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        <title>Custom Feed &#45; The BioLogos Forum</title>
    <link>http://biologos.org/resources/find/any/Problem of Evil,Ancient Cultures/sort&#45;by&#45;Newest?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
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    <dc:rights>Copyright 2013</dc:rights>
    <dc:date>2013-05-21T14:28:34-08:00</dc:date>    
    
    

            
            
        
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        <title>Southern Baptist Series: Evolution and the Problem of Evil</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;series&#45;evolution&#45;and&#45;the&#45;problem&#45;of&#45;evil?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/southern&#45;baptist&#45;series&#45;evolution&#45;and&#45;the&#45;problem&#45;of&#45;evil?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Were one to propose creation by means of theistic evolution, some of the presuppositions for these responses to the problem of evil no longer function. Therefore, advocating some form of theistic evolution poses problems for standard explanations of the problem of evil.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Today we post the seventh and final installment in our Southern Baptist Voices series–a collection of essays from Southern Baptist scholars with BioLogos responses to their concerns and arguments. You can read more about the series and access all of the other papers <a href="/blog/sbv">here</a>, and get an overview in Dr. Kenneth Keathley's <a href="/blog/series/southern-baptist-voices-kenneth-keathely">introductory essay</a>.  <br> </br>
But because today's essay from Dr. Steve Lemke is the last in this nearly year-long project, and brings together many of the concerns expressed by his colleagues (not to mention many non-academic Christians), we're handling the response in a slightly different manner than we have in previous exchanges.  Instead of posting a separate response essay, we've chosen to highlight how the conversation has developed over these past months by including pertinent links to previous SBV exchanges within the paper itself, and responses to Dr. Lemke's key points in the sidebar: mouse over <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('Response0');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('Response0');">highlighted phrases</a>
 to show and hide this additional text. As BioLogos President Darrel Falk explains in his accompanying post (also published today), we think this method shows how prescient Dr. Lemke was when he wrote this paper early on in our dialogue, and how the conversation itself has suggested ways forward in many of the key areas of concern he cites.  Please be sure to read Dr. Falk's <a href="southern-baptist-voices-and-in-conclusion-.-">series summation</a>, as well.</p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="Response0"><p>BioLogos comments will appear here in the sidebar.</p></div>


<h3>Evolution and the Problem of Evil</h3>


<p>Let me begin by expressing appreciation for the commitment and intent of BioLogos. Francis Collins was speaking at nearby Tulane University a couple of years ago when my son was a senior in high school, and I brought him along to hear this noted Christian biologist’s presentation to help prepare him for challenges he would experience (as he is now) in college. This is a tremendously valuable ministry. However, as a philosopher and a theologian I do have concerns about some of the theological implications of the BioLogos theistic evolution view, particularly regarding the problem of evil.</p>

<p>The problem of evil is one of the most persistent and intuitive challenges to the Christian faith and the existence of God.  The classic defenses or theodicies that have been used to answer this challenge include the <em>Freewill Defense</em> (God is not responsible for much of evil because it is caused by the free actions of humans), the <em>Soul Making Defense</em> (God allows or sends some evils or suffering in order to build human character in overcoming adversity), and the <em>Eschatological Defense</em> (although the cause of some suffering may be beyond our understanding, whatever suffering we may experience in this life cannot compare with an eternity of blessing in heaven).</p>


<img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/steve_lemke.jpg" alt="" height="230" width="168" style="float:right;margin:0px 0px 0px 10px;"  />

<p>These theodicies or defenses to the problem of evil, however, normally presuppose the standard view of divine creation.  Were one to propose creation by means of theistic evolution, some of the presuppositions for these responses to the problem of evil no longer function. Therefore, advocating some form of theistic evolution poses problems for standard explanations of the problem of evil.</p>

<p>Cornelius Hunter has recently published <em>Darwin’s God: Evolution and the Problem of Evil</em>,<sup>1</sup>  an excellently researched book which re-examines Darwin’s motives for developing the theory of evolution.  Hunter’s main thesis is that Darwin’s intent was not to undermine belief in the existence of God, but to afford a defense of God’s moral nature.  The viciousness of nature caused Darwin and some of his contemporaries to desire to disconnect God’s role in creation from this viciousness in nature, and the blind process of natural selection is the vehicle for disassociating God from the vulgarities of nature. In essence, then, Hunter’s argument is that Darwin’s theory was a form of theodicy – sheltering God’s goodness against the accusation that He is the author of the evil in nature.</p>

<p>Hunter’s thesis sounds hauntingly similar to that of the early Gnostics, who sought to insulate God from the evil material world. They therefore proposed intermediary <em>aeons</em>, archetypes, or a demiurge to isolate the purity of God from the evil of nature.  The Darwinian account sharply differs from the biblical account in at least three crucial ways:</p>

<ul><li>The Darwinian account removes God from being directly involved in much of creation by utilizing natural processes instead, while the biblical account presents God as directly involved in the details of creation, both in the beginning and throughout history through his providential care.</li>
<li>The Darwinian account blurs the distinction between humans and other animals, while in Scripture humans are a distinctive and special creation.</li>
<li>The Darwinian account presents God as apathetic and disinterested in the moral status of animals, while the scriptural account presents God (though giving primary focus to humans) as vitally interested in the moral status of animals, and indeed for the redemption of the entire created world.</li></ul>

<p>Another problem with Hunter’s thesis is that whatever Darwin’s original motivation might have been, the novelty of Hunter’s thesis underscores the fact that this is not how Darwin’s ideas predominantly have been used and understood. No one (including contemporary evolutionary biologists) seriously believes Darwin’s ideas as he presented them. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('Response1');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('Response1');">Darwin’s ideas about evolution have themselves evolved.</a> (<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-william-dembski-part-ii"> see Falk, Part 2</a>) So even if Hunter’s thesis were correct about Darwin’s original motivation for the problem of natural selection, this has little relevance to contemporary evolutionary biology.</p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="Response1"><p>Although Darwin did relinquish his faith in the God of orthodox Christianity and the challenges outlined by Steve were central to the loss of that faith, as Steve himself goes on to point out, BioLogos is not Darwinian.   In my response to William Dembski, I discussed how my views differ from those that might be classified as Darwinian: <em>"I agree with Dembksi that Darwin’s views were not theologically neutral.  Darwin’s views on teleology, human exceptionalism, and miracles were not compatible with Christianity.  Quite simply, this is why I do not consider my views to be Darwinian and why I am not a Darwinist.</em>"</p></div>

<p>Any such Darwinian evolutionary biology also undermines classical defenses for God’s goodness. For example, the Christian group BioLogos has presented the perspective that God created all living organisms, including humans, through a gradual process that includes natural selection, group selection, genetic drift or other such physical processes, with God possibly intervening at some undefined points.  While this BioLogos approach (which might be labeled a variety of “gradualism” with regard to creation) includes a role for God in creation (as opposed to pure Darwinian evolution), some of the same problems involved with the problem of evil pertain to the BioLogos view as well. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('Response2');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('Response2');">In fact, the specific role that God plays in evolution remains somewhat vague and ill-defined.</a> (<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-william-dembski-part-i">see Falk, Part 1</a>) Without BioLogos providing a clearer and more precise differentiation between itself and Darwinian evolution – and thus building a clear “Chinese wall” between their view and that of Darwinian evolution -- these views appear to be very close, and the problems that pertain to one view pertain to the other view (at least in part) as well. The following problems arise with regard to the problem of evil in relation to forms of creation by gradualism.</p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="Response2"><p>This is true. At the time Steve wrote his paper, BioLogos <em>had</em> been too vague about this topic.  Still, caution is required when offering scientific specifics about how God is acting in nature, because even Scripture itself is not specific as to the “how” of God’s actions.   However, Part 1 of the response to William Dembski does address Steve's concern and is summarized as follows: <em> “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.”</em></p></div>

<h3>The Best of All Possible Worlds</h3>

<p>First of all, it is incumbent upon a good God to produce an optimally good world. We could not necessarily expect an evil or morally mixed God to produce a good world, but we have every reason to expect a good and beneficent God (Matt. 5:48; 1 John 1:5, 4:7-8) to produce the “best of all possible worlds” (given human freewill). In the biblical account, therefore, the evil and suffering we witness in nature and in human experience is not accountable to God because of a defective process in creation, but rather it is a result of the moral Fall of the first humans and subsequent sin by their descendents. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('Response3');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('Response3');"> However, gradualism has no such vehicle to defend God against the accusation of being responsible for natural and physical evil and suffering.</a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-kenneth- keathley-part-2">(see Applegate, Falk, and Haarsma, Part 2).</a>  </p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="Response3"><p>Similarly, when Steve wrote this, we likely had not been careful enough to clearly lay out a statement about the BioLogos view on the historicity of Adam and Eve and the Fall.   This is no longer the case.  See, for example, Part 2 of our response to Kenneth Keathley:  <em>“Finally, then, whether or not Adam was a real person is a theological question, not a scientific one; the most science can say is that there was never a time when the human population from which all modern humans descended was as small as two individuals. This fact obviously creates interesting questions regarding the image of God and original sin, but nothing in evolutionary biology precludes the possibility that God began a covenantal relationship with a real, historical first couple who brought about spiritual death as a result of their disobedience.”</em></p></div>

<h3>Human Distinctiveness</h3>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response4"><p>This Southern Baptist Voices series has given us the opportunity to clarity our views on human distinctiveness, as well.  In fact we believe there <em>is</em> a clear line between humankind and animals, as described in Part 2 of our response to William Dembski:  <em>“Even if all that Darwin says here were more or less true, it would still say nothing about that which makes humans truly exceptional, because—our linguistic and cognitive abilities aside—what makes us truly exceptional has less to do with biology than with the fact that God chose to enter into a unique relationship with humankind.  Dembski paraphrases an ideologically strict Darwinian view of man as “not worthy of special divine attention, and with no prerogatives above the rest of the animal world.” But Christians recognize that our material ordinariness is radically transformed by the presence and promises of God. Exactly as with the people of Israel among the nations, so humans among the animals: our special identity rests in the free choice of the Creator to give us his himself and his name. If we recognize that human specialness rests on God’s fellowship with and call upon us, and that we—alone of all creatures—are enabled by God to bear his image in the world, then anything Darwin said about the physical continuity between humans and animals is irrelevant.  In the way that matters most, we are not continuous with animals. For philosophical and theological reasons, Darwin did not recognize this. Darwin, I believe, was wrong.  I, like Dembski and like Southern Baptists in general, am not a Darwinist.”</em></p></div>

<p>Second, if God created all living species, including humans, through a gradual evolutionary process that includes common descent from nonhuman primates, <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response4');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response4');"> there is no clear line to draw a moral or spiritual distinction between humans and other living beings.</a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-william-dembski-part-ii ">(see Falk, Part 2).</a>.  Yet fundamental to any view of a moral universe is the belief that humans are created in the image of God in a way that is uniquely above all other sensate species (Ps. 8:4-8), and included in this image is our soul and our moral capacity. It is difficult to imagine how humans could receive the image of God through some sort of physical process.  <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response5');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response5');"> Instead, the Bible describes God as being directly and personally involved in creating the human soul by breathing it into mankind  (Gen. 2:7). </a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-response-to-john-hammett-part-1">(see O’Connor, Part 1).</a> 
In the specific language of the biblical account (if not to be discounted, allegorized, or completely ignored), God created human souls directly, not indirectly through some impersonal process. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response6');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response6');"> Gradualism offers no clear answer as to how a human soul reflecting the image of God could come about; in fact, such a unique thing in all of creation is everything but gradual or natural.</a>
<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/what-does-it-mean-to-be-human-a-response-to-bruce-little-part-2">(see Bishop, Part 2). </a>
</p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response5"><p>To understand our thinking on the “image of God,” consider Part 1</a> of Tim O’Connor’s response to John Hammett: <em>“The Christian Scriptures teach that we human beings have been created in God’s image. What does that mean? I am in substantial agreement with Dr. Hammett on this question. While I think that bearing God’s image involves our having or having a potentiality for certain basic psychological capacities that we associate with the term “person”, it has to do even more profoundly with our specific capacity for relationship with God. Indeed, I would go further and say that it is not just our having this capacity that makes us divine ikons, it is also the fact that God has activated this capacity—He has given the precious gift of His self-disclosure to us. Further still, it has an eschatological dimension, based on the revealed promise of a future development and perfection of each of us, and so by implication, of human nature itself, by almighty God. We are in the process of becoming fully human: beyond a descriptive biological or even psychological notion of human nature lies a teleological one—not a telos of nature but of God's loving purposes for us. Despite our unequally born deficits—physical, cognitive, emotional, and moral/spiritual—we are destined for a fuller, supernatural realization of our common nature.”</em></p></div>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response6"><p>We have expanded on this subject, as well. Consider Part 2 of Robert Bishop’s response to Bruce Little:  <em> “Jesus’ human life in Scripture indicates that the divine image is a special relationship, or form of relationality: to be in relationship with the Father as a created, embodied person; to be sustained or upheld in this relationship with the Father through the perfecting Spirit; and to be in relationship with other persons and all of creation.  Moreover, this special relationship is also a vocation to mirror or reflect the glory, life and worship of God. If to be the image of God is to be sustained in a special relationship with the Father, each other and creation through the Spirit, then the imago Dei is not grounded in intrinsic qualities that particularly mark humans as distinct from the rest of the animals, as essentialism would have it. Christians can understand Genesis 1: 24-31 and 2: 4-5, as many of the Patristic Fathers did, as an account of our unity and connection with the rest of creation as well as of our special relationship with God and role in God’s kingdom. So if Father, Son and Spirit created human beings through evolutionary processes, we would have continuity and connection with all of creation while still being the imago Dei. Evolution does not threaten human specialness before God unless it is viewed as a replacement for divine creative activity (which, of course, is what Richard Dawkins, Jerry Coyne and Answers in Genesis all do repeatedly).” </em></p></div>

<h3>Whence Cometh Freedom?</h3>

<p>Thirdly, even if God intervened at various points in theistic evolution to create new forms from which other species evolve, this does not afford a satisfactory account of human freewill. If humans are not a unique and distinct creation (as the biblical account makes quite clear), but are with other apes the product of a single ancestor, from whence did freewill arise? How can we account for some mutations having freewill and others not having it?</p>

<p>Some quasi-materialists propose some form of epiphenomenalism in which the mind emerges somewhat magically from material cells. This proposal is devoid of any convincing scientific evidence, but it is the only alternative left for materialists to espouse in order to account for some of the most basic human intuitions – that our minds are more than merely a physical organ, that our choices are genuine expressions of freewill, and that we are free moral agents who are responsible for our actions.</p>

<p>Evolutionary biology has no scientific evidence to respond to these basic human intuitions other than to assert that “there is no ghost in the machine” and <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response7');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response7');"> that any apparent choices are actually mechanical outworking of hard determinism predetermined by prior physical causes.</a>
<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-response-to-john-hammett-part-2">(see O’Connor, Part 2).</a> Therefore, if human choices are merely illusions, humans cannot be held morally accountable, all blame and responsibility reverts back to the God who created this world.</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response7"><p>Actually, science <em>has</em> shown that new properties emerge as we move from the very small components of a system to the system as a whole.  We are, even according to mainstream science, more than the sum of our parts, and more than reductionists would have us believe.  Tim O’Connor addresses this point in Part 2 of his response to John Hammett:  <em>“Many of the spectacular successes of twentieth-century science consisted in showing how certain ‘high-level’ features (liquidity and other molecular properties; biological life itself) can be seen to result directly from the properties and interactions of lower-level entities. These theories are elegant and persuasive on the evidence. However, alongside such reductionist successes we have seen the rise of the sciences of complex systems, which appear to indicate the importance of higher-level features of organized systems acting as fundamental constraints upon the lower-level behavior of the very entities that compose them.  How exactly we should understand such ‘emergent’ or ‘holistic’ features in different sorts of complex physical systems is a hotly debated question by theorists. I would claim only that it is especially plausible to see human consciousness and the capacities that it enables as metaphysically irreducible to—something ‘over and above’—the underlying physical properties that give rise to them.”</em></p></div>

