would not exist, nor would it exist as “universe.” Creation theology, in turn, has often included three related but distinct claims: 1) the universe had a beginning; 2) the universe depends absolutely and at every moment on God for its sheer existence; and 3) the universe is the locus of God’s continuing activity as Creator. The first two have traditionally been grouped in terms of <em>creatio ex nihilo</em>(creation from nothing), and the third in terms of <em>creatio continua</em> (continuing creation).</p>

<p>The doctrine of <strong>providence</strong> presupposes a doctrine of creation, but adds significantly to it. While creation stresses that God is the cause of all existence, providence stresses that God is the cause of the <em>meaning and purpose</em> of all that is. God not only creates but guides and directs the universe towards the fulfilling of God’s purposes. These purposes are mostly hidden to us, though they may be partially seen after the fact in the course of natural and historical events. The way God achieves them is hidden, too. Only in the eschatological future will God’s action throughout the history of the universe be fully revealed and our faith in it confirmed. General providence refers to God’s universal action in guiding all events; special providence refers to God’s particular acts in specific moments, whether found in personal life or in history.</p>

<h3>Divine intervention arises in the Enlightenment</h3>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Pierre-Simon_Laplace.jpg" alt="" height="267" width="200" style="float:left; margin:0px 10px 10px 0px;" />The rise of modern science in the seventeenth century and Enlightenment philosophy in the eighteenth, however, led many to reject the traditional views of divine action. Although Isaac Newton (1643-1727) argued for the essential role of God in relation to the metaphysical underpinnings of his mechanical system, and in this way defended the sovereignty of God in relation to nature, Newtonian mechanics depicted a causally closed universe with little, if any, room for God’s <em>special</em> action in specific events—and then only by intervention: that is, by acting as from outside that closed system. A century later, Pierre Simon Laplace (1749-1827, pictured left) combined the <em>determinism</em> of Newton’s equations with <em>epistemological reductionism</em> (the properties and behavior of the whole are reducible to those of the parts) and <em>metaphysical reductionism</em> (the whole is simply composed of its parts), to portray all of nature as a causally closed, impersonal mechanism. This in turn led to the concept of interventionism: if God were really to act in specific events in nature, God would apparently have to break the remorseless lock-step of natural cause and effect by intervening in the sequence and violating the laws of nature in the process. </p>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/immanuel_kant.jpg" alt="" height="277" width="220" style="float:right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;" />The eighteenth century also saw the rise and fall of deism, in which the scope of divine agency was limited to an initial act of creation. According to deism, the universe was like a clock which, once built and set in place, proceeded to run on its own.  David Hume (1711-1776) challenged the deistic (and theistic) arguments for God as first cause and as designer. In response, Immanuel Kant (1724-1804, pictured right) constructed a new metaphysical system which emphasized the mind’s role in organizing sense-data through universal categories of intuition and forms of sensibility. According to Kant, the sphere of religion lies not in our knowing (the activity of pure reason) but in our sense of moral obligation (the activity of practical reason). It is our ethical system, not our knowledge of nature, that requires us to postulate God, freedom and the immortality of the soul. The consequence of Kant’s thought for the West was the philosophical separation of the domains of science and religion into “two worlds”—a move which was to have an immeasurable effect on Christian theology up to the present. </p>

<h3>Theology splits into conservative and liberal interpretations of divine action</h3>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/schleiermacher.jpg" alt="" height="350" width="220" style="float:left; margin: 0px 10px 10px 0px;" />As a consequence of the philosophical division of science and religion, theology in the nineteenth century was faced with a fundamental challenge not only to its contents and structure, but even to its method. The variety of responses to this challenge tend to fall into two groups: “liberals” largely accepted and worked within the terms of the discussion that modernity dictated while “conservatives” upheld traditional formulations and tended to reject “modernity.” The earliest and most influential figure among liberals was Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768-1834), who responded to Kant by locating religion as neither a knowing nor a doing. Instead religion is grounded in personal piety—the feeling of absolute dependence. </p>

<p>Schleiermacher held that theological assertions emerge from the immediacy of the religious self-consciousness. He understood God’s relation to the world in terms of “universal divine immanence” [the idea that God is present to the entire cosmos at all times], and he blurred the distinction between creation and providence by collapsing the later into the former. In a famous move he defined miracle as “. . . simply the religious name for event. Every event, even the most natural and usual, becomes a miracle, as soon as the religious view of it can be the dominant.” Schleiermacher’s arguments became characteristic of liberal Protestant theology throughout the nineteenth century and continued into much of twentieth century theological work.</p>

<p>The second half of the nineteenth century saw the rise of Darwinian evolution, which combined random variation and natural selection to explain biological complexity. To some in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries, the fundamental role of chance in nature seemed to undercut any notion of divine action in the world; to others, such as the Anglo-Catholic liberal movement in Britain and America, Darwinian evolution could be accommodated and even integrated into theology without interventionism, since God works immanently in and through the very processes of nature. In contrast, religious conservatives tended either to reject evolution as a whole or give it a limited acceptance with the proviso that the objective acts of special providence constitute divine interventions in nature.</p>

<h3>The rise of neo-orthodoxy in the twentieth century</h3>

<p><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/kant.jpg" alt="" height="171" width="250" style="float:right; margin: 0px 0px 10px 10px;" />Protestant theology in the first half of the twentieth century was largely shaped by Karl Barth. In his rejection of nineteenth-century liberal theology, Barth returned theology to its biblical roots and focused it on the God who is “wholly other.” Recognizing that a religion founded exclusively on subjective experience is vulnerable to the critiques of Feuerbach and Freud, Barth and his followers held fast to the objective action of God in creating and redeeming the world. “The Gospel is . . . not an event, nor an experience, nor an emotion—however delicate! ... It is a communication which presumes faith in the living God, and which creates that which it presumes.” The ‘God who acts’ became a hallmark of the ensuing “biblical theology” movement which arose in the 1940s and 1950s. To many this movement seemed to offer a <em>tertium quid</em> between liberal and conservative theologies. </p>

<p>But do Barthian neo-orthodoxy and the biblical theology movement actually produce a credible account of divine action? On the one hand neo-orthodoxy attempts to distance itself from liberal theology by retaining biblical language about God acting through wondrous events and by viewing revelation as including an objective act. Yet on the other hand, it, like liberalism, accepts the modern premise that nature is a closed causal system, as depicted by classical physics. The result is that neo-orthodoxy seems to assert a contradiction: God does act objectively in nature (as conservatives believe) and God does so without intervening, violating, suspending or obstructing the ordinary processes of nature understood as a closed causal system (as liberals believe).</p>

