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Evolution

Thought this was too good not to mention.

From James K.A. Smith’s new Christianity Today article, What Galileo’s Telescope Can’t See.

“There is a particular analogy often invoked in current discussions about the relationship between Christian faith and science. Ours, we are told, is a “Galilean” moment: a critical time in history when new findings in the natural sciences threaten to topple fundamental Christian beliefs, just as Galileo’s proposed heliocentrism rocked the ecclesiastical establishment of his day. This parallel is usually invoked in the context of genetic, evolutionary, and archaeological evidence about human origins that challenges traditional Christian understandings.

Historical analogies like this are often particularly loaded because our age is characterized by chronological snobbery and a self-congratulatory sense of our maturity and progress. Since we now tend to look at the church’s response to Galileo as misguided, reactionary, and backward, this “Galilean” framing of contemporary discussions does two things—before any “evidence” is ever put on the table.

First, it casts scientists—and those Christian scholars who champion such science—as heroes and martyrs willing to embrace progress and enlightenment. Second, and as a result, this framing of the debate depicts those concerned with preserving Christian orthodoxy as backward, timid, and fundamentalist. With heads in flat-earth sand, any who voice hesitation or skepticism about the “assured/obvious” implications of evolutionary evidence are cast in the villainous role of Galileo’s putative persecutor, Cardinal Bellarmine.

… But the Galileo analogy doesn’t help us work through that tension because it says too much too fast. To invoke the Galileo analogy is to have already made up our minds. When we construe current debates about human origins in “Galilean” terms, we rhetorically position ourselves as if the implications of common descent were “as obvious” as the earth revolving around the sun. The Galileo analogy is a conversation stopper. It effectively suggests that resistance is futile.

Underneath the analogy is a more serious problem. These “Galileans” exhibit an essentially “whiggish” stance toward the theological tradition—an underlying confidence in progress and the unquestioned assumption that “newer is better.” At work here is a sense that faith needs “updating,” and that clinging to historic concerns and formulations is merely “conservative,” as if seeking to preserve historic doctrines were just a matter of fearing change.

The result is that the Christian theological tradition is seen to be a burden rather than a gift that enables the Christian community to think through such challenges. The Galileans never entertain the possibility that some of our ancient theological and confessional traditions might actually be a resource in contemporary debates—a wellspring of theological imagination to help us grapple with difficult questions. Instead, they suppose that the cross-pressure between theological tradition and contemporary science can only be alleviated by “updating” the tradition. On this account, our orthodox theological heritage—including the creeds and confessions—is part of the problem rather than a valued resource for articulating a solution.”

You can read the full article here.

Although I’m quite comfortable with evolution as a scientific principle, I think Smith does an excellent job of critiquing the ways in which the Galileo analogy encourages us to move rather uncritically from an acknowledgment of evolutionary science to the assumption that this must then necessitate the Church makes particular theological moves.

Yes, I said I wouldn’t be posting on Tuesdays anymore, but I came across some brilliant videos – that were not exactly on topic with my current series – and wanted to take this opportunity to share them with you.

The first features John Dickson discussing the fascinating and beautiful story of Christian charity in the ancient world.


The next clips return us to the conversation about hermeneutics, evolution, and how we interpret Genesis 1-3.

John Walton and Tremper Longman, two of the top Old Testament scholars in Evangelicalism, take turns explaining how they approach these issues, and then do some Q and A. If you can make the time, I could hardly think of a better resource for evangelicals wrestling with these difficult questions.

(HT: Louis McBride)

I’m starting to read The Language of Science and Faith by Giberson and Collins, and was struck early on by an irony deeply embedded in the debate over faith and science.

In a way, fundamentalist Christianity (at least of the AIG stripe) and fundamentalist atheism (Hitchens, Dawkins) are making essentially the same argument – faith and mainstream science are inherently incompatible, and one must choose to either reject God or reject mountains of scientific data.

Both offer systems that are self-contained, give answers to everything from within the system’s own narrative, and by design invalidate any potential of critique from the outside.

In agreeing that a choice must be made between mainstream science and faith in God, two groups who look like opponents from one perspective may be closer to being mirror images – same substance but reversed results.

 

[Update: Louis responded to Ham's post this morning]

After all the discussion of evolution and creationism lately, I thought I would clarify something – I don’t think that Young Earth Creationism (YEC) is the problem, at least not in and of itself.

I may not personally find the science or theology behind YEC persuasive any longer, but if you do that’s fine, and really not something I feel like picking a fight over. There are many people who have wrestled with this question and come to a YEC position for perfectly understandable reasons, and I respect that.