<h3>The Problem of Pain</h3>

<p>Fourth, gradualism has no moral explanation for animal pain. If humans are the product of an earlier ancestor, it may have taken thousands or millions of years for life to evolve to that point, or for humans to evolve from an earlier primate ancestor. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response8');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response8');"> How can the pain of these creatures (some of them quasi-human or proto-human) be justified? </a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-2">(see Schloss, Part 2)</a> 
This is specifically the issue that worries many Christian ethicists about cloning. Each experiment in animal cloning has produced hundreds of “monsters” before the clone is successful. What if we were cloning humans? What would be the moral implications of creating hundreds of “monsters” just to develop one clone?</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response8"><p>Although the problem of pain is an extremely significant issue, it is not clear that it rules out the possibility of God having chosen to create through the evolutionary process. In Part 2 of Jeff Schloss’s response to John Hammett, he wrote: <em>“The possibility of pain may be requisite to that of fulfillment, or death may be conjoined to life as a function of metaphysical, logical, or biotic necessity. Death and its pains may be fully consoled, and necessary for the experience of consolation, in a life to come. The existence of death, in a finite world, may be a necessary form of “taking turns” so that both the number and the diversity of creatures that experience and manifest life are maximized. The capacity for pain and the possibility of relinquishing life itself may present the option—even to animals—for the most morally salient and fullest expression of life’s goodness: caring for others to the point of sacrifice. None of these approaches is problem-free, though neither does it appear that any may be dismissed out-of-hand.”</em></div>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response9"><p>Significantly, Part 3 of Jeff Schloss’s response to John Laing is entitled "The Evolutionary Role of Death and Natural Selection." If one was to read only one posting in the entire series, I think it likely that this is the one I would most recommend.  Jeff very briefly summarizes some recent developments in evolutionary biology including evidence for the significance of cooperation between individuals (as opposed to competition) as a shaping force in life’s history.  He draws things to a conclusion by stating, <em>“Scientifically death <strong>does not </strong>'drive' evolution.” </em>(Emphasis in the original.)
</p></div>


<p>The unanimous view is that this would be morally unjustifiable, but <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response9');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response9');"> this is uncannily similar to the notion of creating animals who suffer for millions of years before evolution finally produced humans. </a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-3">(see Schloss, Part 3)</a>
 In the biblical creation accounts, pain and suffering comes into the world after the Fall and as a result of the Fall of the earliest humans, and thus God is absolved of direct responsibility for this pain.  In this gradualist account, pain and suffering precede the Fall. Millions of generations of sensate beings would have suffered and died before the Garden of Eden. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response10');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response10');"> Why would God allow this suffering of innocents for millions of years?</a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-3 ">(see Schloss, Part 3)</a>
</p>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response10"><p>We do not believe there is a clear answer to this question. However, Part 3 of Jeff’s response to Laing summarizes both our sentiments and the incompleteness of our knowledge this way: <em>“Unlike John, I do not see anything in evolutionary theory to reduce, and I see much to augment the sense of grandeur and (for that matter) the appreciation of sheer goodness—both earthly and divine—evoked by the wonders of the living world.  Yet grandeur and goodness are not perfection. My Dad is still dying. I still wince at the suffering of clearly sentient animals. And, truth be told, I tremble at the biblical images of universal herbivory: even metaphors are metaphors of something, and in the case of biblical revelation, that something can be taken to be real and important. So like John, I confess to profound gratitude tempered with a lingering unease at the state of nature. Though I believe in a Fall, this unease is not rationally relieved by attributing to an Adam the present state of all nature. Nor is it resolved by the various alternative considerations I’ve described and which, taken together, seem to have considerable merit but not sufficiency. Notwithstanding, I thankfully affirm that 'I have known the goodness of the Lord in the land of the living.' And I look to the day when we may say together, 'My ears had heard of You, but now my eyes have seen You.' (Job 42:5)"</em></p></div>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response11"><p>In Part 2 of Schloss’s response to John Laing, he states that<em> “It is not clear that evolution puts God on the hook in any way that is not generated by the long-recognized, wondrous-though-uncertain testimony of creation itself. As Blaise Pascal noted, 'If the world existed to instruct man of God, His divinity would shine through every part in it in an indisputable manner; but as it exists only by Jesus Christ, and for Jesus Christ, and to teach men both their corruption and their redemption, all displays the proofs of these two truths. All appearance indicates neither a total exclusion nor a manifest presence of divinity…" </em></p></div>

<p>Ironically, Hunter’s Darwinian explanation in Darwin’s God doesn’t work for the BioLogos perspective at this point, because God is somewhat more directly involved at several steps in creation than in the purely Darwinian perspective, so it is <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response11');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response11');"> God who must shoulder the blame for this undeserved pain.</a> <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-2 ">(see Schloss, Part 2)</a></p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response12"><p>Here is Jeff Schloss’s take on this issue from his Part 1: <em>"Although all Christians have traditionally affirmed resurrection (for both the redeemed and unredeemed), there have been longstanding debates about whether the life that is redemptively restored in Christ and the death that is brought about by sin is 'spiritual' (involving the vitality or disruption of communion with God) or 'physical' (involving the viability or dissolution of biotic function). Of course these are not mutually exclusive, and perhaps they are not even ultimately distinguishable. But however one understands death to be an incursion upon human telos, it does not answer or even clearly bear upon the evolution-related question of whether other living beings beyond and before humans were created to be immortal. “Violence” in western thought has often been understood as a disruption of natural ends: but do we assume that all creatures share the same “natural end”? For instance, is the nature or telos of worms immortality? Is death a violation of all creaturely natures that was therefore absent from earth prior to initial human intimacy with and subsequent estrangement from God? Significantly, not a single one of the scriptures John cites explicitly refers or even vaguely alludes to the general place of death in the natural order: virtually every one emphatically focuses on death as a consequence of sin for uniquely human moral agents, and—correspondingly—on eternal life as God’s special purpose for supernaturally redeemed humanity.  Indeed, I am at a loss to find in the entire Bible a scripture that clearly teaches death across the entire biotic realm postdates and is a consequence of human sin. Neither is this point affirmed or even mentioned in the most prominent historic creeds of Christian orthodoxy." </em></p></div>


<p>Another attempt to affirm a gradualist view of creation in which pain preceded the creation of humans was by William Dembski, who in his book The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World<sup>2</sup> proposed that the animal world existed in pain for millennia before the creation of humans, and thus the pain of these animals was applied retroactively from the later Fall (pp. 9-10).  This proposal was not well received by many in the evangelical world because it depicts God causing pain to sensate beings even before the cause of the pain took place, and Dembski ultimately felt compelled to post a clarification of his views.<sup>3</sup> So, the reality of animal pain before the Fall in the gradualist account of creation heightens the problem of evil rather than resolving it.</p>



<h3>Death and the Nature of God</h3>

<p>Fifth, in orthodox Christian theology, death is seen as the ultimate punishment for the Fall of Adam and Eve. There was a time of created goodness from when humankind has fallen.  <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response12');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response12');"> All human suffering, animal suffering, natural disasters, and death was ultimately the result of the God’s punishment for human sin</a>, the curse after the Fall as described in Genesis 3. <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-1 ">(see Schloss, Part 1)</a>   </p>


<p>However, <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response13');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response13');"> in the gradualist evolutionary account, there is no Fall.</a><a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-kenneth- keathley-part-2">(see Applegate, Falk, and Haarsma, Part 2).</a>  
 If anything, there is a “rise,” as human beings “come of age” and become morally responsible at some point in the process of evolution from prehuman primates.  There are multiple problems with this proposal from a theological perspective:</p>
<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response13"><p>Lemke’s concerns about the reality of Adam, Eve, and Eden in this section are best answered with this brief statement from Part 2 of our response to Keathley: <em>“[N]othing in evolutionary biology precludes the possibility that God began a covenantal relationship with a real, historical first couple who brought about spiritual death as a result of their disobedience”</em></div>


<ul><li>It is one thing to apply symbolic interpretations to the first three chapters of Genesis; it is another <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response13');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response13');"> to eliminate the historical reality of the Fall altogether.</a><a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-kenneth- keathley-part-2">(see Applegate, Falk, and Haarsma, Part 2).</a>  
.</li>


<li>In the biblical view of creation, God creates humans in a paradisical Eden, and humans are ejected from Eden after their sin. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response13');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response13');"> In the gradualist view,</a><a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-kenneth- keathley-part-2">(see Applegate, Falk, and Haarsma, Part 2).</a> there never was an Eden, and humans never enjoyed the kind of original created goodness described in Scripture.</li>



<li>In the biblical view of creation, separation from God and death are the punishments for human sin.  In the gradualist view, there never was an Edenic paradise, and persons were created to die. Sin has no real causal connection with <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response14');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response14');"> physical death. </a>  <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/evolution-creation-and-the-sting-of-death-part-1">(see Schloss, Part 1)</a></li>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response14"><p>As Jeff Schloss reminds us in Part 1 of his paper, <em>"Although commentators differ over whether the Pauline description of death in Romans 5 refers to spiritual and/or physical death, the passage clearly focuses on humans. It identifies humanity as the subject of infection, instigated and promulgated by initial and ongoing human sin: “in this way death came to all people, because all sinned” (Romans 5:12)."</em></p></div>


<li>In the biblical view of creation, humans were created “a little lower than the angels, crowned with glory and honor” (Ps. 8:5).  In the gradualist view, humans emerged from previously created nonhuman primates.  <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response15');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response15');"> This is a profound re-envisioning and diminishment of the Christian anthropology
 found in the Bible. </a>  <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/southern-baptist-voices-a-biologos-response-to-william-dembski-part-ii">(see Falk, Part 2)</a></li>
<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response15"><p>Darrel Falk put it this way: <em>”Christians recognize that our material ordinariness is radically transformed by the presence and promises of God. Exactly as with the people of Israel among the nations, so humans among the animals: our special identity rests in the free choice of the Creator to give us his himself and his name. If we recognize that human specialness rests on God’s fellowship with and call upon us, and that we—alone of all creatures—are enabled by God to bear his image in the world, then anything Darwin said about the physical continuity between humans and animals is irrelevant." </em></p></div>


<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="response16"><p>We think this last significant issue raised by Dr. Lemke shows just how important this Southern Baptist Voices Series has been, because it highlights the fact that many of the theological concerns raised here do not emerge from the scientific data about life's origins or the discipline of evolutionary biology.  There are surely theologians who look at creation this way, but to the extent they do so, their views emerge from their own theological considerations; they are not obligatory extrapolations which emerge from the science itself.</p></div>


<li>The Bible describes God creating a beautiful paradisicial Eden with sinless humans, which was lost only because of human rebellion and sin. The gradualist account posits God creating a substandard world that had to evolve to reach even the sad levels of contemporary life.  This imperfect creation reflects on the nature of God. Why would a perfectly good God create such an imperfect world?  Why or how could a moral God create humans to be already fallen? Orthodox Christian theology affirms that God is already perfect in all His attributes, and does not evolve or change in His essence.  The theology more apposite to the gradualist account is Process Theology, in which evolution in creation mirrors evolution within God himself, as he moves from a powerful but imperfect being toward a more perfect being.  In fact, Process Theology was designed with a view to harmonizing Christian theology with evolutionary presuppositions.  But Process Theology is not held to be orthodox by most evangelical Christians, particularly with regard <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('response16');"onmouseout="toggle_visibility('response16');"> the nature and perfection of God.</a> </li></ul>


<p>At the core of the Christian worldview is the biblical metanarrative of creation, fall, and redemption.  The evolutionary gradualist perspective radically rewrites this standard Christian account by essentially merging the creation and fall into a single event.  Humans were created as finite and fallen, not placed in a paradise with created righteousness.  This gradualist approach squares well with an evolutionary account, but it does not square well with the biblical creation accounts in Scripture.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. Cornelius Hunter, <em>Darwin’s God: Evolution and the Problem of Evil </em>(Waco: Brazos Press, 2001).<br>
2. William A. Dembski, <em>The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World</em> (Nashville: B&H Academic, 2009).<br>
3. Tom Nettles, review of <em>The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World</em>, by William Dembski, in <em>Southern Baptist Journal of Theology</em> 13.4 (2009): 80–85.  A partial defense and Dembski’s clarification are found in David Allen, “A Reply to Tom Nettles’ Review of William A. Dembski’s <em>The End of Christianity: Finding a Good God in an Evil World,</em>” a white paper at the Center for Theological Research (February 2010), available online (<a href="http://www.baptisttheology.org/documents/AReplytoTomNettlesReviewofDembskisTheEndofChristianity.pdf">PDF</a>).</p>
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        <pubDate>Fri, 28 Dec 12 10:43:42 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Steve Lemke</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: “And God Saw That It Was Good”: Death and Pain in the Created Order</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/death&#45;and&#45;pain&#45;in&#45;the&#45;created&#45;order?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/death&#45;and&#45;pain&#45;in&#45;the&#45;created&#45;order?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The tension generated by our understanding of God’s character, as revealed in the Bible, and by the reality of the natural world around us has been the focus of much debate within the Christian church since the first century. This series examines critically several of the proposed solutions to this problem, viewing them from the perspective of a geologist, paleontologist, and orthodox evangelical Christian.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>To Mrs. Professor in Defense of My Cat’s Honor and Not Only</h3>

<p><em>My valiant helper, a small-sized tiger <br />
Sleeps sweetly on my desk, by the computer,<br />
Unaware that you insult his tribe.<br /><br />

Cats play with a mouse or with a half-dead mole.<br />
You are wrong, though: it’s not out of cruelty.<br />
They simply like a thing that moves.<br /><br />

For, after all, we know that only consciousness<br />
Can for a moment move into the Other, <br />
Empathize with the pain and panic of a mouse.<br /><br />

And such as cats are, all of Nature is. <br />
Indifferent, alas, to the good and the evil. <br />
Quite a problem for us, I am afraid.<br /><br />

Natural history has its museums, <br />
But why should our children learn about monsters,<br />
An earth of snakes and reptiles for millions of years?<br /><br />

Nature devouring, nature devoured, <br />
Butchery day and night smoking with blood. <br />
And who created it? Was it the good Lord?<br /><br />

Yes, undoubtedly, they are innocent, <br />
Spiders, mantises, sharks, pythons. <br />
We are the only ones who say: cruelty.<br /><br />

Our consciousness and our conscience <br />
Alone in the pale anthill of galaxies <br />
Put their hope in a humane God.<br /><br />

Who cannot but feel and think, <br />
Who is kindred to us by his warmth and movement, <br />
For we are, as he told us, similar to Him.<br /><br />

Yet if it is so, then He takes pity <br />
On every mauled mouse, every wounded bird. <br />
Then the universe for him is like a Crucifixion.<br /><br />

Such is the outcome of your attack on the cat:<br />
A theological, Augustinian grimace, <br />
Which makes difficult our walking on this earth.</em></p>

<p>–Czeslaw Milosz,<sup>1</sup>  translated by the author and Robert Hass</p>

<h3>The Problem</h3>

<p>The poem above communicates in a very poignant and profound way the essence of the theological problem of death, pain, and suffering in the natural world—what has been referred to as “natural evil.” As we will see, it may also point to at least one aspect of a Christian response.</p>

<p>I have become convinced that one of the fundamental issues underlying much of the resistance of many Christians to an ancient, evolving creation is that of the problem of “natural evil.” “Natural evil” is also very often a primary focus of those who reject a personal and compassionate God, as it was for Darwin himself. The issue of theodicy thus seems not only to drive many people of Christian faith away from an acceptance of the conclusions of modern science, but also to drive members of the scientific community away from a serious consideration of the claims of the Christian faith. The topic is important, then not because its solution is central to the validity of the Christian faith, but because it often serves as an unnecessary stumbling block to a productive engagement of both science and faith.</p>

<p>The tension generated by our understanding of God’s character, as revealed in the Bible, and by the reality of the natural world around us has been the focus of much theological and philosophical debate within the Christian church since the first century. This article sets out to examine critically several of the proposed solutions to this problem, viewing them from the perspective of a geologist, paleontologist, and orthodox evangelical Christian.</p>

<p>The theological problem of death and pain emerges from the following propositional statements:</p> 