<h3>A third way between liberal and conservative theologies</h3>

<p>Any purported “third option” will require an intelligible concept of objectively special providence which does <em>not</em> entail divine intervention. Such a concept could serve as a <em>genuine tertium</em> quid to conservative and liberal notions of special providence, combining strengths borrowed from each. Specifically, we will seek to speak about special divine acts in which God acts objectively in an unusual and particularly meaningful way in, with, and through events which serve to mediate God’s action. We will seek to do so without entertaining—in fact by refusing—the additional claim that God must intervene in, or at least suspend, the laws of nature.  Those laws are themselves the result of and description of God’s continuous creation, after all. I call this type of divine action <em>Non-Interventionist Objective Divine Action</em> (NIODA).</p>

<p class="intro">In part 2 of this series, Tom Burnett will explore in more depth what Russell takes to be wrong with the Enlightenment concept of “supernatural intervention.”  Part 3 will explain and clarify Russell’s theory of NIODA.</p>

<p><em>From Chapter 4, “Does ‘The God Who Acts’ Really Act? New Approaches to Divine Action In Light Of Contemporary Science,” in <a href="http://store.augsburgfortress.org/store/product/3874/Cosmology-From-Alpha-to-Omega" target="_blank"><em>Cosmology: From Alpha to Omega</em></a>  by Robert John Russell, copyright © 2008 Fortress Press. Reproduced by permission of Augsburg Fortress Publishers. All rights reserved. No further reproduction allowed without the written permission of the publisher.</em></p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 25 May 12 04:59:18 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Robert John Russell, Thomas Burnett</dc:creator>
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        <title>A BioLogos Response to William Dembski, Part 1</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;a&#45;biologos&#45;response&#45;to&#45;william&#45;dembski&#45;part&#45;i?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;a&#45;biologos&#45;response&#45;to&#45;william&#45;dembski&#45;part&#45;i?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>We think that God created all living organisms, including humans, through the evolutionary process.  But acceptance of creation through evolution does not mean that we reject the notion of a miracle&#45;working God.  On the contrary...</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/darrel_large.jpg" alt="" height="312" width="250" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;" />

<p>This ongoing series grew out of a conversation that Kenneth Keathley, the Senior Vice President for Academic Administration at Southeastern Baptist Theological Seminary and I had last year.  We agreed that he would solicit a set of essays from scholars at Southern Baptist Seminaries who would specifically identify their concerns about what they perceive to be the BioLogos view of creation.   In response to this request, Dr. William Dembski of Southwestern Baptist Seminary submitted the essay “Is Darwinism Theologically Neutral?” Although I do not consider my view Darwinian, I am sure that my view and that of others associated with BioLogos is perceived that way by some, so this gives me an opportunity not only to respond to his analysis, but to clarify my position on creation and how I think it is distinct from what Dembski calls “Darwinism."</p>



<h3>God’s Activity in Creation</h3>

<p>I will begin by summarizing my view of the nature of God’s activity in creation.  I think that God created all living organisms, including humans, through the evolutionary process.  Acceptance of creation through evolution does not mean that I reject the notion of a miracle-working God.  On the contrary, I believe in the miracles of Scripture, and I believe that we’ve experienced God’s supernatural activity in our own lives.  I stand in awe of a personal God whose activity is not constrained by natural laws, but also includes supernatural acts.  </p>

<p>But what are the natural laws?  Are not the <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/List_of_laws_in_science">the laws of nature</a> simply a description of God’s ongoing and non-ceasing activity in the universe? The Law of Gravity, for example, is not something that God set up in the beginning, thereafter recusing himself from further involvement and exiting from the scene.  Instead, the Law of Gravity works as it does because of the ongoing activity of God’s Spirit in the universe.  So consistent is that activity that it can be described mathematically through scientific analysis.   If God ceased to be active, however, then not only would the matter of this universe no longer function in a way which enables a mathematical description of gravity, matter itself would cease to exist.   Paul, referring to Christ, writes “All things are created by him and through him.”  Continuing, he goes on to state that “He himself is before all things and <strong>in him all things hold together</strong>” (Colossians 1:17).   So he created in the beginning and, indeed, “…without him not one thing came into being.” (John 1:3)  But it doesn’t end there: his <strong>ongoing</strong> activity is necessary for the universe to function.   As the writer to the Hebrews declares “He <strong>sustains all things</strong> by his powerful word.” (Hebrews 1:4)    The laws of nature, then, are simply a description of the ongoing activity of God which—because it is so consistent, dependable, and pervasive—points to the trustworthiness of God. Put another way, the activity of God is not restricted to that which we call the <em>supernatural</em>; it is all God’s activity.  It is just that some aspects of God’s activity are so consistently repeatable that we can develop laws which describe the regularity of the divine activity which “holds” and “sustains” the universe.  This latter type of activity is no less magnificent just because God does it continuously.  Indeed, the Psalmist marveled at God’s natural activity and worshipfully reflected upon it.</p>

<p>On the other hand, the God we know through Scripture and personal experience also works in ways that are not mathematically predictable.  We call this aspect of God’s action <em>super</em>natural, and we seem to think of this facet of God’s work—this law-defying activity—as being more God-like.  Indeed calling it <em>super</em>-natural suggests we think of it as God’s “turbo-charged” activity. But are not miracles simply a reflection of God choosing to work in a unique, non-customary manner to accomplish God’s purposes in God’s time? (See <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/louis_scholarly_essay.pdf">here</a> for more detail.)  When God works in this way, Scripture generally presents such activity in the context and purpose of God’s desire to enter into or renew a relationship with an individual or with a community of people.    For example, God’s miraculous involvement in the lives of the elderly couple, Abraham and Sarah, led to the birth of their son, Isaac, and marks the beginning of God’s very special relationship with their descendents.   God’s interaction with Moses through the burning bush initiated a new phase of God’s relationship with the Hebrew people as they moved out of slavery and back into the Promised Land.  And of course, the supreme examples of miraculous activity are the incarnation, the empty tomb, and the resurrected Body.  We worship a personal God whose desire for an ongoing loving relationship with humankind is first laid out in the early chapters of Genesis, but does not end there.  In all divine activity—supernatural and natural—God is just being who God is: Creator, Sustainer, and loving Father. There are not two sets of activities, even though we label them “super” and “ordinary.”  All are “super,” because all describe the activity of our supernatural God. Some are regular, predictable and ongoing, while other activities of God are not, for reasons often based in the fact that God is lovingly responsive and relational.</p>

<p>The Genesis narrative gives us no details about the mechanism by which God brought the universe and life into existence.  God gave the charge: “Let there be lights in the dome of the sky..., “ “Let the waters bring forth…,”  “Let the land bring forth…,” “Let the birds multiply…,” and, in response, we are told, it happened.   Scripture does not explain how it happened, although as we read God’s other book—the book of nature—we see that God’s work extended over a long period of time.  In these details, the Bible does not say whether the “bringing forth”  was fulfilled through God’s natural activity (that which is regular, ongoing, and can be described by science) or God’s supernatural activity (that which is not regular and predictable).   Given the many examples of supernatural activity in Scripture, we human beings tend to expect that for something as special as creation of stars or new species, supernatural activity would have been required.   But we cannot derive this from the scriptural account and, therefore, it is wise not to second-guess how God might have worked based on the Scriptures.</p>

