A Thinking Reed

"Man is but a reed, the most feeble thing in nature, but he is a thinking reed" – Blaise Pascal

Creation vs. "nature"

Recently Camassia posted on how children’s stories can inculcate a sentimental view of animals and the natural world that is neither realistic nor truly compassionate. This led to a discussion about in what sense death and predation in the natural world are an essential part of the created order and what our attitude toward them should be.

As it happens, a book I just picked up from our local library – Animals on the Agenda: Questions About Animals for Theology and Ethics, edited by Andrew Linzey and Dorothy Yamamoto – has a couple of essays that address this very question. In “Is Nature God’s Will?” philosopher Stephen R. L. Clark criticizes a fairly common form of nature mysticism or pantheism that equates what’s good with what’s “natural.” Well-meaning environmentalists may embrace this kind of worldview because of the damage they think, rightly or wrongly, has been done to the natural world because of the Judeo-Christian understanding of reality.

But, as Clark argues, if whatever is natural is good, then we really have no grounds for condemning anything:

If Nature’s Way is to be our guide, it is pointless to complain of mass extinctions, or pollution. In a mechanistic universe terms like ‘pollution’ (which implies that there are preferred states, or real goals) are out of place: there is only biochemical change. But ‘pollution’ is also out of place in a pantheistic world: there are only openings up of new ecological niches, the testing of old-established kinds against new challenges. It is the office of each kind, each ‘separate’ organism to maintain its own as best it may, so that the glory of the whole be made richer through the war of its parts. So the worship of Nature which has been so popular a response to environmental catastrophe bids fair to explain such things away. Think of it – and of genocide – as evolution in action, to no human end. Environmentally-minded theologians often suggest that it is ‘natural’ (and so commendable) that gangs of dogs, for example, should pull down, kill, and disembowel their prey. Human predators are just as ‘natural’, and it is quite unclear what limits they should put upon themselves, or what would count as ‘unnatural’ greed. If nature is unambiguously God’s will, God apparently wants us to be predatory nepotists. (p. 130)

Even granting that there is cooperation as well as competition in nature, it’s clear that nature is a mixed bag morally and certainly does not unambiguously reflect the character of the God revealed in Jesus. And, far from being the necessary source of a deprecation of nature, a distinction between the natural and the divine is necessary to properly value the created world. Nature is good, but fallen: “We are, as it were, in receipt of a divine revelation in the natural universe, but that revelation is obscured and twisted by the effects of some primaeval sin” (p. 135).

The point is echoed by Michael Lloyd in his essay “Are Animals Fallen?” The existence of predation and animal suffering, Lloyd argues, is strong prima facie evidence against the existence of a benevolent creator. Much more so is it evidence against a specifically Christian theology which depicts God as self-giving love. Lloyd rejects any view that attempts to depict violent predation as a positive good or even a necessary evil. Surely an omnipotent God could, if he wished, create a world without such features.*

Lloyd considers the process theology view that God isn’t omnipotent, but must work with the built-in limitations and unpredictable freedom of creatures to try to realize positive values. But he rejects this view on the grounds that it compromises the biblical understanding of God, who is Lord of all creation, and that it seems to make any kind of eschatological hope difficult to sustain.

Instead, Lloyd settles on the fairly traditional idea that the fallenness of nature is attributable to the agency of intelligent beings who sinned. Since modern evolutionary theory makes it impossible to suppose that human sin was the cause of nature’s fall (since predation, violence, and suffering long predate human existence), he argues for the view that “death, disease, division, and predation are … consequences of the angelic Fall rather than part of the good order of creation” (p. 159). Lloyd concedes that there’s not much, if any, direct evidence to support this view, but contends that the overall plausibility of the Christian “package of beliefs” allows this relatively unsupported assertion to be carried.

Whatever we may think of the idea of a “primeval sin” or “angelic fall” as explanations for the state of nature, I think Clark and Lloyd are right that Christians can’t simply affirm the natural order as it stands as unqualifiedly good. Certainly, being qua being is good, but not everything created beings do is good. If we think that all of creation is going to be redeemed (rather than that human beings will merely escape creation into a disembodied heaven), then it seems we have to say that creation will be radically transformed in some way (even if we can’t say how this is going to happen, or exactly what it entails). Whatever else we may say about God’s kingdom, violent predation hardly seems like it should have a place there.

This doesn’t mean, though, that we should try to “fix” nature by, say, making our pets into vegetarians or that predation might not be the lesser evil in many cases. It’s God who will redeem creation, not us. However, neither should we appeal to “nature” to justify human practices which clearly inflict unnecessary suffering or exacerbate nature’s fallen state. This would seem to have implications for farming, breeding practices, and other ways we interact with the natural, and especially animal, creation. St. Francis even reputedly convinced a wolf not to attack people!

Christians, it seems, need to tread a path between the denigration of nature that has characterized some traditional theology and an uncritical embrace of whatever seems “natural.”

As G. K. Chesterton wrote:

The essence of all pantheism, evolutionism, and modern cosmic religion is really in this proposition: that Nature is our mother. Unfortunately, if you regard Nature as a mother, you discover that she is a stepmother. The main point of Christianity was this: that Nature is not our mother: Nature is our sister. We can be proud of her beauty, since we have the same father; but she has no authority over us; we have to admire, but not to imitate. (from Orthodoxy, p. 112)

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*One caveat here: I’m not sure we can so confidently say that it was possible for God to create a radically different world such that, to use Lloyd’s example, there would be a vegetarian analogue of a tiger. Not that I deny God’s omnipotence, I’m just not as confident as some that we have a firm grasp on what would or would not be possible under radically different conditions. The laws of nature may be interconnected in ways that we have at best a partial grasp of, so that certain states of affairs that we seem to be able to imagine obtaining are not, in fact, possible states of affairs.