<ol><li>Scripture consistently declares the absolute goodness of God and the very goodness of his creation. Furthermore, Scripture declares God’s love and care for creation, and the glory and praise it returns to him.</li>

<li>Scripture also confesses a transcendent God who is omnipotent in power, yet immanent in creation as well. God’s creative activity is not described as being confined to some past event at the beginning of time, but as a present and continuing reality. God upholds creation in its being from moment to moment, and is creatively active in its history. This understanding of God’s relationship to creation has been well articulated by Jürgen Moltmann.<sup>2</sup></li>

<li>In seeming conflict with these confessions of God’s character, we observe death, pain, and suffering as ubiquitous, even integral, aspects of the creation around us.</li></ol>

<p>The apparent conflict between God’s goodness and the presence of pain and suffering is made especially acute when we consider the nonhuman creation.<sup>3</sup> How can we accommodate the death and suffering of animals within a theology that declares both God’s omnipotence and goodness? C. S. Lewis forcefully puts the issue before us in his book <em>The Problem of Pain</em>:</p>

<blockquote>The problem of animal suffering is appalling; not because the animals are so numerous ... but because the Christian explanation of human pain cannot be extended to animal pain. So far as we know beasts are incapable either of sin or virtue: therefore they can neither deserve pain nor be improved by it.<sup>4</sup></blockquote>

<p>Because the issue of animal pain so directly impacts our understanding of the goodness of creation, I will focus particularly on solutions to the problem as posed by Lewis.</p>

<p>How do we then reconcile the goodness of God who is immanent and active in his creation with the death, pain, and suffering we see embedded within it? There seem to be two basic alternative approaches to this dilemma.<sup>5</sup></p> 

<ol><li>Natural evil can be attributed to something independent of God and acting against his will. This position threatens to limit God’s power and freedom.</li>

<li>Natural evil can be considered a part of God’s good purpose for creation, and either directly willed or permitted by him. Such a view would seem to bring into question God’s goodness and love for his creatures.</li></ol>
 
<p>The tension between these alternatives—and efforts to avoid their negative theological consequences—surface in many of the proposed solutions to this problem.</p>

<p class="intro">In part 2, we start to look at some of the proposed solutions, beginning with the idea that a perfect creation was corrupted by a fall.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">1. This poem was included in a collection of poems that was one of two works by Czeslaw Milosz mentioned in a review article by Michael Ignatieff, “The Art of Witness,” <em>New York Review of Books</em> (March 23, 1995). I thank Carol Regehr for bringing my attention to this work.<br />
2. Moltmann refers to this aspect of God’s creative activity in history as “continuous creation.” Jürgen Moltmann, <em>God in Creation</em> (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress Press, 1993), 206–14.<br />
3. I will not address here arguments concerning the degree to which animals experience pain. This issue is considered by Robert Wennberg in “Animal Suffering and the Problem of Evil,” <em>Christian Scholar’s Review</em> 21 (1991): 120–40. It is obvious to me that, for many animals at least, pain and suffering are a very real conscious experience.<br />
4. C. S. Lewis, <em>The Problem of Pain</em> (New York: Macmillan Publishing, 1962), 129.<br />
5. As stated by John Hick, in <em>Evil and the God of Love</em>, rev. ed. (New York: HarperCollins Publishers, 1977): “For every position that maintains the perfect goodness of God is bound either to let go the absolute divine power and freedom, or else to hold that evil exists ultimately within God’s good purpose” (pp. 149–50).</p>
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        <pubDate>Sat, 24 Nov 12 06:00:30 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Keith Miller</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Genesis Through Ancient Eyes</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/genesis&#45;through&#45;ancient&#45;eyes?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/genesis&#45;through&#45;ancient&#45;eyes?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this talk, originally delivered at the BioLogos President&apos;s Circle meeting in October 2012, Dr. John Walton discusses the origin stories of Genesis 1&#45;3, and why their focus on function and archetypes mean there is no Biblical narrative of material origins.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In the first segment of his talk, “Genesis Through Ancient Eyes”, Dr. John Walton discusses the authority of Scripture and how we should both honor and understand the text. According to Walton, we must remember that Scripture is “for us”, but that it was not written “to us”. He briefly highlights the ancient cosmology of both Egypt and Isreal and implores us to see the text of the Bible the way the Ancient Israelites would have seen it.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Thu, 18 Oct 12 08:00:48 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>John Walton</dc:creator>
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        <title>Science and the Bible: Theistic Evolution, Part 3</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;3?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;the&#45;bible&#45;theistic&#45;evolution&#45;part&#45;3?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>As I stressed in my column about the YEC view, creationism is ultimately about theodicy—it’s not only about theodicy, to be sure, but the belief that animals must not have suffered and died before Adam and Eve committed the first sin is crucial to the “young” in Young Earth Creationism. To a significant degree, Theistic Evolution is also about theodicy.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Last time, I presented three implications and conclusions concerning Theistic Evolution. There is much more to say about this, so we continue the same thread—and we will pick it up yet again in two weeks, coming back once more for an historical look in about a month.</p>
 
<h3>Some implications and conclusions of Theistic Evolution--continued</h3>
<p><strong>(4) Several leading TEs have advanced a strongly Christocentric theology of creation—stressing the idea (from the prologue of John’s gospel) that the Maker of heaven and earth is the <em>crucified and resurrected</em> second person of the Trinity. Especially when theodicy is the topic, they like to speak about “the crucified God,” or “the theology of the cross,” or “divine kenosis.”</strong></p>

<p>On first glance, some readers might be a bit perplexed: isn’t this column supposed to be about evolution, not the crucifixion? What could those topics possibly have in common? The answer lies in theodicy, or the problem of evil and suffering in the world. As I stressed in my column about the <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/science-and-the-bible-scientific-creationism-part-1">YEC view</a>, creationism is ultimately about theodicy—it’s not <em>only</em> about theodicy, to be sure, but the belief that animals must not have suffered and died before Adam and Eve committed the first sin is crucial to the “young” in Young Earth Creationism.  To a significant degree, Theistic Evolution is <em>also</em> about theodicy. In one of the best books on science and religion that I could name, Catholic theologian <a href="http://woodstock.georgetown.edu/fellows/john-haught.html">John Haught</a> explains the atheist’s view of theodicy (which he does not share) as follows: </p>

<blockquote><p>“Evolution is incompatible with any and all religious interpretations of the cosmos, not just with Christian fundamentalism. The prevalence of chance variations, which today are called genetic ‘mutations,’ definitively refutes the idea of any ordering deity. The fact of struggle and waste in evolution decisively demonstrates that the cosmos is not cared for by a loving God. And the fact of natural selection is a clear signal of the loveless impersonality of the universe.” (<a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0809136066/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0809136066&linkCode=as2&tag=thebiofou06-20">Science and Religion: From Conflict to Conversation</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0809136066" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, p. 52) </p></blockquote>

<p>Proponents of TE have responded to the issues raised in the latter two sentences in a variety of ways. I agree with Christopher Southgate’s analysis of the overall situation. Like several of the writers I mention this week, <a href="http://humanities.exeter.ac.uk/theology/staff/southgate/">Southgate</a> is a theologian with a doctorate in science; he’s also an accomplished poet. The text he wrote with many others, <a href="http://www.continuumbooks.com/books/detail.aspx?BookId=159509&SubjectId=1080&Subject2Id=1743">God, Humanity and the Cosmos: A Textbook in Science and Religion</a>, is really much more than a textbook. I recommend it for anyone seeking a wide-ranging introduction to the principal issues. </p>

<p>Southgate and his collaborators see just two “possible theologies of divine action in respect of evolution,” considering that “the problems of theodicy <em>are</em> severe.” Option ONE: “to posit God merely as the passive, suffering companion of every creature, a view self-consistent but dubiously faithful to the Christian tradition.” Option TWO: “to mount a defence of teleological creation using a <em>combination</em> of [certain] theological resources,” namely these three—</p>

<ul><li>“we must adopt <em>a very high doctrine of humanity</em> and suppose that indeed humans are of very particular concern to God.” This is linked with the Incarnation.</li>
<li>“we must take very seriously <em>the cross as costly to God</em>, as <em>part</em> of God’s hugely costly way of taking responsibility for the creative process.”</li>
<li>“we must give <em>some account of the redemption of the non-human creation</em> …” This is linked with the Trinity. (p. 279 in first edition, 1999)</li></ul>

<p>Given limited space, I’ll focus almost exclusively on the second idea, though we may want to discuss all of them below. </p>

<h3>The Crucified God</h3>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_te_3_2.jpg" alt="" height="410" width="570"  /><br />View of the entrance to the main camp of Auschwitz (May 1945). The gate bears the motto, "Arbeit Macht Frei" (Work makes one free). United States Holocaust Memorial Museum (<a href="http://idamclient.ushmm.org/IMAGES/(S(jpksgemvvs32jp2s3yxwqvax))/RetrieveAsset.aspx?instance=IDAM_USHMM&qfactor=2&width=640&height=480&crop=0&size=1&type=asset&id=1067785">Source</a>).</p>

<p>We start with something that arose in a context entirely unrelated to evolution, Jürgen Moltmann’s (read more <a href="http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/J%C3%BCrgen_Moltmann">here</a> and <a href="http://www.christianitytoday.com/ct/2005/september/20.120.html">here</a>) notion of <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/0800628225/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=0800628225&linkCode=as2&tag=thebiofou06-20">The Crucified God</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=0800628225" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />. The theological point and the emotional impact of Moltmann’s conception is aptly captured in this stark passage, written in response to Elie Wiesel’s dark story of a child who was publicly hanged at Auschwitz: “like the cross of Christ, even Auschwitz is in God himself. Even Auschwitz is taken up into the grief of the Father, the surrender of the Son and the power of the Spirit.” (p. 278) A recent sermon by Matt Bates, pastor of Centenary United Methodist Church in Richmond, fleshes this out for us in a very accessible way; please read <a href="http://fromtheheartofthecity.blogspot.com/2012/08/sermon-for-sunday-august-26.html">the whole sermon</a> before going any further.</p>

<p><strong>Repeat: please read the sermon. It’s a vital part of what I’m trying to say.</strong></p>

<p>Now that you see more clearly what the “Crucified God” is about, let’s see what John Polkinghorne says about it: </p>

<blockquote><p>“This profound and difficult thought meets the problem of suffering at [the] level which its deep challenge demands. 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. But this can only really be so if God is indeed truly present in that twisted figure on the tree of Calvary. Only an ontological Christology is adequate to the defence of God in the face of human suffering. God must really be there in that darkness.” (Belief in God in an Age of Science, p. 44) </p></blockquote>

<p>Be sure to notice two things in this passage. First, Polkinghorne confesses that his own Christian faith depends on such a conception of God, but there are only two very brief references to evolution in the entire eloquent chapter from which I’ve quoted. There’s plenty of science there, but almost all of it is modern physics, not biology. (I’ll leave it as an exercise to “students” to get a copy of this excellent little book and fill in the blanks.) In other words, evolution doesn’t shape Polkinghorne’s theology nearly as much as his theology shapes his view of evolution. </p>

<p>The second thing to notice is that in the last three sentences Polkinghorne is doing something subtle, but extremely important—something that I don’t want anyone to miss. Contrary to some of the most influential voices in the science and religion “dialogue” (some examples would be Haught, Ian Barbour, and the late Arthur Peacocke), Polkinghorne affirms the full divinity and humanity of Christ, in a classical Chalcedonian sense. Read those sentences again a couple of times, and you should see what I’m driving at. As he says a bit later on, “Unless there really is a God who really was ‘in Christ reconciling the world to himself’ (2 Cor. 5:19), then the cross is no answer to the bitter problem of the suffering of the world.” (p. 45) In other words, one can only take this approach to theodicy unless one actually believes in the reality of the Incarnation; only an orthodox Christian can speak meaningfully of the “Crucified God.” In the final part of this column, when I’ll present Polkinghorne as a contemporary exemplar of a theologically “orthodox” TE, it’s <em>partly</em> this aspect of his thought that I will have in mind.</p>

<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/davis_te_3_3.jpg" alt="" height="384" width="270"  /><br />Lucas Cranach the Elder</p>

<p>Finally, I should note that the term “crucified God” is not actually modern. Although Moltmann wrote an influential book about it, the language comes from <a href="http://triablogue.blogspot.com/2011/09/martin-luthers-theology-of-cross.html">Martin Luther</a>. Another physicist-theologian, George Murphy, writes in a highly Lutheran way about <a href="http://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1563384175/ref=as_li_ss_tl?ie=UTF8&camp=1789&creative=390957&creativeASIN=1563384175&linkCode=as2&tag=thebiofou06-20">The Cosmos in the Light of the Cross</a><img src="http://www.assoc-amazon.com/e/ir?t=thebiofou06-20&l=as2&o=1&a=1563384175" width="1" height="1" border="0" alt="" style="border:none !important; margin:0px !important;" />, advancing the view that a “theology of the cross” in which God sets aside power to become a participant in the universe, even to the point of death, takes priority over a “theology of glory,” in which we seek God first in the power behind nature, not in the powerlessness of the cross. For a short version of Murphy’s ideas, go <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/murphy_scholarly_essay.pdf">here</a>. </p>

<p>Once again, we need to stop mid-stream. These ideas are deep and perhaps too new for many readers, and it’s best to reflect on them before we go further and even deeper.</p> <br> </br><br> </br>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Tue, 11 Sep 12 05:00:06 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ted Davis</dc:creator>
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        <title>Series: Southern Baptist Voices: Evolution and Death</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;evolution&#45;and&#45;death&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/southern&#45;baptist&#45;voices&#45;evolution&#45;and&#45;death&#45;series?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>This exchange brings together related essays on death in light of evolution and Scripture from Southern Baptist theologian Dr. John Laing. Laing argues that evolutionary theory requires death to play a central role in the creation of new life, but sees Scripture depicting death only &quot;as an invader, disturber of peace, and a force of evil.&quot;  A BioLogos response is given by Dr. Jeff Schloss.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="caption-left"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/Schloss_headshot.jpg" alt="" height="361" width="260"  />

<p>In his thoughtful, gracious, and fair-minded essay, Professor John Laing focuses on what many believers and non-believers alike recognize as perhaps the most significant challenge to faith in an all-good, -knowing, and -powerful Creator God: the problem of natural evil, and in particular, the acrid sting of death.  While the issue is an ancient one, Laing—and many other contemporary commentators who range from sympathetic to antagonistic toward biblical theism—view evolution as exacerbating the problem to the point that one must choose between the good God of scripture and the truth of evolution.  Although the general issue of “evolution and evil” is manifold and beyond the scope of a single essay, John (if I may), zeros in on two ways in which evolution seems to aggravate the particular theological challenge of death.  First, in the view of scripture, death is “an invader, disturber of the peace, and a force of evil”; therefore its primordial (as opposed to <em>post hoc</em>) place in the world described by evolution seems incommensurate with an originally good creation.  Second, it is not just the primordial <em>place</em> but also the functional <em>role</em> of death that appears to constitute a problem: evolution by natural selection is widely viewed as being driven by death, and more generally by fierce competition, in a way that seems hard to reconcile as a mode of creation that a wise and good God would employ.</p>

<div class="see-also">Next month, our final exchange in the Southern Baptist Voices series will specifically address the problem of evil.</div>

<p>I agree with John that these are serious issues.  Little is accomplished either by glibly dismissing their <em>prima facie</em> legitimacy or by responding with theological concessions that relinquish core claims of the gospel.  In his words: “a fundamental aspect of the good news in the Gospel is the defeat of death – this negative, destroying force – in the resurrection of Christ.”  Amen! In what follows I hope to engage sequentially both issues he raises in a way that takes them seriously while avoiding compromised hope.</p>

<h3>The Primordial Place of Death</h3>

<p>I need to start by acknowledging that these are not just arid intellectual issues but also profoundly personal ones.  I have just returned from keeping vigil at the deathbed of my father, and the sting of death is especially acute.  The fact that every son sees his father die (or worse, that a parent may see a child die) –that in some sense, universal human death is part of the current “natural order” we all experience – offers no solace for the tearful remonstration of what an awful violation it is.  It is a violation not just of our deepest desires, but also of what we construe to be God’s purposes, for the God of scripture is not a mere field of energy or prime mover or initial organizing principle, but is wondrously and clearly portrayed as “the living God” whose explicit purpose is that we “have life, and have it in abundance.” Indeed, in the most extensive section of his essay John cites over 40 scripture passages that affirm life as God’s intention for humanity and death as an intrusive, subverting consequence of sin.  I could not be in stronger concord.</p>