<p>Indeed, the distinction is softened by Scripture itself, which often speaks of God’s natural activity in ways that sound supernatural.  For example, the Psalmist writes of God opening his hand to feed the living creatures (Psalm 104:28).  We know how God does this and so did the Psalmist—he did it through natural means—but it was still God’s process and God’s provisions.  Job speaks of thunder as being the voice of God (Job 40:9).  We know God’s natural activity produces thunder and we can describe the laws that are responsible for it, but the fact that we know how it works certainly doesn’t negate the point being made in the book of Job.  When the Psalmist describes the heavens as being the work of his fingers (Psalm 8:3), this does not negate astronomy’s description of the regular and ongoing processes that give rise to stars in God’s universe. Those processes are natural, but they are every bit as much God’s activity as if he were to take huge balls of matter and miraculously fashion sparkling stars with his hands.</p>

<p>Still, given that there is extensive supernatural activity exhibited in God’s interaction with Israel and in the life of Jesus, it is entirely possible that he did work supernaturally in fulfilling the creation command, as well.   Even though the miracles described in the Bible primarily serve some theological or pastoral purpose that stems from God’s earnest desire to make his presence known and to deepen his relationship with humankind, we should reserve judgment about whether <em>only</em> God’s natural activity was responsible.  It is not clear though, that supernatural activity would often be God’s chosen mode of action millions of years before humans had arrived.  Thus, we should not assume with certainty that God would choose to use supernatural flurries of activity if his ongoing regular activity—that described through natural laws—would accomplish the same end, albeit over a longer period of time.  For all we know, God may prefer slowness, even though we seem to be inclined to think that faster is better.  After all, in the history of Israel and the church, God gave no new prophecy for 400 years before the coming of Christ, and it took the early church five centuries to come to a clear—albeit mysterious—understanding of the Trinity.  Even now, two thousand years after Christ, we wait for his return.</p><br> </br>

<p class="intro">In the next part, Darrel responds to Dembski’s lists of non-negotiables and clarifies how he sees BioLogos as different from “Darwinism”.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 02 May 12 08:03:43 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Darrel Falk</dc:creator>
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        <title>Mitochondrial Eve, Y&#45;Chromosome Adam, and Reasons to Believe</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/understanding&#45;evolution&#45;mitochondrial&#45;eve&#45;y&#45;chromosome&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/understanding&#45;evolution&#45;mitochondrial&#45;eve&#45;y&#45;chromosome&#45;adam?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>When presented with the evidence for human population sizes over our evolutionary history, a common point of confusion for evangelicals is how this evidence fits with Mitochondrial Eve. How can we all come from one woman (and one man) but also come from a large population of 10,000 individuals?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">One of the challenges for discussing evolution within evangelical Christian circles is that there is widespread confusion about how evolution actually works. In this (intermittent) series, I discuss aspects of evolution that are commonly misunderstood in the Christian community. In this post, we tackle the issue of why “Mitochondrial Eve” and “Y-chromosome Adam” are not an ancestral couple from whom all humans descend, as claimed by the Old-Earth Creationist organization <em>Reasons to Believe</em>.</p>

<p>It is reasonably well known among evangelical Christians that all living humans trace their mitochondrial DNA back to a single woman (a so-called “mitochondrial Eve”) and that all living males similarly trace their Y-chromosome DNA back to a single male (a so-called “Y-chromosome Adam”).  These individuals are commonly assumed by evangelicals to be the Biblical Adam and Eve, the first humans alive and the progenitors of the entire human race. While most young-earth and old-earth creationist organizations make this claim, perhaps one of the best-known organizations to do so is the old-earth creationist / anti-evolution organization <em>Reasons to Believe</em>, who have produced numerous  articles, podcasts, and even entire books on the subject.</p>

<p>In contrast to this common evangelical understanding, the scientific picture is rather different. Mitochondrial Eve, though the most recent common matrilineal ancestor of all humans, was but one of a large population living about 180,000 years ago. So too for Y-chromosome Adam: he was also a member of a large population, and he lived about 50,000 years ago. As has been discussed several times here at BioLogos, there are multiple lines of evidence that indicate the human population has never been below around 10,000 members at any time in its history: we branched off as a large population to form our own species.</p>

<p>When presented with the evidence for human population sizes over our evolutionary history, a common point of confusion for evangelicals is how this evidence fits with Mitochondrial Eve. How can we all come from one woman (and one man) but also come from a large population of 10,000 individuals? Aren’t these two observations in conflict?</p>

<p>The answer is no, these lines of evidence fit together. Humans do come from a large population, and all present-day humans do inherit mitochondrial and Y-chromosome DNA from specific individuals in the past. The reason for the apparent discrepancy lies in how mitochondrial and Y-chromosome DNA are inherited, as we shall see below.</p>

<p>Mitochondria are organelles responsible for energy conversion, and they contain their own small, circular chromosome that they replicate apart from regular chromosomes in the cell nucleus. Mitochondria are not passed on to progeny through sperm, but only through the egg: as such, mitochondrial DNA is passed on solely through the maternal line. Consider a small pedigree (family tree) below. Circles represent females, males are represented with squares. In this family, one grandmother (the woman at the top right of the pedigree) has passed on her mitochondrial DNA to her sons and daughter, but only her daughter passes it on to the next generation. All individuals who have this grandmother’s mitochondrial DNA are shown in blue:</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_1.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="363"  /></p>

<p>Conversely, if we examine Y-chromosome inheritance in this same family, we would see that (obviously) women cannot pass it on to their children. Here, the red lines show all males who have descended from a grandfather of the family (the male at the top left of the pedigree):</p>
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_2.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="355"  /></p>

<p>Now we are ready to examine how these types of DNA are inherited in a larger group, and compare their modes of inheritance with regular chromosomal DNA. While it is not possible to draw out a pedigree for a population of 10,000 individuals, let’s examine a smaller group to see how a specific mitochondrial sequence can “take over” a population of organisms (note that this effect applies to other organisms besides humans that use an XX – XY system of sex chromosomes).</p>

<p>In the family tree below, three mitochondrial DNA variants are present in the first generation (the top row of the pedigree) and a represented with different colors (green, blue and red). Tracing the inheritance of these mitochondrial DNA versions through the family tree shows that all living members of this population (the bottom two rows) have inherited the red version only. The blue and green versions eventually hit a dead end where they were not passed on (either through females who did not have children, or males). As such, all living individuals can trace their mitochondrial DNA back to this group’s “mitochondrial Eve”, the woman at the top right of the tree with the “Mito 3” variant.</p>