What I’m frustrated with is how some YEC proponents have turned their position into something that is causing harm and division in the church, and needlessly driving away scores of people from the faith.

See I have spent most of my life among Christians for whom YEC was not only a majority opinion, but something of a badge of orthodoxy.

In classrooms, textbooks, and Sunday school lessons, the YEC position has been co-opted by Ham, AIG, Bob Jones, etc., and kids are taught from a young age that evolutionists are the bad-guys, that it is inherently anti-biblical, that evolution is really a way to justify sin and not have to believe in God, and that deep down even scientists know evolution has no real evidence behind it and the Bible clearly disproves it.

I’m speaking from experience here, because growing up that is the narrative I was sold by pastors, teachers, and peers.

Yet none of that is necessarily inherent to YEC, so why have we allowed such divisive voices to define the YEC conversation? Do we not see the damage that it is doing; to individuals, to theology, to education, to the way people understand the Christian faith, even to the place of YEC in the larger theological dialogue?

I’m tired of the narrative that evolution and Christian faith are inherently opposed and the entire conversation is off-limits, of hearing that yet another brilliant Old Testament professor was fired over their views on evolution, and of seeing the personal attacks on people I know and respect.

But most of all I’m tired of the way this false dichotomy creates an unnecessary crisis of faith for countless believers and a needless obstacle to the Gospel for those who are seeking God.

I’ve had my own crisis of faith, my own baggage that I’m still working through after being immersed in that narrative for far too long. And honestly, it didn’t have to be that way. [You can read some of that story here]. Yes I have residual frustrations, this debate can strike a nerve still. But looking back, YEC wasn’t the problem, it was the way YEC was held as an absolute on par with the Gospel, and the way it was taught as the only way to faithfully follow God.

Whatever position you take on creation, evolution, or the age of the earth, can’t we agree that faithful Christians come to many different conclusions on these issues, and have the actual debate over the science and the text, instead of turning it into a propaganda war?

 

Recently a friend of mine, Louis at Baker Book House, was the subject of a post by Ken Ham.

Since Louis has been discussing his journey of making peace with evolution on his Church Connection blog, as you might expect Ham’s post was… well lets says “less than complementary.”

And by “less than complementary” I mean Louis was accused of apostatizing from his faith, compromising clear biblical truths, and promoting heresy – so nothing dramatic then.

Here are a couple excerpts.

“You probably have already read the blog of Louis, who reviews books for Baker Book House (including The Evolution of Adam by Peter Enns), but I found it interesting to see the steps to apostasy eroding at this man’s (Louis) faith… Although I hate to see this happening before my eyes, I am reminded of the original sin where Satan tempted Eve with the heretical and evolutionary** ideas of becoming like God and not trusting the words of God completely.  We are still falling for these “lies” today.”

“We can clearly see the seeds of doubt leading to unbelief operating in this employee at a Christian book publisher as the influence of compromising with evolution and millions of years takes its toll. We already see the sad result of compromise with a once theologically conservative Christian book publisher now publishing a heretical book like that of Peter Enns.”

This sort of personal attack is a perfect example of why I’m tired of how evangelicals continue to listen to Ham and AIG. There are certainly people I know personally who hold a YEC position graciously and for admirable reasons, but tolerating such vitriolic nonsense is doing nothing to further the Church’s mission or unity..

When I read posts like this I can’t help thinking that for Ham and AIG it’s no longer about debating the science, and its not really even about biblical faithfulness anymore, even if it perhaps began that way.

Now it has become about defending one specific  theory about what the bible must be, and militantly protecting the identity, security, power, fame, and yes, money, that come along with promoting that theory by attacking anyone who disagrees.

Louis is anything but apostate or unorthodox, his faith in Christ and passion for the Bible is clear to everyone who knows him. And when someone lowers themselves to disgraceful personal attacks on a man like that, I think it says far more about the fear, and anger, and strong-arm tactics of the person making the attack than any problem with Louis’ journey.

________________________

**[The serpent tempting Eve to believe in an “evolutionary” idea - “And lo the serpent spoke unto Eve and said ‘thou art descended from millions of years of a biological process called evolution’ and Eve, deceived by the serpent, began to share this loathsome error with Adam under the guise of ‘teaching the controversy,’ and they both became atheists.” That’s in there, right?]

Enns has an interesting essay in the Huffington Post today, Once More, With Feeling: Adam, Evolution and Evangelicals.