<p>Although all Christians have traditionally affirmed resurrection (for both the redeemed and unredeemed), there have been longstanding debates about whether the life that is redemptively restored in Christ and the death that is brought about by sin is “spiritual” (involving the vitality or disruption of communion with God) or “physical” (involving the viability or dissolution of biotic function).  Of course these are not mutually exclusive, and perhaps they are not even ultimately distinguishable. But however one understands death to be an incursion upon <em>human telos</em>, it does not answer or even clearly bear upon the <em>evolution-related</em> question of whether other living beings beyond and before humans were created to be immortal.  “Violence” in western thought has often been understood as a disruption of natural ends: but do we assume that all creatures share the same “natural end”?  For instance, is the nature or <em>telos</em> of worms immortality?  Is death a violation of all creaturely natures that was therefore absent from earth prior to initial human intimacy with and subsequent estrangement from God?  Significantly, not a single one of the scriptures John cites explicitly refers or even vaguely alludes to the general place of death in the natural order: virtually every one emphatically focuses on death as a consequence of sin for uniquely human moral agents, and—correspondingly—on eternal life as God’s special purpose for supernaturally redeemed humanity.<sup>1</sup>  Indeed, I am at a loss to find in the entire Bible a scripture that clearly teaches death across the entire biotic realm postdates and is a consequence of human sin.<sup>2</sup> Neither is this point affirmed or even mentioned in the most prominent historic creeds of Christian orthodoxy.</p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="/uploads/static-content/bible_rocks_cover.jpg" style="float:left;">Davis Young & Ralph Stearley’s <a href="/resources/books/the-bible-rocks-and-time">The Bible, Rocks, and Time</a> (2008, Inter Varsity Press) provides an expansive historical survey.</div>

<p>Yet none of this means that there is not an issue here.  The view that death in all creation is not endemic but followed from a recent human fall was—with the exception of Aquinas and a few others—the dominant perspective of the church fathers, key reformers, and most Christians through the 17th Century (see sidebar). However, by the same token, so was geocentrism and so was the doctrine of human exceptionalism.  Virtually all Christians have relinquished geocentrism in light of utterly compelling scientific evidence along with the recognition—in part motivated but not dictated by findings of science—that no clear and persistent scriptural teaching or core theological doctrine is compromised by this view.<sup>3</sup>  On the other hand, the claim of exceptionalism continues to be affirmed by many Christians – including myself – in light of important theological commitments and ongoing scientific discussion.</p>

<p>So is the primordial nature of death more like geocentrism, or more like human exceptionalism?  Scientifically, there is little question that it is more akin to geocentrism.  Over the last three centuries the empirical evidence for and the explanatory fruitfulness of the view that earth’s biota and death’s existence vastly predate the origin of humans have increased explosively—arguably to an extent beyond any other finding of science.  Amongst tens of thousands of natural scientists, there is virtually unanimous agreement on this point.<sup>4</sup>  I should be clear that this is not an <em>ad hominem</em> argument: to say the evidential and demographic situation is similar to geocentrism is not in itself to claim that the “recent death” position is wrong. Nor is it an <em>ad populum </em>argument: neither John nor I have space to assess scientific evidence for this claim, and the fact that the overwhelming majority of Christian and non-Christian scientists have for several centuries shared the “primordial death” view does not make it true.  But it does mean that if that view is to be rejected for the kinds of theological reasons that John raises, it seems there should be unambiguous scriptural warrant for that rejection.  Failing that, then there needs to be a compelling theological rationale <em>and</em> a decided lack of plausible alternatives posited by fellow orthodox Christians.</p>

<p>I have already agreed with John that the Bible persistently presents death as an enemy of God’s purposes for humanity.  But I have suggested (perhaps altogether wrongly!) that he does not provide clear scriptural evidence for death being a comparable enemy to and intrusion upon God’s purposes for all creatures.  A faithful reading of the Bible does not seem to be incompatible with seeing death as part of the magisterial history of life as depicted by evolution and other natural sciences. </p>

<p>With these considerations of the biblical text as background, tomorrow I’ll describe why I do not believe that John or those with kindred perspectives provide a compelling <em>theological</em> mandate for this view of death, either.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1. There are a few scriptures not cited by John, which deal with the absence of carnivory (though not death itself) in images of idyllic creation.  Genesis 1:30 portrays a world in which every creature with the breath of life had plants for food.  And the images of the new earth in Isaiah 11 and 65 paint a renewal of this order in redeemed creation.  Interestingly however, they do not portray an elimination of death for animals, or even for humanity. According to Is 65, the passage which presents the beautiful image of the lion and lamb:  “ ‘Never again will there be in it an infant who lives but a few days, or an old man who does not live out his years; the one who dies at a hundred will be thought a mere child; the one who fails to reach a hundred will be considered accursed. They will build houses and dwell in them; they will plant vineyards and eat their fruit. No longer will they build houses and others live in them, or plant and others eat. For as the days of a tree, so will be the days of my people… The wolf and the lamb will feed together, and the lion will eat straw like the ox, and dust will be the serpent’s food. They will neither harm nor destroy on all my holy mountain,’ says the LORD.” This and other eschatological passages in scripture have a history of widely varying interpretations, but taken most literally, it describes a world with prolonged life in which there is still death (he who dies a centenarian will be like a child, and most people will live as long as trees), and in which death, however, is not inflicted by one creature upon another.<br />
2. Although commentators differ over whether the Pauline description of death in Romans 5 refers to spiritual and/or physical death, the passage clearly focuses on humans. It identifies humanity as the subject of infection, instigated and promulgated by initial and ongoing human sin: “in this way death came to all people, because all sinned” (Romans 5:12).<br>
3. Not all Christians have relinquished geocentrism. For example, a well-known public advocate is Dr. Gerardus Bouw, who has a Ph.D. in astronomy and until recently taught at Baldwin-Wallace Christian College. He founded the Association for Biblical Astronomy and authored an apologetic monograph for a stationary earth: <em>Geocentricity</em> (1992, Association for Biblical Astronomy).  A crucial commitment of Dr. Bouw is that he “assumes that whenever the two [the Bible and astronomy] are at variance, it is always astronomy—that is, our ‘reading’ of the ‘Book of Nature,’ not our reading of the Holy Bible—that is wrong.” (<a href="http://www.geocentricity.com/ accessed 8/1/2012">http://www.geocentricity.com/ accessed 8/1/2012</a>). Note that this epistemic framework asserts not just that the Bible is a more perfect witness to theological truth than nature, but that human understanding –  “our reading” – of the Bible is somehow more immune to error than our reading of nature. The Bible itself does not clearly teach that humans, in our frailty, are less vulnerable to misunderstanding special than general revelation. The difference between faith in the scriptures and faith in our understanding of the scriptures is important though not always recognized, and underlies much tension in faith-science issues. <br />
4. To his credit, even the most prominent critic of primordial death cited by John acknowledges this evidential and demographic claim.  In a moving autobiographical essay, Kurt Wise acknowledges “I accepted the Word of God and rejected all that would ever counter it, including evolution. With that, in great sorrow, I tossed into the fire all my dreams and hopes in science.” Although he believes in the viability of searching for a scientific rationale, he affirms “I am a young-age creationist because that is my understanding of the Scripture. As I shared with my professors years ago when I was in college, if all the evidence in the universe turned against creationism, I would be the first to admit it, but I would still be a creationist because that is what the Word of God seems to indicate.” [Kurt Wise, in John F. Ashton (ed)., <em>In Just Six Days</em>.  2001.  Master Books.  Page 355.]</p>
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        <pubDate>Sun, 12 Aug 12 05:00:10 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Jeffrey Schloss, John D. Laing</dc:creator>
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        <title>The Questions Update: Did death occur before the Fall?</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;questions&#45;update&#45;did&#45;death&#45;occur&#45;before&#45;the&#45;fall?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/the&#45;questions&#45;update&#45;did&#45;death&#45;occur&#45;before&#45;the&#45;fall?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Today’s post features a preview of the updated Question, &quot;Did death occur before the Fall?&quot;, revised by Senior Web Consultant and Writer Deborah Haarsma. This question provides an overview of the issue and points readers to more resources within and beyond the BioLogos website.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<h3>Introduction</h3>
<p>When scientists investigate God’s creation, they find that humans appear very late in the history of life.   The fossil record shows that many creatures died long before humans appeared.   In fact, many entire species went extinct millions of years ago (the dinosaurs are the most famous example), long before humans lived or sinned.</p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/questions/image-question25-thumb.jpg" alt="" height="76" width="70"  />See <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/fossil-record">“What does the Fossil Record Show?”</a> and <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/ages-of-the-earth-and-universe">“How are the ages of the Earth and universe calculated?”</a></div>

<p>Yet God’s revelation in scripture paints a different picture.   Several key scripture passages teach that death is a consequence of sin, including <cite class="bibleref">Genesis 2:16-17</cite>, <cite class="bibleref">Genesis 3:19,22</cite>, <cite class="bibleref">Romans 5:12-21</cite>, and <cite class="bibleref">1 Corinthians 15</cite>.   How should we think about these passages in light of the scientific evidence?   Could animals have died before human sin?   Does “death” in these passages refer to physical death, or spiritual death, or sometimes one and sometimes the other?  To ponder these questions, we need to consider God’s revelation in scripture <em>and</em> God’s revelation in nature.   The scientific evidence is discussed in other Questions, as are the topics of the fall and sin (see sidebars).  Here we consider what scripture says about death and how the two revelations might be reconciled. </p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/original_sin_question_thumn.jpg" alt="" height="76" width="70"  />See <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/original-sin">“How does original sin fit with evolutionary history?”</a></div>

<h3>Animal Death </h3>
<p>The Bible passages that teach about sin and death are clearly referring to the death of humans.  Do these passages also refer to animals?  Thomas Aquinas (1225-1274) didn’t think so.  He believed that God’s original creation included animals that killed each other, writing that “the nature of animals was not changed by man’s sin.”<a href="#note-1"><sup>1</sup></a>  Pastor Daniel Harrell makes a logical argument for animal death, writing that “there had to be death in the Garden, otherwise Adam would have been overrun by bugs and bacteria long before he took that forbidden bite of fruit.”<a href="#note-2"><sup>2</sup></a>  Animal death is also necessary to maintain population levels in a balanced ecosystem (see below for more).  Some Bible passages portray predatory animals as part of God’s original plan for creation (<cite class="bibleref">Job 38:39-41</cite>, <cite class="bibleref">39:29-30</cite>,  <cite class="bibleref">Psalm 104:21,29</cite>).   Other passages speak of the “lion laying down with the lamb” instead of killing the lamb (<cite class="bibleref">Isaiah 11:6-7</cite>, <cite class="bibleref">Isaiah 65:25</cite>), but these verses refer to the future kingdom of God, not the original creation.  While animal death and suffering raises other theological questions (see Sidebar), it does not contradict Biblical teaching about death as a consequence of sin.  </p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/questions/image-question10-thumb.jpg" alt="" height="76" width="70"  />See <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/problem-of-evil">“How does the evil and suffering in the world align with the idea of a loving God?”</a></div>

<h3>Human death: physical or spiritual?</h3>
<p>One traditional interpretation of Genesis 2-3 is that sin results in <em>physical</em> death.  Humans would have been immortal without sin.  In <cite class="bibleref">Genesis 2:17</cite>, God warns Adam and Eve, “But of the tree of the knowledge of good and evil you shall not eat, for in the day that you eat you shall die.”  In <cite class="bibleref">Genesis 3:19</cite>, God carries out this punishment, cursing Adam with labor and death, “By the sweat of your brow you will eat your food until you return to the ground, since from it you were taken; for dust you are and to dust you will return.”  In 1 Corinthians 15 Paul contrasts and compares Christ and Adam, highlighting Adam’s fall as the cause of physical death for the whole human race.    </p>

<p>John Calvin, however, suggested that Adam’s sin caused the abrupt painful death that we experience today, a wrenching apart of the physical and spiritual aspects of humans.  Calvin seems to have thought that if Adam had not sinned, a more gentle kind of physical death or “passing” from life into life would have occurred: “Truly the first man would have passed to a better life, had he remained upright; but there would have been no separation of the soul from the body, no corruption, no kind of destruction, and, in short, no violent change.”<a href="#note-3"><sup>3</sup></a>  In this view, humans were created mortal, but intended for long healthy lives and graceful deaths, such as described in <cite class="bibleref">Isaiah 65:20-25</cite>. The Old Testament speaks of death at the end of a long life in purely positive terms, such as <cite class="bibleref">1 Chronicles 29:28</cite> where King David “died at a god old age, having enjoyed long life, wealth, and honor.”</p>

<p>Another interpretation of these passages is that the consequence of sin is <em>spiritual</em> death, not physical death.   If Adam had not sinned, humans would still have died like we do today, but without “the sense of loss, uncertainty about an afterlife, … and regret for unfinished work” that comes with spiritual death.<a href="#note-4"><sup>4</sup></a>  Agemir de Carvalho Dias, Presbyterian pastor and teacher of the Evangelical College of Parana, Brazil, writes that “the death that entered the world with Adam is understood as something that takes man apart from God, a spiritual death, in the sense that the access to God is now closed and can be restored only through faith.”<a href="#note-5"><sup>5</sup></a>  Of course some sins still bring about physical death, such as Abel’s death at Cain’s hand, and the death of King David’s infant son after the king’s adultery (<cite class="bibleref">2 Samuel 12:13-14</cite>).   </p>

<p>The text of Genesis 2-3 can support an interpretation of the curse as spiritual death.  In the curse of <cite class="bibleref">Genesis 3:19</cite>, God tells Adam “for dust you are and to dust you will return,” implying that Adam was created mortal from the dust.    God warned Adam and Eve that they would die in the day they ate from the tree, and yet Adam lived to the age of 930 (<cite class="bibleref">Genesis 5:5</cite>).   What <em>did</em> happen on the day they ate from the tree?  Adam and Eve felt shame and were expelled from the Garden, breaking their fellowship with God – spiritual death.   </p>

<p>Weren’t Adam and Eve immortal, created as perfect ideal human beings?  This is a popular idea, but not clear in the Biblical text.  The first humans are described as “very good” and pleasing to God (<cite class="bibleref">Genesis 1:30-31</cite>), but not as perfect or with superhuman abilities.    Also, consider the Tree of Life.  God planted this tree in the garden before the fall (<cite class="bibleref">Genesis 2:9</cite>) and it gives immortality to the one who eats it (<cite class="bibleref">Genesis 3:22</cite>).  If God created humans as immortal, what was the purpose of the Tree of Life?  It would only be needed if humans were mortal to begin with.<a href="#note-6"><sup>6</sup></a></p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/genesis_two_rewrites_series.jpg" alt="" height="95" width="70"  />Pastor Stephen Rodeheaver reflects on the two trees of Genesis 2-3 and the implications for us today (<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/series/genesis-rewrites-series">blog series</a>)</div>

<p>In the New Testament, Paul writes much on the relationship between sin and death.  Sometimes Paul was clearly referring to spiritual death (<cite class="bibleref">Romans 6:1-14</cite>, <cite class="bibleref">7:11</cite>), and other times clearly to physical death (<cite class="bibleref">1 Corinthians 15:35-42</cite>).   Yet even in 1 Corinthians 15, Paul writes of the eternal life in Christ as something much more than the mere earthly life we experience now, implying that “death” also refers to much more than mere physical death.   This is more explicit in <cite class="bibleref">Romans 5:12-21</cite> where death is contrasted with the gifts of grace, justification, and righteousness, i.e. the new spiritual life provided by Jesus’ victory. </p>

<div class="see-also"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/questions/image-question15-thumb.jpg" alt="" height="76" width="70"  />See <a href="http://biologos.org/questions/evolution-and-the-fall">“Were Adam and Eve Historical Figures?”</a> which discusses the issue of death and the identity of Adam and Eve</div>