<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_3.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="391"  /></p>

<p>Let’s now examine Y-chromosome inheritance patterns in the exact same family tree. Suppose there are three Y chromosome variants present in the first generations:</p>
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_4.jpg" alt="" width="570" height="386"  /></p>

<p>Here we can see that the current population has inherited its Y-chromosome DNA from one individual as well (variant 1, the red lines) and that the other Y-chromosome variants (blue and green) hit dead ends through males that did not reproduce or men who only had daughters. All living members of the population trace their Y chromosome DNA back to an individual (filled in with yellow) who lived two generations after their most recent matrilineal common ancestor (the woman at the top right).</p>

<p>Now we are ready to examine regular chromosomal inheritance in this same family tree. Genetic variation on chromosomes other than the Y can be passed through either gender without problem, and individuals can have two variants at a time (one on the chromosome inherited from mom, the other on the chromosome inherited from dad). These key differences (compared to how mitochondrial DNA and Y chromosomes are inherited) produce a very different effect. In this same family, numerous variants (represented by the different colors) have been transmitted to the present generation without loss:</p> 
 
<p align="center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/mito_eve_5.jpg" alt="" width="565" height="371"  /></p>

<p>Notice the middle couple in the first generation in the pedigree. This man’s Y chromosome did not make it to the present day, and similarly his wife’s mitochondrial DNA did not make it either (scroll up to see this if you need to refresh your memory). So, they contributed nothing to the current generation, right? Not at all: both of them have passed on regular chromosomal variation to the present day (traced as blue and black lines).</p>
  
<p>In other words, it would be incorrect to examine this population, determine (correctly) that they share common mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome ancestors, and then go on to conclude that these two individuals were an ancestral pair that started this entire family. We know that this group descends from a larger population, because genetic variation in the present population is too large to explain as coming from one pair (there are five colors, or genetic variants in this population, and the max any one pair could carry is four, with two each).</p>

<p>While this example examines a small family, the same principles apply to larger groups: mitochondrial and Y-chromosome lineages, though interesting, cannot be used to estimate population sizes over time. For that type of work, regular chromosomal variation should be examined. Present day human genetic variation indicates that though we all share a common mitochondrial DNA and Y-chromosome source, these individuals came from a population of at least 10,000 individuals, and that they lived over 100,000 years apart. If you are interested in examining the evidence for human population sizes, Darrel Falk and I have discussed it previously.</p>
 
<p>In summary, anti-evolutionary groups, such as <em>Reasons to Believe</em>, that claim that the evidence for Mitochondrial Eve and Y-chromosome Adam supports an ancestral couple for the entire human race are not interpreting the data correctly. They have failed to account for the unique pattern of inheritance these types of DNA have in populations.</p>

<p class="intro">Photo courtesy of <a href="http://irkedmagazine.com/417/chromosomes/" target="_blank">Lewis Schofield</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Oct 11 08:25:23 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</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>Mon, 17 Oct 11 08:00:03 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>David Swaim</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: From ID to BioLogos</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/from&#45;id&#45;to&#45;biologos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/from&#45;id&#45;to&#45;biologos?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Dennis Venema describes his personal journey that took him away from the Intelligent Design arguments toward the evolutionary creation worldview. Through careful and honest research, he discovered ID scientific reasoning to be analogy&#45;based, in sharp contrast to evolutionary science, which was supported by concrete data. After accepting this view, God’s presence ever strengthened him as he explored the compatibility between the Bible and God’s creative mechanism.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>For those familiar with my work here at BioLogos, it might come as a surprise to know that until relatively recently I was a supporter of the Intelligent Design Movement (IDM). In this series of posts, I tell the story of my transition to the view that God uses evolution as a creative mechanism.</p>

<h3>Early years</h3>
<p>I grew up in northern British Columbia, Canada, in a small town called <a href="http://www.visitterrace.com/" target="_blank">Terrace</a>, where I spent a lot of time in the woods with my father and brother hunting and fishing. Little did I know how spoiled we were –Terrace and its environs are a world-class destination for outdoor pursuits, especially fishing. As a hunter, my father was always interested in patterns in nature: what animals fed on, where they moved at certain times, and so on. Even as a child I can remember being similarly interested in how nature worked. Often, while dad fished, I was the one brandishing a net, bucket at the ready, to see what critters I could scoop up and examine. While my peers at school wanted to be astronauts and firemen, I dreamed of being a scientist some day.</p>

<p>My local church setting was pretty much a wash when it came to science. Science was not held up as a potential vocation, but neither was it denigrated as suspect.  Creation science did not seem to be a priority, but rather global missions.  As such, science–faith issues were seldom, if ever, discussed in the church I grew up in. I can vaguely recall one dust-up over eschatology, which was perhaps the first time I realized that not all Christians agree on everything when it comes to interpreting the Bible. I cannot, however, recall any similar discussion about the means by which God created.</p>

<h3>High school</h3>
<p>Despite evolution being almost a complete non-issue in my local church, I seemed to acquire a generic, evangelical, anti-evolutionary position by default. Certainly I knew of no Christians who accepted it, and I can still recall the feeling of dread I would get even at hearing the word <em>evolution</em> spoken aloud. That word, in my mind, was effectively synonymous with <em>atheism</em>. Fortunately, even in high school biology class evolution seemed to be a complete non-issue too, for as far as I can recall evolution was not a subject I was exposed to in high school. In fact, in high school I found biology to be intensely boring – it seemed to me to be mere regurgitation of information. Chemistry and physics seemed much more interesting, and I suspect now the reason for the appeal they held for me then was that they were taught from their underlying principles: atomic theory, Newtonian mechanics and Einstein’s theories of special and general relativity. What was missing was the theoretical underpinnings of  biology: a way to organize the laundry list of information into a <em>context</em>. It would be a long time before I realized that <em>evolution</em> was the theoretical underpinning that was missing from my biology experience. Given my dread of the topic, had this been pressed on me in high school I may have never pursued a career in biology. </p>

<p>As a high school student I had left behind my childhood desire to be a scientist. After all, I knew no scientists, and had no notion of how one might become one. In my small-town, northern Canadian setting, a medical doctor was about as close as one came to a scientific career that I was aware of. Accordingly, I set my sights on medicine, and off I went to the University of British Columbia in the fall of 1992. Biology seemed a natural choice for an aspiring doctor, so that was what I chose.</p>

<p>One church incident that I do recall with great clarity happened just before I left for university. There were several recent grads in the congregation: some were headed to Bible College, and others, such as myself, were off to “secular” universities. Our congregation had a time of prayer for all of us, but the contrast was stark: prayers of thanksgiving and blessing for those bible-school bound, but for those of us heading into the lion’s den, prayers of supplication that we not lose our faith in the process. I can remember steeling myself for the upcoming battle, where professors tried to snare me with their atheistic teachings and peers likewise pressured me to give up my faith. One battle I knew was coming was the evolution one: certainly, as a biology student, this would be one of the challenges I would have to face.</p>