As you might expect from the title of his latest book, Enns is particularly interested in the Adam question, which is probably the most heated and controversial part of the conversation between evolutionary science and Christian theology.

And what he says is spot on, this has everything to do with what sort of book we imagine the Bible to be. That doesn’t make one side correct, but I do think it points us to the real crux of the matter – like a host of other pressing issues in Evangelicalism this is not simply a matter of my lining my verses up against yours.

The battle for the Bible centered on inerrancy and inspiration for quite a long time, but when people on both sides of most Evangelical debates believe in the truth and authority of Scripture it should become apparent to us that agreement on the right “in-“ terms does little to ensure agreement on what the text actually means – and so we must discuss the real point of tension, hermeneutics.

Below is a selection from Enns’ essay [I would love to hear your thoughts on it], and you can read the rest here.

“Evangelicals have been butting heads with evolution for 150 years. A lot is at stake.

If evolution is right about how humans came to be, then the biblical story of Adam and Eve isn’t. If you believe, as evangelicals do, that God himself is responsible for what’s in the Bible, you have a problem on your hands. Once you open the door to the possibility that God’s version of human origins isn’t what actually happened — well, the dominoes start unraveling down the slippery slope. The next step is uncertainty, chaos and despair about one’s personal faith.

That, more or less, is the evangelical log flume of fear, and I have seen it played out again and again.

In recent years, the matter has gotten far worse. Popular figures like Richard Dawkins have done an in-your-face-break-the-backboard-slam-dunk over the heads of defenders of the biblical story. They’ve taken great delight in making sure Main Street knows evolution is true, and therefore the Bible is “God’s big book of bad ideas” (Bill Maher) and Christians are morons for taking it seriously. Evangelicals have been on high alert damage control mode.

Then you have the mapping of the human genome. It’s a done deal: humans and primates are 90-something percent related genetically. The best explanation for it, geneticists tell us, is that humans evolved from primates. …

…Evolution is a threat, and many evangelicals are fighting to keep Adam in the family photo album. But in their rush to save Christianity, some evangelicals have been guilty of all sorts of strained, idiosyncratic or obscurantist tactics: massaging or distorting the data, manipulating the legal system, scaring their constituencies and strong-arming those of their own camp who raise questions.

These sorts of tactics get a lot of press, but behind them is a deeper problem — a problem that gets close to the heart of evangelicalism itself and hampers any true dialogue.

It has to do with what evangelicals expect from the Bible.”

Old Testament scholar Peter Enns has been causing a stir with his latest book,  The Evolution of Adam

It’s quite an interesting book, and in it he makes his case with the arguments of theology, science, and hermeneutics, and yet at the end turns to another element to the debate, that it challenges beliefs so deep they have become part of our identity. So that it’s not just a matter of science or theology, we have an emotional and psychological stake in the result.

“Evolution threatens the evangelical narrative. And it’s not a joke. The threat is real.

All of the rancor, posturing, and nervousness about evolution masks a deep fear: ”If the Bible is wrong here, there is no telling where this will go. Soon I may find myself adrift, no longer sure if I can trust anything the Bible says–no longer sure about how I should life my life and what will happen to me after I die.”

It really does come down to the the Bible: what is it and what does it mean to read it well? The evangelical movement has invested a lot of energy in building thick walls around the Bible, ready to defend it against challenges, real or perceived, that threaten its safety. (If you want to learn why that’s part of the evangelical legacy, Mark Noll will tell you here. I’ve never read anything that gets to the point as quickly and says it so well.)

The problem before us, however, is that evolution effectively challenges time-honored, bedrock, evangelical positions on how the Bible must be read. That’s why for some, even engaging evolution generously, let alone accepting it, simply means turning their back on their own evangelical heritage. The cost of doing so is often too high.

What is lost is the comfort of knowing that your reading of the Bible is right, which allows one to table doubt and mystery and embrace a (false sense of) absolute certainty.

Rewriting one’s theological narrative is threatening, but new narratives must be written, where openness to theological change when warranted is valued as part of the journey of faith rather than feared as a threat to faith…

The question of evolution is out in the open, it’s not going to go away, and it has implications for how evangelicals read their Bible and do theology. The only real question before us is how will we choose to address it.”

[For the rest of the quote, see this post which is a loose excerpt from his book]

What do you think?

Is Enns right that this can end up being about identity and emotion and our own personal narratives as much as science or theology?

If so, how might that influence the way we engage the discussion and the questions we are willing to ask?

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