<p class="intro">For more, be sure to read the full FAQ <a href="/questions/death-before-the-fall">"Did death occur before the Fall?"</a> in our Questions section!</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<ol>
<a name="note-1"></a><li>Saint Thomas Aquinas.  <em>Summa Theologica</em>, Part 1, Question 93, Article 1 (<a href="http://www.newadvent.org/summa/1096.htm">web article</a>)</li>
<a name="note-2"></a><li>Daniel Harrell.  “Death’s Resurrection”, <em>BioLogos Forum</em>, December 18, 2009 (<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/deaths-resurrection">blog</a>)</li>
<a name="note-3"></a><li>John Calvin. <a href="http://www.ccel.org/ccel/calvin/calcom01.html">Commentaries on the First Book of Moses</a>, called Genesis, trans. by John King. ch3 v19 (p. 97).</li>
<a name="note-4"></a><li>George Murphy “Human Evolution in Theological Context” BioLogos scholarly essay which includes a discussion of human and animal death (<a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/murphy_scholarly_essay.pdf">PDF</a>), p. 6</li>
<a name="note-5"></a><li>Quoted by Marcio Antonio Campos in “Did peace and love reign in the world before the original sin?” <em>BioLogos Forum</em>, March 7, 2011 (<a href="http://biologos.org/blog/did-peace-and-love-reign-in-the-world-before-the-original-sin/">blog</a>)</li>
<a name="note-6"></a><li>See Deborah and Loren Haarsma, “Three interpretations of the Tree of Life”, supplemental material to <em>Origins: Christian Perspectives on Creation, Evolution, and Intelligent Design</em> (Grand Rapids, MI: Faith Alive Christian Resources) 2011 (<a href="http://www.faithaliveonline.org/origins/pdf/Origins_11-05.pdf">PDF</a>)</li>]]></content:encoded>
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        <title>Series: Asa Gray and Charles Darwin Discuss Evolution and Design</title>
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        <description>Many Christians believe that they face a painful choice&#45;&#45; either life was designed by God or it is an evolutionary product of natural selection.  Charles Darwin himself believed in this dichotomy, and people ever since have felt the need to &quot;choose sides&quot;.  However, looking back at history, we find that one of Darwin&apos;s chief scientific colleagues, Asa Gray, did not share this perspective. In this three&#45;part essay, part 1 charts the relationship of Asa Gray and Charles Darwin.  Part 2 describes Darwin&apos;s struggle with the problem of natural evil and design in nature, and part 3 explores how Asa Gray was able to embrace evolution without rejecting the idea of design.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/darwin_photo.jpg" alt="" height="352" width="207"  /></p>

<p>Evangelical Christians in the nineteenth century were generally not biblical literalists, nor did they believe in a young earth. In other words, the religious opposition to Darwin did not arise from perceived problems between Darwin's theory and a literal reading of Genesis. Rather, following the publication of <em>Origin of Species</em>, it centered on what seemed to be the randomness of natural selection, the appearance of new organisms by chance, and therefore the exclusion of divine purpose or design in Nature.<sup>7</sup> It was the teleological question that Gray addressed in his review and about which he and Darwin corresponded over many years.</p>

<h3>Darwin responds to Gray's review of <em>Origin of Species</em></h3>

<p>Darwin's response to Gray's review, a copy of which he received prior to its publication, was very positive. Darwin even hoped that it could become a preface in a second American edition of <em>On the Origin of Species</em> on which Gray worked. In a letter later in the year to James Dwight Dana, Darwin said: "No one person understands my views & has defended them so well as A. Gray;--though he does not by any means go all the way with me."<sup>8</sup> The "all the way" included teleology, and Darwin wrote this to Gray concerning his attempt to retain design:</p>

<blockquote>It has always seemed to me that for an Omnipotent & Omniscient Creator to foresee is the same as to preordain; but then when I come to think over this I get into an uncomfortable puzzle <em>something</em> analogous with "necessity & Free-will" or the "Origin of evil," or other subject quite beyond the scope of the human intellect.<sup>9</sup></blockquote>

<p>Three months later he picked up the discussion with these comments:</p>

<blockquote>With respect to the theological view of the question; this is always painful to me.--I am bewildered.--I had no intention to write atheistically. But I own that I cannot see, as plainly as others do, & as I should wish to do, evidence of design & beneficence on all sides of us. There seems to me too much misery in the world. I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent & omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars, or that a cat should play with mice. Not believing this, I see no necessity in the belief that the eye was expressly designed. On the other hand I cannot anyhow be contented to view this wonderful universe & especially the nature of man, & to conclude that everything is the result of brute force. I am inclined to look at everything as resulting from designed laws, with the details, whether good or bad, left to the working out of what we may call chance. Not that this notion <em>at all</em> satisfies me .... But the more I think the more bewildered I become; as indeed I have probably shown by this letter.<sup>10</sup></blockquote>

<p class="caption-center"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/asa_gray_image_4.jpg" alt="" height="311" width="436"  /><br />"I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent & omnipotent God would have designedly created the Ichneumonidae with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars, or that a cat should play with mice." - Charles Darwin</p>

<h3>Darwin invokes William Paley</h3>

<p>Shortly after this letter to Gray, Darwin wrote Charles Lyell on the same subject and said:</p>

<blockquote>I have said that natural selection is to the structure of organised beings, what the human architect is to a building. The very existence of the human architect shows the existence of more general laws; but no one in giving credit for a building to the human architect, thinks it necessary to refer to the laws by which man has appeared. No astronomer in showing how movements of Planets are due to gravity, thinks it necessary to say that the law of gravity was designed that the planets should pursue the courses which they pursue.--I cannot believe that there is a bit more interference by the Creator in the construction of each species, than in the course of the planets.--It is only owing to Paley & Co, as I believe, that this more special interference is thought necessary with living bodies.<sup>11</sup></blockquote>

<p>In mentioning "Paley & Co," Darwin was referring to William Paley and other natural theologians, who had argued that nature--through the organization and adaptations of living organisms--demonstrated the existence of an intelligent creator. Darwin had studied Paley while in university, and Gray had also been influenced by the work of Paley, whose eighteenth-century opus <em>Natural Theology</em> was an important component of nineteenth-century American philosophy and was still used as a text at Harvard when Gray began teaching there in 1842. </p>


<p class="caption-right"><img src="http://biologos.org/uploads/static-content/asa_gray_image_5.jpg" alt="" height="345" width="250"  /><br />William Paley</p>

<p>Paley's Argument from Design ultimately boiled down to this:</p>

<p>Premise 1: God's will is for us to be happy in this life and the next.</p>

<p>Premise 2: We can discover God's will either by consulting Scripture or by consulting "the light of nature." Both ways will lead to the same conclusion.</p>

<p>Premise 3: The will of God with regard to any action can be found by inquiring into its "tendency to promote or diminish the general happiness."</p>

<p>Conclusion 1: God creates to promote the general happiness of all creatures.
</p>
<p>Conclusion 2: Organisms are perfectly adapted to their environment by the Creator.</p>

<p>The corollary of this last conclusion was that perfect design, from the structure and functioning of an organ to the structure of the universe, is evidence for God.</p>

<h3>Confronting the reality of suffering and death in nature</h3>

<p>For Paley, Nature provided the evidence for the existence of God, but Darwin had difficulty with this argument. His difficulty centered on what might best be referred to as issues surrounding theodicy, i.e., are natural selection and its results consistent with design by a benevolent God or do they imply that, if designed, God is capable of malevolent intent. In a July 3, 1860, letter to Gray, Darwin explicitly raises the issue. He writes:</p>

<blockquote>One word more on "designed laws" & "undesigned results." I see a bird which I want for food, take my gun & kill it, I do this <em>designedly</em>.--An innocent & good man stands under tree & is killed by flash of lightning. Do you believe (& I really should like to hear) that God <em>designedly</em> killed this man? Many or most person do believe this; I can't & don't.--If you believe so, do you believe that when a swallow snaps up a gnat that God designed that that particular swallow should snap up that particular gnat at that particular instant? I believe that the man & the gnat are in same predicament.--If the death of neither man or gnat are designed, I see no good reason to believe that their <em>first</em> birth or production should be necessarily designed. Yet, as I said before, I cannot persuade myself that electricity acts, that the tree grows, that man aspires to loftiest conceptions all from blind, brute force.<sup>12</sup></blockquote>

<p> What Darwin wanted was Design without suffering, teleology without agony, purpose without pain.</p>

<h3>Darwin and Gray discuss Design</h3>

<p>This issue becomes the focus of discussion following the third article of a series that Gray published in <em>The Atlantic Monthly</em> in July, August, and October of 1860. When these articles were reprinted as a chapter in Gray's <em>Darwiniana</em>, the chapter was titled "Natural Selection not Inconsistent with Natural Theology." The passage that focused the discussion for Darwin was this: "We should advise Mr. Darwin to assume, in the philosophy of his hypothesis, that variation has been led along certain beneficial lines."<sup>13</sup></p>

<p>After stating that the article was "admirable," Darwin responded to Gray in these words:</p>

<blockquote>But I grieve to say that I cannot honestly go as far as you do about Design .... [Y]ou lead me to infer that you believe "that variation has been led along certain beneficial lines."--I cannot believe this; & I think you would have to believe, that the tail of the fan-tail was led to vary in the number & direction of its feathers in order to gratify the caprice of a few men.<sup>14</sup></blockquote>

<p>In September, Darwin responded to a question from Gray and informed him of his correspondence with Lyell on the subject of Design. In a lengthy passage, he wrote:</p>

<blockquote>Your question of what would convince me of Design is a poser. If I saw an angel come down to teach us good, & I was convinced, from others seeing him, that I was not mad, I should believe in design. If I could be convinced thoroughly that life & mind was in an unknown way a function of other imponderable forces, I should be convinced.... I have lately been corresponding with Lyell, who, I think, adopts your idea of the stream of variation having been led or designed. I have asked him (& he says he will hereafter reflect & answer me) whether he believes that the shape of my nose was designed. If he does, I have nothing more to say. If not, seeing what Fanciers have done by selecting individual differences in the nasal bones of Pigeons, I must think that it is illogical to suppose that the variations, which Nat. Selection preserves for the good of any being, have been designed. But I know that I am in the same sort of muddle (as I have said before) as all the world seems to be in with respect to free will, yet with every supposed to have been foreseen or preordained.<sup>15</sup></blockquote>

<p>Finally, in December, Darwin sent up the white flag, conceding that "if anything is designed, certainly Man must be; one's 'inner consciousness' (though a false guide) tells one so; yet I cannot admit that man's rudimentary mammae ... & pug-nose were designed .... I am in thick mud;--the orthodox would say in fetid abominable mud."<sup>16</sup> From this point on, the topic is not as central in their correspondence.</p>

<p>Following the publication of Darwin's book on orchids, however, he asked Gray to look at the last chapter, since Darwin believed that it bore on the design question. Gray's response was found in both his review of the book and in a letter to Darwin. In his review, he praised Darwin for having "brought back teleological considerations into botany." He concluded:</p>

<blockquote>We <em>faithfully</em> believe that both natural science and natural theology will richly gain, and equally gain, whether we view each varied form as original, or whether we come to conclude, with Mr. Darwin, that they are derived:--the grand and most important inference of <em>design in nature</em> being drawn from the same data, subject to similar difficulties, and enforced by nearly the same considerations, in the one case as in the other.<sup>17</sup></blockquote>

<p>Gray may have believed that Darwin "brought back teleological considerations into botany," and Darwin may have swung that way in his book on orchids, but by 1867 Darwin had definitely swung back to the other side. In his concluding remarks for <em>The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication</em>, he wrote:</p>

<blockquote>However much we may wish it, we can hardly follow Professor Asa Gray in his belief that "variation has been led along certain beneficial lines," like a stream "along definite and useful lines of irrigation." If we assume that each particular variation was from the beginning of all time preordained, then that plasticity of organisation, which leads to many injurious deviations of structure, as well as the redundant power of reproduction which inevitably leads to a struggle for existence, and, as a consequence, to the natural selection or survival of the fittest, must appear to us superfluous laws of nature. On the other hand, an omnipotent and omniscient Creator ordains everything and foresees everything. Thus we are brought face to face with a difficulty as insoluble as is that of free will and predestination.<sup>18</sup></blockquote>

<p class="intro">In Part 3, the final post in this series, Dr. Miles will explore how Asa Gray was able to embrace evolution without rejecting the idea of design in nature.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>

<p class="date">7. Following the publication of Descent of Man, a second problem arose for evangelicals, centered on how humans could be moral beings, created in the Image of God, if they were continuous with the animal kingdom. I will not be addressing that issue in this paper.<br>
8. Charles Darwin, <em>The Correspondence of Charles Darwin</em> 8, 1860 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1993), 303. <br>
9. Ibid., 106. <br>
10. Ibid., 224. <br>
11. Ibid., 258. <br>
12. Ibid., 275. <br>
13. Asa Gray, "Natural Selection not Inconsistent with Natural Theology" in <em>Darwiniana</em> (Cambridge, MA: The Belknap Press of Harvard University, 1963), 121-2. <br>
14. Darwin, <em>The Correspondence of Charles Darwin</em> 8, 496. <br>
15. Charles Darwin, <em>The Correspondence of Charles Darwin</em> 9, 1861 (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1994), 267-8. <br>
16. Darwin, <em>The Correspondence of Charles Darwin</em> 9, 369. <br>
17. Cited in Darwin, <em>The Correspondence of Charles Darwin</em> 9, note 11, 430. <br>
18. Charles Darwin, <em>The Variation of Animals and Plants Under Domestication</em> (New York: D. Appleton and Company, 1896), 428.</p>

]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 04 Aug 12 07:21:11 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Sara Joan Miles</dc:creator>
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        <title>The Creation of Beauty</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/beauty&#45;from&#45;the&#45;bleak?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/beauty&#45;from&#45;the&#45;bleak?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Physical death is a necessary and, perhaps, disconcerting element of the evolutionary process for many Christians. It is difficult to imagine a perfect and loving God designing such a universe where forces such as natural death and entropy operate.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe width="560" height="315" src="http://www.youtube.com/embed/Sqy1a_Gz0zQ" frameborder="0" allowfullscreen></iframe></p>

<p class="intro">Though some may believe that moving the science/faith dialogue forward is best left to scientists, scholars, and theologians, we at BioLogos recognize that our pastors play an invaluable role in the conversation. Across the globe, pastors are helping their congregations work through difficult issues of science and faith with honesty, insight, and a gentle spirit. To this end we present an ongoing series recognizing sermons (and the pastors who give them) that are helping to promote the harmony of science and faith. Today's sermon comes from Michael Gungor, a musician, founder of the musical group Gungor, and a pastor at the Bloom Church in Denver, Colorado.</p>

<p>Gungor’s song “Beautiful Things” emphasizes the liberating truth that God has wonderfully made beautiful things “out of the dust,”  just as God makes beautiful things out of a life fully surrendered to him and buried in his love.</p>

<h3>Beautiful Things</h3>

<p>All this pain<br />
I wonder if I’ll ever find my way<br />
I wonder if my life could really change at all<br />
All this earth<br />
Could all that is lost ever be found<br />
Could a garden come up from this ground at all</p>

<p>You make beautiful things<br />
You make beautiful things out of the dust<br />
You make beautiful things<br />
You make beautiful things out of us</p>

<p>All around<br />
Hope is springing up from this old ground<br />
Out of chaos life is being found in You</p>

<p>You make beautiful things<br />
You make beautiful things out of the dust<br />
You make beautiful things<br />
You make beautiful things out of us</p>

<p>Physical death is a necessary and, perhaps, disconcerting element of the evolutionary process for many Christians. It is difficult to imagine a perfect and loving God designing such a universe where forces such as natural death and entropy operated. Michael Gungor of Bloom Church in Colorado addresses this idea and offers wisdom on such a complex issue.</p>