<h3>University 101</h3>
<p>To my delight, I found that university was not going to require me to hold my breath spiritually for four years. Soon I was involved with Inter-Varsity Christian Fellowship and enjoying the friendship of many other Christian students. Biology, however, remained boring and laundry-list like. My grades in chemistry and physics were still higher than those within my declared major of biology. The one bright spot was that evolution barely seemed to rate a mention except in passing. Certainly no compelling evidence for evolution was ever mentioned – professors seemed too intent on teaching the details of their fields to provide a wider evolutionary context. Even the introductory survey courses seemed more intent on a mere description of biodiversity rather than any detailed understanding of how that diversity arose.  I did note that there was a 400-level evolution course, but thankfully it was an optional elective. Avoiding the evolution issue was easier than I had thought: I simply skipped taking that elective.</p>

<p>At the start of my third year, with my grades still marginal for medical school, I somehow decided to upgrade into a biology “honors” student. This meant two things: working on an undergraduate research thesis with a faculty member, and attending an “honors seminar” class with other students in the same program.</p>

<p>Experiencing my first taste of research was electrifying: here at last was genuine science! Not long after, my upper-level classes seemed a lot more interesting and relevant, and also much easier. My grades improved dramatically, and medical school looked to be a live option once more – except for the fact that my childhood interest in science had blossomed again.</p>

<h3>Standing against evolution</h3>
<p>The undergraduate thesis seminar class included an assignment that required students to familiarize themselves with the research of one of the professors in the department. As the list of potential faculty and their research interests was read, one caught my attention: the work of <a href="http://www.zoology.ubc.ca/~schluter/" target="_blank">Dolph Schluter</a> on experimental evolution. I decided to take the opportunity to score a few hits on the so-called “theory” by signing up for this topic. What followed can only be described now as a painful memory: full of ignorance and confidence, I trotted out every long-refuted, anti-evolutionary argument in the book (in fact, if memory serves, my “research” was nothing beyond skimming one anti-evolutionary book for its arguments). I remember that the class was quite engaged by the presentation, and there was some  vigorous back-and-forth with some of the students who knew the science better than I because of their research work. I can only imagine what the thesis class faculty supervisor was thinking at the time. The worst part was that Dolph himself arrived early for his own presentation to the class, which was to follow my own. As such, he was able to hear a good portion of my nonsense.</p>

<p>Fortunately for me, Dolph had no interest in what would have been a very easy dressing-down. Rather, he restrained himself to a few words to the rest of the class on their lack of knowledge. Personally, I thought I had scored a victory for the faith, against the evils of evolution.</p>

<p><em>In the next post in this series, I’ll describe my introduction to, and enthusiastic embrace of, the Intelligent Design Movement.</em></p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 25 Aug 11 05:00:30 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
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        <title>The (Lack Of) Conflict Between Science and Religion in College Students</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;lack&#45;of&#45;conflict&#45;between&#45;science&#45;and&#45;religion&#45;in&#45;college&#45;students?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;lack&#45;of&#45;conflict&#45;between&#45;science&#45;and&#45;religion&#45;in&#45;college&#45;students?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Media&#45;hungry atheist, creationist and religious fundamentalist provocateurs have dominated the science and religion narrative for the past decade. A recently published large&#45;scale survey of college students, however, finds that the call to arms has fallen on deaf ears.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Reposted with permission from <a href="http://www.huffingtonpost.com/matt-j-rossano/no-sciencereligion-confli_b_865543.html" target="_blank"><em>Huffington Post</em></a>.</p>

<p>Media-hungry atheist, creationist and religious fundamentalist provocateurs have successfully dominated the science and religion narrative for the past decade or so. In doing so, they have created the false impression of an ongoing unavoidable war between the two camps. A recently published large-scale survey of college students, however, finds that the call to arms has fallen on deaf ears. For the vast majority of American university students, there simply is no conflict between science and religion.</p>

<p>Christopher Scheitle, a Penn State sociologist, analyzed survey data from more than 10,000 students at over 200 colleges and universities across America (<em>Journal for the Scientific Study of Religion</em> 50, p. 175). The students were surveyed both as freshman and juniors so that attitudinal change over the course of their university years could be assessed. Among the many items on the survey was one that asked the following: "For me, the relationship between science and religion is one of..." Four possible responses were provided: (1) Conflict -- I consider myself to be on the side of science, (2) Conflict -- I consider myself to be on the side of religion, (3) Independence - science and religion refer to different aspects of reality and (4) Collaboration -- each can be used to support the other. Students were also asked about their religious beliefs and affiliations and their course of study (i.e. major).</p>

<p>Results showed that nearly 70 percent of college freshman saw the science/religion relationship as one of either independence or collaboration. The minority who saw science and religion in conflict were roughly evenly split between those who sided with religion (17 percent) and those who sided with science (14 percent). Even more interesting was the fact that when students changed their opinion over time, the most likely change was moving from a conflict position to one of non-conflict (either independence or collaboration). For example, 70 percent of those who as freshmen said they were on "religion's side" had changed to a non-conflict position by the time they were juniors. Similarly, 46 percent of freshmen who said they were on "science's side" had adopted a non-conflict position by the time they were juniors. By contrast, only 13 percent of freshman who took a non-conflict position changed to one of conflict by their junior year (5 percent to religion's side, 8 percent to the side of science). For most students, more education means less science/religion conflict, not more.</p>

<p>The above results also reflect the fact that the pro-science point of view appears to be more entrenched than the pro-religion point of view. In other words, once someone has adopted "science's side" in a perceived science and religion conflict, it is harder to move them from this position compared to when someone has adopted "religion's side." Exactly how to interpret this is unclear. Are religious people actually less dogmatic on the issue? Maybe. Maybe the evidence more clearly confirms the rightness of the "science" side and this is why fewer people switch. Then again, if the evidence so clearly supports the "science side" then why don't the majority of people see a conflict to begin with, and why do nearly half of the pro-science folks defect over time?</p>

<p>The apparent greater willingness of "religion side" students to re-examine their stance can also be seen in another interesting finding. Students at religious schools were actually less likely to claim to be on "religion's side" than students at secular schools. This pattern held true even after the results were adjusted for the students' degree of religious commitment and religious conservatism. The author suggests that students at religious schools may feel less threatened than equally religious students at a secular school and that the conflict narrative may be more salient at secular schools.</p>

<p>The breakdown of findings by major also showed some interesting trends. Business and education students were most likely to adopt a conflict approach, with nearly 40 percent doing so, most of whom claimed a pro-religion stance. The conflict approach was endorsed by just under 30 percent of natural science, math and engineering, social science, and arts and humanities students. However, while the majority of "conflict" students in natural science, math and engineering sided with science, the majority of arts, humanitie, and social science students sided with religion. While it is important to keep in mind that most students of all majors saw no conflict, this pattern across majors was somewhat troubling to the author:</p>

<blockquote><p>"The finding that scientists and engineers are among the most likely to have a pro-science conflict perspective could mean that some of the most influential voices in these public debates might be more likely to fuel the debates than attenuate them. Similarly, future educators are among the most likely to hold a pro-religion conflict perspective. Given that classrooms and school boards have been one of the central forums for the struggle over religion and science, this does not bode well for a reduction of those struggles" (p. 185).</p></blockquote>

<p>A shrill alarm cry naturally attracts attention and the few extreme voices promoting a science and religion conflict have taken full advantage of this. Seeking common ground or respecting distinct domains are not sexy, but this is where the majority of educated people are when it comes to science and religion. As the author of this survey points out, the non-conflict position firmly established among college students is only a reflection of what has already been found for most working scientists.</p>

<p>The majority position is not always the right one. It is not always the wrong one either. But one is justified in being wary of those who promote conflict (whether in science and religion or in politics, society, etc.) when: (a) it not obvious to most people why the conflict is necessary and (b) those promoting it have something to gain by doing so. Crass opportunism could be afoot just as easily as sincere disagreement.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Fri, 03 Jun 11 08:59:34 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Matt J. Rossano</dc:creator>
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        <title>An Evangelical Geneticist&apos;s Critique of Reasons to Believe&apos;s Testable Creation Model</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/an&#45;evangelical&#45;geneticists&#45;critique&#45;of&#45;reasons&#45;to&#45;believes&#45;testable&#45;creatio?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/an&#45;evangelical&#45;geneticists&#45;critique&#45;of&#45;reasons&#45;to&#45;believes&#45;testable&#45;creatio?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Biologist and BioLogos Senior Fellow Denis Venema examines the interaction between RTB literature and several lines of genetics&#45;based evidence for common ancestry. In so doing, he also addresses the scientific robustness and reliability of the RTB model.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Biologist and BioLogos Senior Fellow Denis Venema examines the interaction between RTB literature and several lines of genetics-based evidence for common ancestry. In so doing, he also addresses the scientific robustness and reliability of the RTB model.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 02 May 11 19:02:57 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
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        <title>Recovering the Doctrine of Creation: A Theological View of Science</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Philosopher Robert Bishop explores the Biblical doctrine of creation, which he describes as &quot;perhaps one of the most helpful pieces of theology for thinking about science&quot;, and describes why the doctrine needs to be recovered from narrower, contemporary interpretations of creation.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Philosopher Robert Bishop explores the Biblical doctrine of creation, which he describes as "perhaps one of the most helpful pieces of theology for thinking about science", and describes why the doctrine needs to be recovered from narrower, contemporary interpretations of creation.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 16:43:49 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Robert C. Bishop</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Recovering the Doctrine of Creation: A Theological View of Science</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/recovering&#45;the&#45;doctrine&#45;of&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;theological&#45;view&#45;of&#45;science?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Robert C. Bishop explains that many believe two things about creation: that the universe was created out of nothing by God and that he accomplished this in six days. This overly simplistic view does not do the robust Doctrine of Creation (DoC) justice, and it unnecessarily hinders much of the dialogue between evolution and Christianity. Bishop “recovers” the DoC by exploring the limitations of creation, God’s sovereignty in the process, God’s Trinitarian activity and ongoing purpose for his creatures, and the salvation of creation in space and time.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This is the first post in a series taken from Robert Bishop's scholarly essay "Recovering the Doctrine of Creation: A Theological View of Science", which can be downloaded <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/bishop_white_paper.pdf" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>In teaching at an evangelical liberal arts college that holds firmly to the inspiration and authority of Scripture, I find most of my students think the biblical doctrine of creation (DoC) is limited to two points: (1) God created out of nothing (<em>ex nihilo</em>) and (2) God created the world in six days (whatever they think “days” is supposed to mean!). My students are fairly representative of contemporary evangelicals’ understanding of the DoC. This contemporary understanding is problematic, however, because it is much narrower than the full doctrine as it was developed by the Patristic fathers. Given that the DoC is perhaps one of the most helpful pieces of theology for thinking about science, it’s worthwhile recovering it in all its glory. What follows over the next few parts of this blog is a brief tour through the elements of this amazing doctrine.</p>

<p>Two preliminary comments to get started. First, we have a tendency to cut up doctrines into chunks like the DoC, the doctrine of providence, the doctrine of salvation, the doctrine of eschatology, etc. Nevertheless, we need to realize that this is somewhat artificial on our part as we strive to understand one grand doctrine of God and His activity. All of these doctrines interpenetrate and inform each other as can be seen in what follows (e.g. much of God’s ongoing work of creation is continuous with His providence in creation; likewise, if God hadn’t created, there would be no providence, salvation or sanctification).</p>

<p>Second, all of the elements composing the DoC have been hard fought, won and then lost over and over in the history of Christian thought. If many of the following elements seem surprising or new to you, that’s largely because since the eighteenth century the DoC has suffered significant decline such that contemporary Christians usually only have a very atrophied version of the doctrine in mind when they think about creation, God’s work in creation, and science.<sup>1</sup></p>

<h3>Creator/Creature Distinction</h3>
<p>Let’s start with the creator/creature distinction, something that is familiar to us and that we recognize as part of the DoC when we think about it. This distinction actually has some important yet often missed implications. For example, the distinction implies that God intends for creation to be something different from rather than similar to Him. God didn’t make creation with the same infinite being or nature as Himself. Creation’s being distinct from God implies it is to be distinctly <em>itself</em>, literally to become uniquely what God calls it to be in Christ.</p>

<p>Moreover, the creator/creature distinction implies that all of creation is valued—it has the kind of nature and functionality God intended it to have. After all, “God saw all that he had made and it was very good” (Gen. 1:31), is a proclamation of His valuing all of creation. The Hebrew term in Genesis 1 and 2, <em>tob</em>, often translated as “good,” has a variety of meanings in different contexts including moral goodness and craftsmanship. However, it is commonly used in the OT in the sense of functioning properly. For example, “It is not good [<em>tob</em>] for the human [<em>adam</em>] to be alone, I shall make him a sustainer beside him” (Gen. 2:18). The man isn’t fully functioning without a sustainer appropriate to his created nature. So the repeating refrains of “good” in Genesis 1 and 2 primarily mean value, as in properly functioning or working as intended, fulfilling assigned purposes. From the beginning, God is telling us that creation does—and will do—what He intends.</p>