<p>He highlights the words of Jesus  in John 12:24 (NIV): “Very truly I tell you, unless a kernel of wheat falls to the ground and dies, it remains only a single seed. But if it dies, it produces many seeds. Anyone who loves their life will lose it, while anyone who hates their life in this world will keep it for eternal life.” In other words, death precedes true life. This statement appears self-contradictory, but there is evidence of this truth in the world around us. Gungor points to the death of cells in a human body. The death of worn-out cells makes room for new cells, keeping the body healthy. In fact, humans necessarily consume plants and animals in their diet to bring nourishment and support life. He also discusses the second law of thermodynamics: entropy. In accordance with this law, the sun continually burns itself out as it produces light and energy that supports life on earth. Thus, there is a place for natural death on this earth as it allows for the continuation of life.</p>

<p> In light of the New Testament and the testament of science, Gungor proposes that perhaps God is not as afraid of physical death as humans are. God is not fearful of death, knowing full well that it will not remain. It allows for growth in the present, but God has spoken of the day when all death will be destroyed forever. Revelation 21:4(NIV) affirms this truth: “He will wipe every tear from their eyes. There will be no more death or mourning or crying or pain, for the old order of things has passed away.” Chapter eight of Romans also speaks about the time when all things will be brought into the glorious freedom of the children of God—that is all things will be made new. Ultimately, life will swallow up death forever, but the current “messiness” of the process of becoming is part of God’s plan too. </p>

<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/36170816?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

<p>(To hear the entire sermon go to this <a href="http://bloomchurchdenver.com/#/gatherings" target="_blank">link</a> and scroll to the sermon —“What Can We Learn About Jesus from Science? Part 2”) </p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 04 Feb 12 07:00:37 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Michael Gungor</dc:creator>
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        <title>Revealing God&apos;s Nature</title>
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        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/revealing&#45;gods&#45;nature?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In today&apos;s video, Brian McLaren discusses the value of considering Scripture in light of the cultures that surrounded them. The Biblical writers were aware of the myths of the power nations that surrounded them, but flipped their stories on their heads to reveal truth about God.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/35267285?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="571" height="321" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen mozallowfullscreen allowFullScreen></iframe></p>

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

<p>In today's video, Brian McLaren discusses the value of considering Scripture in light of the cultures that surrounded them. The Biblical writers were aware of the myths of the power nations that surrounded them, but flipped their stories on their heads to reveal truth about God. The myths of cultures like Babylon declared that the world was built on a foundation of violence and humans meant to be slaves to the gods and their leaders, but the Bible tells that the world comes from goodness and that humans are made for more than servitude but to truly know God.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 18 Jan 12 06:48:09 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian McLaren</dc:creator>
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        <title>Seeing the Flood Story Through an Ancient Israelite Lens</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;flood?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/saturday&#45;sermon&#45;the&#45;flood?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Pete Shaw highlights the story of Noah to explore how the story would have been understood in ancient times and from there he goes on to explore how we might consider it today.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">Though some may believe that moving the science/faith dialogue forward is best left to scientists, scholars, and theologians, we at BioLogos recognize that our pastors play an invaluable role in the conversation. Across the globe, pastors are helping their congregations work through difficult issues of science and faith with honesty, insight, and a gentle spirit. To this end we present an ongoing series recognizing sermons (and the pastors who give them) that are helping to promote the harmony of science and faith. Today's sermon features Pete Shaw, who is the senior pastor of <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/" target="_blank">Crosswalk Community Church</a> in Napa California. The full sermon can be downloaded <a href="http://www.crosswalknapa.org/sermon/110515-the-flood/" target="_blank">here</a>. <strong>Finally, if you know a sermon or podcast related to science and faith that has especially spoken to you, please <a href="/contact">let us know</a></strong>.

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

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

<p class="intro"> A few editorial reflective thoughts by Darrel Falk: The sermon continues, of course, and you can download it at the above link.  What<em> is</em> "the most important thing" to which Pastor Shaw refers as the audio clip draws to a close? Regardless of whether you think it is historical or not, what is the message that God wants to communicate to us through this story?  Consider reading Genesis 9 right now.  What are the parallels in this "recreation"account to the original creation account?  What does God want us to see in making those parallels?  What about the rainbow? What does it symbolize for you?  Can you sense God's love for all of creation (not just humankind) as this story draws to a close?  Why does the story of Noah himself, however, not have a happier ending?  Have we seen the theme of nakedness and the need to cover up nakedness in an earlier scriptural passage?   Why do you think the story of Noah draws us back to this point (nakedness and shame), just like the story Adam and Eve does?  What brought on shame for them?  What brings on shame for us?  Do you see that God is wanting us to think deeply about this story and its meaning?   What is another example of the need to cover up? (Hint: think Moses.)  What difference does the coming of Jesus make to all of this? (Hint: see II Corinthians 3:12-18.) Do you see the rainbow?]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sat, 12 Nov 11 04:00:15 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Pete Shaw</dc:creator>
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        <title>Weekend Sermon: A Tale of Two Cities</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/weekend&#45;sermon&#45;a&#45;tales&#45;of&#45;two&#45;cities?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/weekend&#45;sermon&#45;a&#45;tales&#45;of&#45;two&#45;cities?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>This sermon  is a clear reminder that we each have a choice.  We can work to build cities that celebrate God’s love for us (the lineage of Seth), or we can live in the destructive lineage of Cain.   May the spirit of prayer, humility, and love characterize the world’s cities on this the tenth anniversary of  America’s most stark example of “The Tale of Two Cities.”</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/28839178?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="580" height="428" frameborder="0" webkitAllowFullScreen allowFullScreen></iframe>

<p>The opening chapters in Genesis omit seemingly important details, leaving one with an incomplete understanding of the situation at hand. Dr. Keller explains that ancient Biblical writers sought to convey certain truths, and, therefore, would only include facts relevant to the point of the narrative. This is true of Cain’s exile in Genesis 4: 11-26. As he explores this story, he highlights the crucial insights that the passage means to offer.</p>

<p>Foremost, he exposes the cause of Cain’s ruin. When Cain murders Abel, God questions him saying “Where is Abel your brother?” and “What have you done? The voice of your brother’s blood is crying to me from the ground.” God is not seeking information, but rather creating an opportunity for Cain to repent of his sin. Why is this so? Dr. Keller explains that sin results when one is self-focused, rather than God- focused. Repentance, however, goes to the root of this problem by turning one’s attention to God and others once again. It is the action of removing oneself from the center that heals the hardness and pride of the heart.</p>

<p>However, Cain does not repent. Instead, he complains to God that his “punishment is more than he can bear.” In other words, he is sorry for the consequences of his sin, not the sin itself. This leads to his exile from the presence of God, which is the ultimate downfall of Cain.</p>

<p>Next, there is evidence that Cain’s city is a “culture of death.” From the line of Cain comes a civilization marked by animal husbandry, technology, and music. In these “gardening” activities, the people indeed reflect God’s image as they creatively order the surrounding materials. However, rather than a Garden of Eden through love and service, it becomes a place marked by oppression and violence. For example, one descendant of Cain called Lamech is polygamous, having two wives. Furthermore, this man boasts saying, “I have killed a man for wounding me, a young man for injuring me—If Cain is avenged seven times, then Lamech seventy-seven times.” Their culture is now about power and exploitation. In spite of the death cultivated in this city, Dr. Keller clarifies that cities are not the issue. It is human sin alone that corrupts the city.</p>

<p>Finally, the scriptures point to a coming city of grace. When Cain establishes his city, he names it after himself. Without God’s presence and love, his work becomes a means of making a name for himself. However, cities are supposed to be a place where people selflessly give to one another in response to the Lord. This text shows the beginning of one such city that comes through the line of Seth, Eve’s third son. The passage states that this city is filled with a people who “call on the name of the Lord.” Thus, it is a place where people lift high the name of God. Dr. Keller explains that the Body of Christ is called to be this city of grace within the city of death. Ultimately, this power comes through the Lord Jesus Christ alone, who has poured out endless love and forgiveness and grace upon all who believe in his name.</p>

<p>Exactly one decade ago today, the September Eleventh terrorist attacks shocked Americans beyond belief as they watched airplanes crash into the mighty Twin Towers and Pentagon.  The hearts of the people filled with grief at the aftermath of the tragedy. The Twin Towers were reduced to rubble, thousands of dearly loved individuals died, and all were crushed with heartache. In the midst of this death arose a beautiful sight and sound: millions bowing their heads in prayer, speaking words of comfort, and coming to the aid of one another. In spite of the physical deaths, New York City and the U.S. as a whole were transformed from death to life as people joined hand in hand to mourn the loss and move forward into the healing process. The pain of the losses was raw and real, but so was the love and grace that swept through, causing our divided nation to unite in unbelievable strength.</p>

<p>This sermon  is a clear reminder that we each have a choice.  We can work to build cities that celebrate God’s love for us (the lineage of Seth), or we can live in the destructive lineage of Cain.   May the spirit of prayer, humility, and love characterize the world’s cities on this the tenth anniversary of  America’s most stark example of “The Tale of Two Cities.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 11 Sep 11 07:54:51 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Tim Keller</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Sep 11, 2011 07:54</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Series: From the Dust</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;leap&#45;of&#45;truth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/a&#45;leap&#45;of&#45;truth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this series, Ryan Pettey offers several clips from his powerful documentary &quot;From the Dust&quot;. This feature&#45;length film is divided up into various sections, each of which wrestles with the difficult problems that arise when reconciling Scripture with the theory of evolution. A light of hope dawns on the science&#45;faith conversation, however, as scientists and theologians engage in honest dialogue about tough issues such as the interpretation of Genesis, the nature of the Fall, and the idea of random design. Their profound insights are sure to enlighten all minds, raise deeper questions, and provoke new thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/24747613?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="533" height="300" frameborder="0"></iframe></p>

<p><a href="http://biologos.org/blog/a-leap-of-truth">Last week</a> we debuted the first clip from the documentary “From the Dust”, directed by filmmaker Ryan Pettey. It is our sincere hope that, above all else, the film can become a  focal point for some of the big questions that inevitably arise at the intersection of  science and faith.</p>

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

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

<h3>"The Book of Genesis" Transcript</h3>

<p><strong>Dr. Alister McGrath</strong>: “The Christian church has always wrestled with the interpretation of Scripture, realizing both how important it is and also sometimes how difficult it is to get it right. Certainly, the opening chapters of Genesis have been a topic of much debate throughout Christian history.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Polkinghorne</strong>: “The Bible is very important to me, but it is very important to recognize that the Bible is not a book. The Bible is a library. It has all sorts of different kinds of writing in it—It has histories, it has stories, it has poetry, it has prose. When we read Genesis one, we have to figure out, what am I reading? Am I reading a divinely dictated textbook to save me the trouble of doing science, or am I reading something, in fact, more interesting and profound than that?”</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="pop2">What does Walton mean when he says that Genesis was written "for us" but not "to us"?</div>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “We have to approach Genesis 1 for what it is. It is an ancient document. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop2');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop2');">It is not a document that was written to us</a>—we believe the Bible was written for us like it is for everyone of all times and places because it is God’s Word—but it was not written to us. It was not written in our language. It was not written with our culture in mind or our culture in view.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Alister McGrath</strong>: “It is not about the authority of Scripture, it is about the interpretation of Scripture. What method of interpretation do I use in the case of each individual passage?”</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="pop1">What does Karen Winslow mean when she says a literal reading of Genesis is not the same thing as a scientific reading?</div>

<p><strong>Dr. Karen Strand Winslow</strong>: “Biblical scholars urge people to take a literal, plain reading of the text…but I think in the controversy between theology and science, <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop1');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop1');">literal is often used to mean scientific</a>, as if it is scientific, and  that is a whole different story.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “We are inclined by our culture to think of the creation narrative as an account of material origins because we think about the world in material terms. For us, that is kind of what is important about origins. People come to Scripture thinking that they need to integrate it with science and so, they want to either read science out of the Bible or they want to read science into the Bible. That is not the way to do it because inevitably you end up making the text say things that it never meant to the ancient audience.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Chris Tilling</strong>: “We are importing meaning into the text; we are bringing our own presuppositions and assumptions into a text and reading it in light of that as if it were in the text. Now, there is a sense in which we all inevitably do that, but there is also a sense in which we need to be aware when the times that we do that are damaging to the reading of the text.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Nancey Murphy</strong>: “When I was a kid and the film industry was still relatively new, it was possible to depict people from two centuries ago as modern Americans dressed up in togas. As the film industry has gotten more sophisticated, they have gotten better and better at creating human figures that actually look and behave and think as they probably would have in the past. So, we Bible readers ought to be equally sophisticated and recognize that someone who was writing three thousand years ago, which is very hard to imagine, that these people must have been very different from us, with very different concerns. They certainly had very different understandings about how material things worked.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Peter Enns</strong>: “One of the benefits of understanding the historical circumstances of the Bible is that we are reminded of how incredibly old this literature is. Let’s understand it in view of what we could even remotely expect of the Biblical writers to say.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Nancey Murphy</strong>: “We can understand what our own creation stories are saying better, if we know what the creation myths were that were known at the times that those stories were written—for instance, to realize that a lot of the Genesis stories were written as a counter measure against the other cultures’ creation stories. That throws an immense amount of light on what parts of the story we are supposed to be paying attention to.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Chris Tilling</strong>: “The Gilgamesh epic, for example, has a flood narrative and so forth, and so it wants to reflect creatively and theologically in light of those creation myths; it is going to be something recognizable.”</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="pop3">How does the Genesis creation account take other creation myths and “sort of turn things on its head?”</div>

<p><strong>Dr. Peter Enns</strong>: “Genesis one shares theological vocabulary with the other stories—<a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop3');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop3');">it just sort of takes things and turns it on its head.</a>”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Nancey Murphy</strong>: “If one creation myth talks about the earth being created as a result of the battle between gods, we know to look in our creation stories to say, ‘wait a minute! Is violence intrinsic to the very creation of the universe?’ We find very clearly written that no, it is not.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Peter Enns</strong>: “It’s Israel’s declaration that Yahweh is worthy of worship. It is a potent and counter-intuitive theological statement in the ancient world where people say, ‘That is totally different from anything we have ever seen.’”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Polkinghorne</strong>: “The stories of the ancient world were not so concerned with minute, literal accuracy as we are today. People wrote not to give you sort of a factual, journalistic account of what is going on, but to tell you the significance of what was happening.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. Ard Louis</strong>: “And so what we see is that there are these really interesting structures in the Genesis text, which suggest that it is not describing the creation process as this is the order in which it happened. Rather, it is taking that story and emphasizing theological points. It talks about days; there was morning, there was evening—but the sun and the moon are not created until the fourth day. So why, for example, did the writer of Genesis put the sun and the moon on the fourth day? It is a very strange thing to do, and it is not as if it is only moderns who realize ‘Oh dear! Something is wrong.’ People at any time of history would have realized that that was an unusual way of writing down a journalistic account. And, of course, the reason most likely is that people of that day worshipped the sun and the moon, and the Israelites were always being drawn away that way, and the people around them were doing that. And so, what the writer was saying is, ‘no, I am going to demote these things to the fourth day. They are not the first thing to be created; they are something to be created somewhat later.’”</p>

<p><strong>Bishop N.T. Wright</strong>: “This is simply the sort of language that people use to refer to concrete events, but to invest those events with their theological significance.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “We are well aware that people have to translate the language for us. We forget that people have to translate the culture for us, and therefore, if we want to get the best benefit from the communication, we need to try to enter their world, hear it as the audience would have heard it, as the author would have meant it, and to read it in those terms.”</p>

<p><strong>Bishop N.T. Wright</strong>: “There is a distinction which is there in Scripture between heaven and earth. But the thing about heaven and earth is that they are supposed to overlap, and have an interesting, interlocking, interplay with one another. They are never supposed to be far apart.”</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="pop4">“You couldn’t talk about God intervening because you can’t intervene in something you are doing.” If God truly is responsible for the creation of the world, how could he intervene? What implications does this have for the Intelligent Design Movement? What would an ID proponent respond to Walton’s statement?</div>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “In the ancient world, they didn’t have a line between supernatural and natural. God was in everything. <a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop4');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop4');">You couldn’t talk about God intervening because you can’t intervene in something you are doing</a>—and to them, God was doing it all. That kind of functional aspect was very important to them.”</p>

<p><strong>Bishop N.T. Wright</strong>: “In Genesis, God makes heavens and earth, and it appears that humans are in the world, but God is around as well because the heavens and earth have not split apart.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “The temple and the cosmos were all blended into one. If we used a modern metaphor it would almost be like the temple was the oval office. It is kind of where all the business is done, where all the work is run. It is the hub of activity and control, and when Deity took up his rest in the temple, it wasn’t for leisure or relaxation…it was to settle down to the work now that everything is set up and ready to go.”</p>

<p><strong>Bishop N. T. Wright</strong>: “Telling a story about somebody who constructs something in six days, it is a temple story. It is about God making a place for himself to dwell…and this is heaven and earth. What you do with that is, the last thing is you put an image of this God into the temple. Suddenly, instead of Genesis one being about ‘were there six days or were there five or were there seven or were there twenty-four hours…,’ it is actually about when the good Creator God made the world, he made heaven and earth as the space in which he himself was going to dwell and put in humans into that construct as a way of both reflecting his own love into the world and drawing out the praise and glory from the world, back to himself. That is the literal meaning of Genesis. To flatten that out into, ‘this is simply telling us that the world was made in six days’ is almost perversely to avoid the real thrust of the narrative.”</p>

<p><strong>Michael Ramsden</strong>: “If this is an inspired book, if this really is, you know, something where God is revealed and can speak through it, it shouldn’t surprise us that we find multiple layers of depth.”</p>

<div class="see-also" style="display:none;" id="pop5">In what way does Genesis One both play the notes of the “symphony” of creation and catch the bigger picture? What is this “bigger picture”? </div>

<p><strong>Bishop N.T. Wright</strong>: “<a onmouseover="toggle_visibility('pop5');" onmouseout="toggle_visibility('pop5');">Genesis is one of those books like a Shakespeare play or like a Beethoven symphony or something where you can describe what it sort of literally says</a>. Here is a Beethoven symphony; here are the notes, ‘Duh, duh, duh, duh.’ Then, you think, ‘well, that doesn’t actually catch what is going on in this’, and you want to use bigger language about the opening of Beethoven’s first symphony. This is an amazing statement about the power of empire and the fate of man…and goodness knows what! You still have got to play the notes. This world was made to be God’s abode, God’s home, God’s dwelling place. He shared it with us, and now he wants to rescue it and redeem it. We have to read Genesis for all it is worth. To say, either history or myth is a way of saying, ‘I am not going to study this text for what it is worth. I am just going to flatten it out so that it conforms to the cultural questions that my culture today is telling me to ask…and I think that is a form of actually being unfaithful to the text itself.”</p>

<p><strong>Dr. John Walton</strong>: “The account in Genesis one is not intended to be an account of material origins. If that is so, then the Bible has no narrative of material origins, and if that is so, we don’t have to defend the Bible’s narrative of material origins against a scientific narrative because the Bible does not offer one. We can let the text be what it is and take it for what it is. That is the most literal reading that you could have.”</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 06 Jul 11 05:00:10 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Ryan Pettey</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Jul 06, 2011 05:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Series: Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography in the Bible</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/series/godawa&#45;cosmic&#45;geography?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/series/godawa&#45;cosmic&#45;geography?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>In this six part series, Brian Godawa takes a closer look at cosmography and its relationship to the Bible. After defining cosmography as a theory that describes features of the heavens and the earth, he relates how his own views about the universe have shifted. He then continues to talk about the Mesopotamian cosmography that is so consistently reflected in Scripture. This view of the universe includes aspects such as the firmament, the pillars, the underworld, the heavens above, the watery abyss. He then explains how one understands these concepts in terms of modern scientific thought.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This is the first in a six-part series based on Brian Godawa’s scholarly paper “Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography in the Bible”, which can be read in its entirety <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/godawa_scholarly_paper_2.pdf" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>

<p>Throughout history, all civilizations and peoples have operated under the assumption of a cosmography or picture of the universe. <em>Cosmography</em> is a technical term that means a theory that describes and maps the main features of the heavens and the earth. A Cosmography or “cosmic geography” can be a complex picture of the universe that includes elements like astronomy, geology, and geography; and those elements can include theological implications as well. We are most familiar with the historical change that science went through from a Ptolemaic cosmography of the earth at the center of the universe (geocentrism) to a Copernican cosmography of the sun at the center of a galaxy (heliocentrism).</p>

<p>Some mythologies maintained that the earth was a flat disc on the back of a giant turtle; animistic cultures believe that spirits inhabit natural objects and cause them to behave in certain ways; modern westerners believe in a space-time continuum where everything is relative to its frame of reference in relation to the speed of light. Ancients tended to believe that the gods caused the weather; moderns tend to believe that impersonal physical processes cause weather. All these different beliefs are elements of a cosmography or picture of what the universe is really like and how it operates. Even though “pre-scientific” cultures like the Hebrews did not have the same notions of science that we moderns have, they still observed the world around them and made interpretations as to the structure and operations of the universe. The Bible also contains a cosmography or picture of the universe that its stories inhabit.</p>

<p>I have said this before, and I will say it again: I am not a scientist, I am a professional storyteller, and so my interest in Biblical cosmography comes from my study of imagery, metaphor, and story. But a picture of the cosmos certainly has a bearing on scientific notions of the way the universe is and operates. Imagination and science are not completely unconnected. I am also a Christian who believes that the Bible is the Word of God. But does this mean that the Bible will have a cosmography that agrees with modern western science? I used to believe it did. I used to believe that if the Bible was scientifically errant in anyway, then it could not be the Word of God, since God would never communicate false information to us. That would make God a liar, or so I thought.</p>

<p>This led to the corollary that whatever modern science has proven would have to be in accord with the Bible’s own revelation. This is called “scientific concordism.” So, if we now know that the earth is a sphere and that the universe is expanding, then Scripture would not contradict that truth. What’s more, I might even be able to find a verse that would have that truth hidden it: Behold, I thought I found it: “It is he who sits above the circle of the earth…who stretches out the heavens like a curtain” (Isa. 40:22). In this scientific concordist paradigm, the Bible contains veiled scientific truths before their time in a gnostic hiddenness that is uncovered by initiates into such mysteries.</p>

<p>Unfortunately, this paradigm would lead to much cognitive dissonance for me as I tortured the text to fit whatever scientific theory I was trying to support at the time. First, I accepted Genesis as literally explaining material creation chronology and relegated evolutionary scientists to dishonest manipulators of facts.<sup>1</sup>  Then I tried to find dinosaurs in the Bible by interpreting the Leviathan or Behemoth as references to ichthyosaurs and sauropods.<sup>2</sup> Then I tried to make six literal days and young chronology of Creation in Genesis square symbolically with the seriously old age of the earth.<sup>3</sup> Then I tried to creatively reconcile the billions of years of the Big Bang with 24-hour earth-bound solar days though gravity-warped space-time.<sup>4</sup></p>

<p>I also thought that the best interpretation of the Bible was the “plain reading” of the text. That is, any interpretation that would turn the meaning into unwarranted figurative, symbolic, allegorical or metaphorical language would be disingenuous hermeneutics. I didn’t mean obvious figurative and allegorical language like parables of talking brambles and trees (Jud. 9:7-15) or clearly poetic expressions of singing mountains and clapping trees (Isa. 55:12).  I meant that when the Bible talked about the physical order and events in heaven and earth it would mean just what it said since the Creator of the cosmos would know best what was actually happening.</p>

<p>But something started to seriously challenge these assumptions. First, as I studied the ancient Hebrew culture and its surrounding Near Eastern background, I began to see how very different a “plain reading” of a text was to them than a “plain reading” was to me.<sup>5</sup> The ancient Hebrew mind was steeped in different symbols, ideas, and language than I was. If I read a phrase like “sun, moon and stars,” my western cultural understanding, which is deeply affected by a post-Galileo, post-Enlightened, materialist science would tend to read such references in terms of the physical bodies of matter, gas, and gravity spread out over vast light years of space-time. When ancient Israelites used that phrase, they would have pictures in their minds of markers and signs (Gen. 1:14), and more personal objects like pagan gods (Deut. 4:19), heavenly beings (1 Kg. 22:19), symbolic influential leaders (Gen. 37:9), or the fall of governing powers (Isa. 13:10).<sup>6</sup></p>

<p>An ancient Jew hearing the words leviathan and sea conjured up notions of a disordered world without Yahweh’s rule, and Yahweh’s covenant creation out of chaos.<sup>7</sup> Whereas for me, hearing those words makes me think of a monster fish swimming in the ocean – or maybe Moby Dick, a symbol of man’s hubris – but primarily the physical material being of those objects. It is easier to see now that my plain reading of the text through my modern western worldview could completely miss the plain meaning that the Scripture would have to an ancient Israelite. My so-called act of “plain reading” was ironically an imposition of my own cultural bias onto the text removed by thousands of years, thousands of miles, and thousands of cultural motifs.<sup>8</sup> We must seek the “plain reading” of the ancient authors and their audience, and in this way we can be “diligent to present yourself approved to God as a workman who does not need to be ashamed, accurately handling the word of truth” (2 Tim. 2:15). </p>

<p>Something else had always haunted me like a nagging pebble in the shoe of my mind, and that was the Galileo affair. We’ll look more at this in my next post.</p>

<h3>Notes</h3>
<p class="date">1.  I never believed they were all lying, but many were certainly blinded by their worldview bias. I still believe that some scientists do in fact lie, cheat, and manipulate facts and studies just as in every other discipline because they are human like everyone else and can be just as driven by political and personal agenda as everyone else. A good book that documents this is <em>Betrayers Of The Truth: Fraud And Deceit In The Halls Of Science</em> By Nicholas Wade William Broad (Ebury Press, 1983); Michael Fumento is a science journalist who reports on current scientific fraud and its widespread economic and political effects at www.fumento.com.<br>
2. <em>Scientific Creationism</em> by Henry M. Morris (Master Books, 1974, 1985) is an example of this viewpoint.<br>
3. <em>Creation and Time: A Biblical and Scientific Perspective on the Creation-Date Controversy</em> by Hugh Ross (NavPress, 1994) is an example of this viewpoint.<br>
4. <em>Genesis and the Big Bang: The Discovery Of Harmony Between Modern Science And The Bible</em> by Gerald Schroeder (Bantam, 1990) is an example of this viewpoint.<br>
5. The seminal book that opened the door for me to a better understanding of this ANE cultural context of the Bible was John H. Walton, <em>Ancient Near Eastern Thought and the Old Testament: Introducing the Conceptual World of the Hebrew Bible</em> (Grand Rapids, MI: Baker, 2006).<br>
6. “The worship of the host of heaven [was] often set in parallelism to the worship of foreign gods (Deut 17:3; 2 Kgs 17:16; 21:3; 23:4–5; Jer 19:13; Zeph 1:4–5).” K. van der Toorn, Bob Becking and Pieter Willem van der Horst, <em>Dictionary of Deities and Demons in the Bible DDD</em>, 2nd extensively rev. ed., 429 (Leiden; Boston; Grand Rapids, Mich.: Brill; Eerdmans, 1999), 429.<br>
7. Brian Godawa, <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/godawa_scholarly_paper.pdf" target="_blank">“Biblical Creation and Storytelling: Cosmogony, Combat and Covenant,”</a> The BioLogos Foundation.<br>
8. Othmar Keel’s <em>The Symbolism of the Biblical World</em> (Eisenbrauns) is an encyclopedia of imagery and motifs that Israel shared with her ANE neighbors that are quite alien to our thinking.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 30 May 11 08:00:55 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>May 30, 2011 08:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Evolutionary Creation: A Christian Approach to Evolution</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/evolutionary&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;christian&#45;approach&#45;to&#45;evolution?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/evolutionary&#45;creation&#45;a&#45;christian&#45;approach&#45;to&#45;evolution?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Professor Denis Lamoureux presents the theory of evolutionary creation, which claims that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit created the universe and life through an ordained, sustained, and design&#45;reflecting evolutionary process. The view of origins, says Lamoureux, fully embraces both the religious beliefs of biblical Christianity and the scientific theories of cosmological, geological, and biological evolution.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Professor Denis Lamoureux presents the theory of evolutionary creation, which claims that the Father, Son, and Holy Spirit created the universe and life through an ordained, sustained, and design-reflecting evolutionary process. The view of origins, says Lamoureux, fully embraces both the religious beliefs of biblical Christianity and the scientific theories of cosmological, geological, and biological evolution.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 18:35:05 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Denis Lamoureux</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 25, 2011 18:35</dc:date>-->
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        <title>The Biblical Creation in its Ancient Near Eastern Context</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/the&#45;biblical&#45;creation&#45;in&#45;its&#45;ancient&#45;near&#45;eastern&#45;context?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/the&#45;biblical&#45;creation&#45;in&#45;its&#45;ancient&#45;near&#45;eastern&#45;context?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>&quot;As a Christian and a biblical scholar, I care both about Scripture as truth and about the ongoing scholarly conversation regarding the composition of the Hebrew Scriptures.  And so, when I was asked to speak on the story of creation in Genesis 1, I welcomed the opportunity to give my thoughts on the interaction between this text and its ancient Near Eastern context.&quot;</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA["As a Christian and a biblical scholar, I care both about Scripture as truth and about the ongoing scholarly conversation regarding the composition of the Hebrew Scriptures.  And so, when I was asked to speak on the story of creation in Genesis 1, I welcomed the opportunity to give my thoughts on the interaction between this text and its ancient Near Eastern context."]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 18:33:35 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Joseph Lam</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 25, 2011 18:33</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Mesopotamian Cosmic Geography in the Bible</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/mesopotamian&#45;cosmic&#45;geography&#45;in&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/mesopotamian&#45;cosmic&#45;geography&#45;in&#45;the&#45;bible?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Brian Godawa looks at several aspects of ancient cosmography (descriptions of the universe) that also appear in the Bible, and what these aspects of the text mean for our understanding of Scripture.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[Brian Godawa looks at several aspects of ancient cosmography (descriptions of the universe) that also appear in the Bible, and what these aspects of the text mean for our understanding of Scripture.]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 17:55:57 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 25, 2011 17:55</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Biblical Creation and Storytelling: Cosmogony, Combat and Covenant</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/essays/biblical&#45;creation&#45;and&#45;storytelling&#45;cosmogony&#45;combat&#45;and&#45;covenant?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/essays/biblical&#45;creation&#45;and&#45;storytelling&#45;cosmogony&#45;combat&#45;and&#45;covenant?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>The literary conventions employed in Genesis chapter 1 mark it out, not as a scientific document describing material origins, but as a theological polemic against surrounding ancient Near Eastern pagan religions. Creation language here and elsewhere in Scripture is not about establishing scientific origins of material substance and structure but about covenantal establishment and worldview.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[The literary conventions employed in Genesis chapter 1 mark it out, not as a scientific document describing material origins, but as a theological polemic against surrounding ancient Near Eastern pagan religions. Creation language here and elsewhere in Scripture is not about establishing scientific origins of material substance and structure but about covenantal establishment and worldview. ]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 25 Apr 11 17:53:38 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 25, 2011 17:53</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Science and Faith at the Movies: &quot;Creation,&quot; Part 2</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;faith&#45;at&#45;the&#45;movies&#45;creation&#45;part&#45;2?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/science&#45;and&#45;faith&#45;at&#45;the&#45;movies&#45;creation&#45;part&#45;2?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Darwin’s descent into agnosticism was fueled by a legitimate personal experience with the problem of evil, specifically in the suffering and death of his daughter.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p class="intro">This is part two in the latest installment of filmmaker Brian Godawa's series "Science and Faith at the Movies." The full paper on <em>Creation</em> can be found <a href="http://biologos.org/uploads/projects/science_faith_at_the_movies2.pdf" target="_blank">here</a>. Godawa, together with filmmaker, Michael Corwin produced the BioLogos video, "<a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=WF94SdvIlD4&list=UUcin1Z87nG_eeBQL00JK62A&index=72&feature=plpp_video">Are Science and Faith in Conflict?</a>"</p>