<p>Moreover, we see God’s valuation of creation especially in Jesus’ incarnation: what higher affirmation could there be of the value of the material order than the second person of the Trinity taking on the material nature of creation and inhabiting its order, an order that Jesus Himself established and blessed in the beginning?</p>

<p>A final implication of the creator/creature distinction is that creation has what theologians call <em>contingent rationality</em>. Creation is contingent in two senses: (1) it is utterly dependent on God such that if Christ ceased sustaining creation it would disappear instantly and (2) God could have made any kind of creation He wanted but chose to make this particular creation. God didn’t need or have to create anything. He was under no compulsion or necessity. Rather, being a loving communion of three persons, out of the overflow of that love God brought into existence a particular kind of creation for His glory and for its own sake. Furthermore, creation has its own rationality, its own particular order, structure and functionality, which is at least partially intelligible to us.</p>

<p>The creator/creature distinction has implications for science as well. First, since creation is so valuable to God, its study is a worthwhile human activity. Second, the contingent rationality of the created order is what science seeks to uncover and understand (whether or not scientists realize that both this order and its intelligibility are good gifts from God).</p>

<h3><em>Ex Nihilo</em> Creation</h3>
<p>That creation was made <em>ex nihilo</em>—literally out of absolute nothing—is implied by the creator/creature distinction. The Patristic fathers inferred the <em>ex nihilo</em> nature of creation from this distinction and various passages like John 1:1-3, 1 Cor. 8:6, Col. 1:16, Heb. 11:3, Rev. 4:11 in their struggle with ancient Greek natural philosophy (the latter maintained that matter was eternal). This element of the DoC was not easy to achieve and required the Patristics to “think away” what was false from the Greek philosophical ideas that so permeated their world and their education.</p>

<p>The theological significance of <em>ex nihilo</em> creation is hard to overestimate. For one thing it protects God’s sovereignty showing us that all things in creation are subject to Him. Moreover, it distinguishes God’s creative activity from all other religious creation stories. There is no pre-existent matter giving rise to divinities as in the other ancient Near East creation accounts. Creation is pictured as originating in covenantal love (Jer. 33:25) rather than conflicts among deities. God is never once seen to be struggling to shape recalcitrant matter (a constant theme in other ancient Near East creation accounts).</p>

<p>Another important implication of <em>ex nihilo</em> creation is that there can be no creation out of nothing without purpose. Creation was no accident on God’s part. He has reasons for what He’s doing, one of which is for creation to become what God destines it to be in Christ (more in part 3).</p>

<p>Finally, a creation made out of nothing is particularly fragile! Its tendency is to always fall back into nothing meaning that creation requires God’s constant preserving care. Here, there is a clear connection between God’s creating out of nothing and His general providence sustaining the being and order of creation.</p>

<h3>Sovereignty in Creation</h3>
<p>God’s sovereignty in creation contrasts with all the ancient creation myths and cosmologies, where divinities are always struggling with each other and with recalcitrant matter. Instead, the Bible pictures God as in control of all things: “See, the Sovereign LORD comes with power and his arm rules for Him” (Is. 40:10a), “He stretches out the heavens like a canopy, and spreads them out like a tent to live in” (Is. 40:22b), and</p>

<blockquote><p>Blessed are you, O LORD, the God of Israel our father, forever and ever. Yours, O LORD, is the greatness and the power and the glory and the victory and the majesty, for all that is in the heavens and in the earth is yours. Yours is the kingdom, O LORD, and you are exalted as head above all. Both riches and honor come from you, and you rule over all (I Chron. 29: 11-12a).</p></blockquote>

<p>From Genesis 1 to Revelations 22, God is king and ruler over all! One of the most relevant implications of this for thinking about science: God rules over all natural processes! Therefore, anything a scientist says about processes in creation can only be describing something that is sustained by God and subject to His sovereignty.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p>1. Although not his main theme, James Turner’s masterful history, <em>Without God, Without Creed: The Origins of Unbelief in America</em>, Johns Hopkins University Press (1986), reveals much of the DoC’s decline during the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 28 Feb 11 07:00:29 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Robert C. Bishop</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: A Tale of Three Creationists</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;tale&#45;of&#45;three&#45;creationists?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;tale&#45;of&#45;three&#45;creationists?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this three part series, Dennis Venema introduces and highlights Todd Wodd—a biologist who validates evolution as a credible theory, yet rejects the theory itself on a Biblical basis. In other words, Wood is a Young Earth Creationist. Despite their different perspectives, however, both he and Venema offer similar scientific critiques of arguments made by Reasons To Believe (RTB) including their view that physical, anatomical and genetic similarities as well as shared pseudogenes do not imply common ancestry between two organisms. The careful evaluations made by both Venema and Wood demonstrate the scientific weaknesses in RTB’s theories.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">In <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/a-tale-of-three-creationists-part-1/">part one</a> of this series, I introduced Todd Wood (pictured at right),  a controversial Young Earth Creationist scholar and faculty member at Bryan College. In this post, I discuss some of Todd’s previous critiques of the Old Earth Creationist organization Reasons to Believe, and his recent blog series examining the exchange between myself and Fazale Rana.</p>

<p>Since his pivotal 2006 paper, Todd has continued to evaluate and respond to arguments against human common ancestry brought forth by other creationists. One group that is frequently the target of Todd’s criticism is the Old-Earth Creationist group <em>Reasons to Believe</em>, (RTB) a group that I have recently critiqued as well (see <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/an-evangelical-geneticists-critique-of-reasons-to-believe-pt-1/">here</a>  and <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/an-evangelical-geneticists-critique-of-reasons-to-believe-pt-2/">here</a>). The striking genetic similarities between humans and chimpanzees presents a difficulty for the RTB view that humans were directly created by God apart from common ancestry with other species. One <a href="http://www.reasons.org/bible-and-brains-explain-human-chimp-similarities" target="_blank">RTB rationalization</a> for the evidence is that since humans and other life are formed from the dust of the ground in the Genesis narratives, such similarities are to be expected:</p>

<blockquote><p>Genesis 2:7 describes the creation of Adam and states that God “formed the man from the dust of the ground.” The verb “formed” is translated from the original Hebrew verb yasar, which means “to form,” “to fashion,” or “to produce.” Genesis 2:19 uses yasar to describe God’s work to form “out of the ground all the beasts of the field and all the birds of the air.” Together, these verses indicate that both man and animals were fashioned by the Creator from the same substance. It follows, then, that anatomical, physiological, biochemical, and genetic similarities should exist between humans and other animals, including the “99% genetic similarity” between humans and chimpanzees.</p></blockquote>

<p>While RTB views this as a reasonable line of argument, Todd does not. The <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2010/05/neandertal-non-sequitur.html" target="_blank">fatal flaw</a>, as both Todd and I see it, is that this rationalization does not explain the <em>pattern</em> of biological similarity we see in nature:</p>

<blockquote><p>Being created by one God would be a good reason for some degree of similarity to exist. Likewise, being created to occupy the same world or to participate in the same ecosystem would also necessitate some biological similarity. These types of considerations could explain why all living things use the same basic biochemical building blocks (amino acids, nucleotides, etc.), for example.</p>

<p>What these considerations do not explain is the pattern of similarity. This is quite a different problem that is easy to confuse with the fact of similarity. What we're dealing with in creation is not just bare similarity or random similarity. There is a definite pattern, and it's a pattern that Darwin says is uniquely explained by the inference of common ancestry …</p>

<p>When are building materials sufficient to justify a conclusion that things built will be strongly similar in form? If I get two homework assignments that are identical word-for-word, I do not conclude that the similarity is inevitable given that they're both written in English.</p></blockquote>

<p>In other words, RTB is content to present a weak argument they feel is theologically satisfying even if it fails to grapple with the compelling pattern that scientists observe throughout nature. Todd, however, isn’t having any of it. He would rather understand the pattern than find ways to explain it away.</p>

<p>Given my appreciation for Todd and his approach, I was pleased to discover Todd’s <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-1.html" target="_blank">blog series</a> examining my recent critiques (see <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/an-evangelical-geneticists-critique-of-reasons-to-believe-pt-1/">here</a>  and <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/an-evangelical-geneticists-critique-of-reasons-to-believe-pt-2/">here</a>)  of <em>Reasons to Believe</em>’s “Testable Creation Model”. I found several aspects of RTB’s response to be inadequate, as I will explain below. Still, when one is personally invested in a discussion it can be difficult to evaluate a rebuttal objectively. Far better to have another, more impartial individual look it over and offer their thoughts.  Todd is an ideal candidate for this. He is eminently qualified to evaluate the science, he is familiar with the RTB literature, and, since he is a Young-Earth Creationist, he certainly cannot be accused of a pro-evolutionary bias.</p>

<p>Todd <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-1.html" target="_blank">starts the series</a> by explaining his motivations:</p>

<blockquote><p>In my last post before Christmas, I indicated that I would be discussing Reasons to Believe in my next posts. Unfortunately, what started as a single response to some of Fuz Rana's recent assertions about the chimpanzee genome has turned into a long series of posts. Having written almost the entire series of posts already, I've become discouraged by the length and detail of my criticisms. I have even debated whether or not I should bother posting what I've written, since I'm sure it will be either ignored by RTB or misconstrued as personal attack or insult. Despite that, though, I do think I have a duty to the public and to the truth to set the record straight on a topic that I'm familiar with: comparative primate genomics.</p></blockquote>

<p>In his first post, Todd addressed the accusation that my critique was merely an <em>ad hominem</em> attack on RTB. In my critique, I was careful not to accuse RTB of wrongdoing. That is certainly one possible explanation for the data I laid out in the original critique, but it is not the only explanation. My intent was to make the data accessible to non-specialists and allow them to see what a biologist sees when they look at the RTB model. So, I found this response from RTB to be somewhat puzzling. Todd’s evaluation was similar to mine:</p>

<blockquote><p>In his first response to Venema's post, Rana wrote,</p>

<blockquote><p>...instead of discussing the scientific weaknesses of our approach, Venema chose to launch an <em>ad hominem</em> attack against me and Hugh Ross, impugning our integrity as scientists and scholars.</p></blockquote>

<p>I think that interpretation is pretty debatable. Venema raised some very important questions … about the way RTB has represented published research. He never accused anyone at RTB of any specific wrongdoing or incompetence. By dismissing these issues as just a personal "attack," I would say that Rana is far more guilty of <em>argumentum ad hominem</em> than Venema ever was.</p></blockquote>

<p>An additional point is that critiquing a model for failing to adequately address the scientific literature is very much a <em>scientific</em> critique. If I submit a scientific paper for publication that makes claims clearly against the published literature, while simultaneously omitting any discussion of the relevant research, the reviewers would, without a doubt, reject my work. That’s not an <em>ad hominem</em> attack on their part, it’s pointing out a scientific weakness in my scholarship. The RTB model, as published in their major books, makes no mention of the key paper comparing the human and chimpanzee genomes. The most recent RTB book, <em>More Than a Theory</em>, even claims that a full-genome comparison has never been done. Moreover, no explanation or evidence is given to back up these assertions. Regardless of the reasons for these omissions, the fact remains that they are a serious scientific shortcoming for the RTB model.</p>

<p>Todd’s thorough analysis eventually spanned eight posts on his blog, and links to each post are provided below for those interested in the details. Having gone over RTB’s response with a fine-toothed comb, Todd offers some conclusions for RTB to consider:</p>

<blockquote><p>Venema and I have documented a sad but consistent and ongoing pattern of erroneous summaries of published works on the part of RTB (Rana and Ross, but mostly Rana). There's really no way to deny these mistakes have been made or to explain them away, so what are you going to do about them? I recommend apologizing for the mistakes, correcting them if you can, and instituting some kind of serious fact-checking filter on everything you publish.</p></blockquote>

<p>Todd <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-8.html" target="_blank">goes on</a> to challenge RTB to live up to their stated invitation for serious critique of their model:</p>

<blockquote><p>Rana claimed that "We do invite serious critique of our model (both theological and scientific). We believe that critical evaluation of our ideas will only improve our case for biblical creation." Fine. Venema did that in his critique. You ignored a number of important points he raised and instead mischaracterized his critique as a personal attack, which it was not. I've also offered a serious critique in the fourth post of this series, where I tested Rana's hypothesis that the unaligned portions of the chimp genome are too different to align. Will you ignore that as well? If so, please stop saying that you "invite serious critique" of the RTB model.</p></blockquote>

<p>I’m hopeful that RTB won’t ignore what Todd has to say. Todd’s blog might not get a huge amount of traffic, but he is an important voice in this discussion. Hopefully posting this here on Biologos will raise Todd’s visibility with those who need to hear what he has to say most: RTB supporters. Folks, when two Christian geneticists who hold radically different views of creation agree that the RTB model has serious scientific flaws, it’s time to ask hard questions.</p>

<strong><p>Todd’s complete blog series can be found here (Parts <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-1.html" target="_blank">1</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-2.html" target="_blank">2</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-3.html" target="_blank">3</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-4.html" target="_blank">4</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-5.html" target="_blank">5</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-6.html" target="_blank">6</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-7_10.html" target="_blank">7</a>, <a href="http://toddcwood.blogspot.com/2011/01/rtb-and-chimp-genome-part-8.html" target="_blank">8</a>)</p></strong>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 07 Feb 11 07:00:48 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Dennis Venema</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Feb 07, 2011 07:00</dc:date>-->
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