<h3><em>Creation</em> and the Problem of Evil</h3>

<p><em>Creation</em> depicts the intrinsic opposition between God and evolution that 19th century scientists reflexively assumed, as well as the warfare metaphor that supported it. Huxley claims in the movie that if everything evolved over millions of years, then God didn’t create it all in 6 days, as if the literal interpretation of that text was the only option. Even Darwin himself is shown laboring under the presupposition that evolution cannot be guided or providentially ordained, that a system of life based upon massive amounts of death cannot be a part of God’s created “good” order. Perhaps it would be too much for the film to raise these questions in that original context. And perhaps that is where the weakness lies in an otherwise gripping and personal drama about the origins of <em>The Origin</em>.</p>

<p>The issues raised by this movie are of critical concern for evangelical Christians and their understanding of Darwinian evolution. It is far too simplistic for Christians to write off Darwin as an infidel bent on destroying the faith. The historical evidence seems to indicate that this movie’s suggestion is true: Darwin’s descent into agnosticism was fueled by a legitimate personal experience with the theological problem of evil both in the broader reality and more specifically in the suffering and death of his daughter. Whatever may be said of Darwin’s theological failings, his struggle with reconciling suffering with a good God is a journey for every person who has any shred of humanity or compassion in their soul. It is not just that there is death and suffering in the world that troubles him, but that death and suffering is a necessary part of the biological system to make it run.</p>

<p>Within his internal struggle, Darwin acknowledged the possibility of a theistic presence behind the laws of evolution. William E. Phipps points out in his book, <em>Darwin’s Religious Odyssey</em>, Darwin’s own words in a letter:</p>

<blockquote><p>“With respect to the theological view of the question: this is always painful to me. I am bewildered. I had no intention to write atheistically. But I own that I cannot see as plainly as others do, and as I should wish to do, evidence of design and beneficence on all sides of us. There seems to me too much misery in the world.... On the other hand, I cannot anyhow be contented to view this wonderful universe and especially the nature of man, and to conclude that everything is the result of brute force… I can see no reason why a man, or other animals, may not have been aboriginally produced by other laws, and that all these laws may have been expressly designed by an omniscient Creator, who foresaw every future event and consequence.<sup>1</sup>"</p></blockquote>

<p>This notion of a God behind the laws of evolution seems to be the last refuge for Darwin’s agnosticism. The God who created the universe and sustains it (Col 1:15-17) could easily have put into place exactly those laws that he could foresee would result in the evolutionary fruit of human beings created in His image. Another possibility is that God himself is directly behind the regularity of physical law, including the process of evolution.  Whether  through indirect allowance or direct mediation, whether through foreknowledge or foreordination, Darwin certainly acknowledged that God is using evolutionary change to accomplish His purposes. That would have to mean that death and suffering must be part of God’s loving plan. And Scripture seems to declare this all over the place.</p>

<p>The litany of God’s actions proclaimed to Job include both natural law and animal predation. God not only claims to be the active agent behind natural forces like snow (37:6), rain and lightning (37:11-12), and astronomical planetary forces (38:31), but God also claims to actively take a hand in the predation of wild animals (38:39-41), as well as predation of evil human nations upon others (Isa 10), and to raise up and destroy nations (Job 12:23). “He causes it to happen” (37:13).  Even taking into consideration the primitive non-scientific Mesopotamian cosmology of the Bible, Scriptural theology still has no problem accepting God’s causal activity behind the destructive forces of nature (Psa 104) and of human evil. God does not merely “allow” evil to exist in the Hebrew worldview, He somehow actively ordains it.</p>

<blockquote><p>I form light and create darkness,<br />
	I make well-being and create calamity,<br />
	I am the LORD, who does all these things.<br />
Is. 45:7</p>

<p>Who has spoken and it came to pass, unless the Lord has commanded it?<br />
Is it not from the mouth of the Most High that good and evil come?<br />
Lam. 3:37-38</p></blockquote>

<p>Let us not forget that God’s speaking forth is the common expression of his active creation as in Genesis One. God’s hand, a metaphor for his active causal participation, is even described in the New Testament as being involved in the the murder of God’s own Son.</p>

<blockquote><p>For truly in this city there were gathered together against your holy servant Jesus, whom you anointed, both Herod and Pontius Pilate, along with the Gentiles and the peoples of Israel, to do <strong>whatever your hand and your plan had predestined to take place</strong>. Acts 4:27-28</p></blockquote>

<p>But this is not to make God evil or the Bible contradictory. For the Christian, this is first and foremost an exegetical issue. Regardless of what philosophical problems Christians may have with the notion of God’s sovereignty and evil, our first commitment is to discover what the Bible says about the issue, <em>not</em> to presuppose what can and cannot be proposed philosophically. Clearly, the Bible claims that God somehow ordains natural disasters and both good and evil in such a way that man’s responsibility is not diminished, nor is God himself engaged in evil. Just how this is so is not explained to us. But this is why Joseph can accept the evil actions of his brothers as having two causal agents behind them: “As for you, you meant evil against me, but God meant it for good” (Gen 50:20 – one action, two actors – human freedom <em>and</em> God’s sovereignty). It is not that humans have no freedom and that God is a puppeteer, but rather that there is a mysterious consilience between the two, best expressed in the proposition that God foreordains the free acts of men.</p>

<p>And herein lies the fundamental flaw in assuming that death and suffering is contradictory to a loving God’s providential care of creation:  it begs the question. Who says God cannot have a morally sufficient reason for why he uses death and suffering to accomplish his purposes?</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Mon, 04 Apr 11 08:00:52 -0700</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Brian Godawa</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Apr 04, 2011 08:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>A Pastor&apos;s Perspective on Death and Evolution</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;pastors&#45;perspective&#45;on&#45;death&#45;and&#45;evolution?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/a&#45;pastors&#45;perspective&#45;on&#45;death&#45;and&#45;evolution?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>If death did not exist before Adam and Eve, how could God have used evolution to create man? And what about predators and natural catastrophes such as the mass extinction of the dinosaurs?</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>In an essay for The BioLogos Forum, guest writer Marcio Antonio Campos <a href="http://biologos.org/blog/did-peace-and-love-reign-in-the-world-before-the-original-sin/">looks</a> at the apparent contradiction between death entering the world through the Fall and the role of death in the process of evolution. If death did not exist before Adam and Eve, how could God have used evolution to create man? And what about predators and natural catastrophes such as the mass extinction of the dinosaurs, which both imply the existence of physical death before the Fall?</p>

<p>For those who didn’t get a chance to read the three responses presented in Campos’ wonderful piece, we certainly encourage you to do so. Today, however, we’d like to look at two videos from Daniel Harrell, Senior Minister of Colonial Church in Edina, Minnesota.</p>

<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/18965516?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="533" height="300" frameborder="0"></iframe></p>

<p>In the first video Harrell addresses the way that we view death.  As we see in Paul’s letters, there is a judicial idea that physical death is the punishment for sin.  According to Harrell, however, this is not the whole story.  Death has a redemptive aspect as well.</p>

<p>Biologically speaking, the pastor reminds us, you cannot have life without death.  New life is always accompanied by death.  In spite of our belief that death is in some sense a punishment for sin, there is also the reality that Christ died for our sins yet we continue to die.  The reason for this is difficult to explain if death truly is nothing but a punishment.  A question continues to linger in the air: “If Jesus died to save me from dying then why do I still die?”</p>

<p>Harrell suggests, however, that the reason we continue to die is that death is not altogether bad.  In fact, according to our understanding of biology, Harrell says, Adam would have died even if he had never sinned at all.  There are two sides to death.  On one hand, the broken relationship that comes from sin is a kind of death.  On the other hand, physical death is a necessary part of biological life.  As living organisms we all have a lifespan.  Had Adam never sinned, Harrell believes he would still have passed at some point from this life to the next just as we will one day do through our faith in Jesus Christ.</p>

<p align="center"><iframe src="http://player.vimeo.com/video/18723380?title=0&amp;byline=0&amp;portrait=0" width="533" height="300" frameborder="0"></iframe></p>

<p>In the second video, Harrell engages us in a speculation over why God may have chosen to create life through the evolutionary process.  Christians often struggle to accept that God created through evolution because it is a process that requires a great deal of death and waste.  They doubt that God would have chosen to create in a way that was not linear and beautiful.</p>

<p>Harrell, however, proposes that as Christians we can accept the idea of evolution in spite of these difficulties.  He comes to this conclusion by realizing that death is part of the character of God.  God’s supreme expression of love, in fact, was an act of death; Christ gave himself fully for the ones he loves.</p>

<p>Evolution is, in a sense, an analogy to this act of love we see in Jesus’ death.  The many organisms that have lived and died throughout the course of evolution are God’s gift to his beloved children.  All of this was “spent by God for the sake of life”.</p>

<p>As human beings, we expect God to do things the way we would do them: in an efficient, linear, and tidy manner.  In reality, Harrell reminds us, God functions in ways that don’t make sense to us at all.  After all, who would expect the God of the universe to become human and die?  Likewise, it doesn’t make sense to us that God would create a world that exists through dying. However, God’s actions are not constrained by whether they “make sense” to mankind, for his ways are above ours.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Wed, 09 Mar 11 09:00:41 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Daniel Harrell</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 09, 2011 09:00</dc:date>-->
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        <title>Coppermouth</title>
        <link>http://biologos.org/blog/coppermouth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</link>
        <guid>http://biologos.org/blog/coppermouth?utm_source=RSS_Feed&amp;utm_medium=RSS&amp;utm_campaign=RSS_Syndication</guid>
        <description>Snakes—especially the poisonous varieties—evoke a primordial dread in many people, a response sometimes even attributed to God’s curse of enmity between Eve and the serpent in the second chapter of Genesis.</description>
        <content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>Snakes—especially the poisonous varieties—evoke a primordial dread in many people, a response sometimes even attributed to God’s curse of enmity between Eve and the serpent in the second chapter of Genesis.  Yet as Pete Enns has <a href="http://www.biologos.org/blog/genesis-creation-and-ancient-interpreters-a-crafty-serpent">written</a>, the reputation of the serpent in Genesis and other near eastern texts is complex and mysterious rather than uniformly evil, as the snake seems to have represented aspects of both immortality and wisdom.  In the Matthew 10:16 Jesus himself suggested that the “craftiness” of the serpent was not something necessarily to be feared or condemned, but claimed as wisdom when in combination with the “innocence of doves.”  Snakes, then, are an interesting example of a natural and spiritual symbol that is equivocal and multifaceted, calling forth both fascination and unease in equal measures, all but requiring us to maintain such competing thoughts and feelings at the same time.</p>

<p>That mental balancing act is nearly the definition of <em>irony</em> described by poet and scholar Matt Boyleston in his recent essay “The Language of Paradox: Irony and Poetry”, in <em><a href="http://www.civitate.org/2010/10/the-city-fall-2010-full-edition/#more-219" target="_blank">The City</a></em>:</p>

<blockquote><p>“Irony describes a poet’s recognition of incongruities and his controlled acceptance of them, or in [critic Northrup] Frye’s words, that irony ‘takes life exactly as it finds it.’ Irony, in this case, is the understanding that life is paradoxical and then dwelling fully in that paradoxical state.” (<strong>The City</strong>. Volume 3 Issue 2 (Fall 2010): p.19.)</p></blockquote>

<p>Boyleston continues by saying that for Christians this sense of the irony is not a mere literary curiosity, but something central to our understanding of what it is to be human, the paradox of living both as created in the image of God and in rebellion against our Maker:</p>

<blockquote><p> “One can only properly understand what it means to be human if one clearly places each of these states, Man’s creation in the image of God and Man’s fallen nature, in an ironic relationship in which one never affirms one state at the expense of the other. . . . If poetry is truly . . . the language of paradox, then to understand fully our paradoxical state as Christians is to dwell poetically. And still further, one must use the language of paradox to properly educate a student concerning this paradoxical, this ironical condition of man.” (p. 20)</p></blockquote>

<p>Boyleston’s commitment to this sort of education is displayed not only in his classroom and essays but in his poetic work, too—including the piece featured below by which we may connect the discussion of snakes and irony with the regular theme of The BioLogos Forum, that Christian faith and evolutionary biology need not be understood as contradictory commitments.</p>

<p>No fan of the Enlightenment idea that something must be “true” (as in verifiable in a reductionistic sort of way) to be affirmed, Boyleston has said that his interests lie in things that have “resonance with cultural memories of origin and relations to community: What is liturgical, repetitive, cyclical?”  Yet, as poets and scientists share an attentiveness to the natural world, Boyleston’s account of looking for creatures at the intersection of science and myth is book-ended by <em>divergence</em> and <em>convergence</em>, concepts that are key to understanding what we find in the biological world.</p>

<p>“Coppermouth” does not propose a solution or instruct on how faith and biology ought to intermingle, but calls us to the practice of searching, always summoned forward by the author of both the World and the Word. In both his analysis and his imagery, then, Boyleston helps us see that cyclical, ironic tensions are not things to be denied or merely mitigated, but are the essence of the human state, compelling us to come together in community in the name of the One who exemplified “dual natures.”  In the paradox of the craftiness/wisdom of the biblical serpent, in the irony of faith and science coming together yet remaining apart, we can recognize the tension between what we know and do not yet know, between who we are and who we one day will be.</p>

<h3>“Coppermouth”</h3>
<p>by J. Matthew Boyleston</p>

<p>We trace divergence.</p>

<p>We are in an old van<br />
on an old bridge<br />
looking for signs:</p>

<p>a snake slip, a warm nest,<br />
the traces of the thought<br />
when we all were one.</p>

<p>The earth has Alzheimer’s.<br />
It forgets all it ever knew<br />
leaving bits and pieces of a shattered<br />
personality flashing up<br />
at us when we dig deep.</p>

<p>The evolutionary herpetologist<br />
from the county zoo with thick waders<br />
and a rusted S-hook<br />
is down on his hands and knees<br />
peering into a dark swamp</p>

<p>and we students fan out in all directions<br />
searching for the Coppermouth,<br />
extinct ancestor<br />
of moccasin and pit-viper,<br />
a slithering rumor <br />
that someone somewhere had heard tell.</p>

<p>Our Gullah translator,<br />
comes back with filtered stories<br /> 
and the feral bodies<br />
of two boa constrictors<br />
let loose in the swamp.<br />
But beneath the stories,<br />
there is something here.<br />
Wounds that don’t respond<br />
to anti-venom<br />
like a door that won’t open <br />
with a key that fits, <br />
the occasional sloughed skin<br />
with patterns only vaguely <br />
similar to ones we know,<br />
even, perhaps two rotten fangs<br />
tacked to the rafter of a hunter’s lodge.</p>

<p>If such a species were still alive,<br />
we must find it, if only to show<br />
us the process of our combination<br />
and how different we’ve become.</p>

<p>If only to remind us of the God<br />
who looks down on us saying:<br />
come together all things<br />
in my name.</p>

<p>©2009 J. Matthew Boyleston.</p>

<p class="intro">A native of South Carolina, James Matthew Boyleston received a BA in English and Philosophy from Furman University, an MFA in Creative Writing from the University of South Carolina, and his Ph.D. in Literature and Creative Writing from the University of Houston.  He now serves in several teaching and administrative roles at Houston Baptist University, including Interim Associate Dean, College of Arts and Humanities, and  Chair, Department of English.  His scholarship and poetry have been published in more than two-dozen journals, with his research interests running a wide gamut of topics at the intersection of history, literature and theology: the English Renaissance, Reformation and Civil War; Calvinism, Reformed Theology and Anglo-Catholicism; the relationships between Irish and Southern literature; Modernist and contemporary poetry; and sacred music, liturgy and artistic worship. As he mentions in <a href="http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=utoTWXsLRfQ" target="_blank">this video</a> of a reading of “Coppermouth,” he also has “a disturbing and intimate knowledge of snakes.”  Additional information may be found <a href="http://www.hbu.edu/hbu/Matthew_Boyleston.asp?SnID=2" target="_blank">here</a>.</p>]]></content:encoded>
        <pubDate>Sun, 06 Mar 11 07:00:46 -0800</pubDate>
        <dc:creator>Mark Sprinkle</dc:creator>
        <!--<dc:date>Mar 06, 2011 07:00</dc:date>-->
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