10 responses to “Creation vs. "nature"”

  1. I’m willing to acknowledge that animals may be capable of sin on some level and that natural does not always = good but when we go so far as to call predation an “evil”, that goes too far.

    When God created the heavens and the earth they were pronounced GOOD. “Being” was not declared good, creation itself was declared good.

    Look at a cat. This animal, by whaterver means, was created by God. A cat (the closest animal to me right now) has big oversized canine teeth for strangling prey animals, senses that are attuned to the sound, sight and smell of small prey animals like insects and birds. Even when a cat plays, it draws the toy to it’s mouth and tries to bite into its neck and then pretends to eat it. This is all hard-wired into the cat. God created the cat in this way. God created the cat to be a predator.

    Creation, and I mean all of it, is good. Period. Can it be used for evil? Certainly. Has human nature been tainted by evil to the point where that has become unable to pull itself out without of that without God’s help? Yes. But if we really believe the Genesis accounts of creation, we must affirm that creation is inherently good, predation and all. As beings with a conscience and God-appointed stewards of creation we do have an opportunity to minimize cruelty and unecessary suffering, but God created predators and pronounced them good, no matter how uncomfortable that makes us.

  2. obligation not opportunity

  3. I’m inclined to agree with you, but I still have some reservations.

    First, how do we square the tremendous amount of suffering that accompanies creation as it is with the love of God? Couldn’t God have created a world where life didn’t have to prey on life?

    Also, there is also the bit in the Genesis creation account that suggests that not only humans, but even the animals were originally vegetarian (Gen. 1:29-30). Doesn’t this suggest that the Bible sees predation as a deviation from God’s original intention for creation?

    The problem, as I see it, is that there’s no particularly compelling account of how creation could have fallen from some pristine state. Maybe the Genesis story is intended to point in the direction that God wants creation to go rather than a description of how it was in some primeval time.

  4. You have to end up fudging something somewhere to construct a coherent theology . Genesis 1:29 can be read to imply that all the animals are vegetarian too (I remember a guy at church camp once telling me that t-rex actually ate giant pineapples which is why it needed such huge teeth) but the language seems vague. Were the plants given as the ONLY food for the animals? It’s unclear to me.

    The overriding climax and general thrust of the “seven days” creation account seems to be the pronouncement of creation as “good”. So I guess I would argue the proper place of emphasis is not what animal ate what (that being uninformed biological information like the fact that birds are created before insects are), but that all of creation is created good.

    This is the starting point of creation. God does not see that “it has the potentional to be good in an eschatological sense” God sees that it is good as it is being created.

  5. WARNING: This will probably make no sense, and it probably has numerous logical holes in it, and you probably won’t be able to understand what I’m trying to say.

    Reading Genesis 3 seems to indicate to me that the main difference between humans and animals is that humans know the difference between good and evil, and animals don’t. Therefore, in my view, humans are responsible for their actions, and animals aren’t. In my view, animals can’t commit evil because they don’t know the concept.

    Maybe I’m just ignorant and narrow-minded or something, tho.

  6. Derek the Ænglican

    All creation groans for redemption…

    The Genesis text does suggest that vegetarianism was the original and preferred way of life. Note, however, that that all changed after the flood (incidentally, it would be much easier to take two of each kind if they all ate grass instead of each other… :-D) Note Gen 9:1-5–the animals are considered guilty for eating blood as well.

    Intertestamental tradition (especially Enoch) suggests that Nephilim blood-eating was a significant factor in triggering the flood…

  7. Alex, yeah – I think that’s right. I don’t want to say that animals commit moral evil (though, I suppose the possibility can’t be completely ruled out in the case of some of the higher mammals).

    My point is that the fact of suffering, predation, death, etc. seem considered in and of themselves bad in the sense that a world without them would be better, supposing that they’re not necessary to bring about some greater good. (Whether they are necessary I’m not sure about.)

    Josh, your point is well-taken. We do have to look at the big picture. But I wonder if it’s not significant that we can interpret the Genesis account in a veggie way – especially when we consider it along with some of the vision of the wolf and lamb feeding together in Isaiah, Jesus stilling the storm, etc. There seems to be a thread running throughout the Bible that creation is good, but is also out of whack in some way (kind of like us).

  8. Joshie: “I remember a guy at church camp once telling me that t-rex actually ate giant pineapples which is why it needed such huge teeth…”

    Giant killer pineapples, I’m sure…

  9. I am so fed up with the current crop of animal movies from Pixar and Dreamworks. Notice how humans are invariably bad for killing/eating animals, and yet some of the animals in the films are carnivores!! Ice Age is the worst, with its sabre tooth tiger who strangely doesn’t eat for days.

  10. Oh yeah, the pineapples were really vicious. He painted a terrifying picture of a time when the earth was stalked by giant pineapples, papaya and kumquats. The killer tomato is the only mega fruit that survived into the current epoch however.

    It wasn’t a complete waste though. I did manage to make a cute girl laugh when I drew a t-rex with a Carmen Miranda style hat. Ashley Mullineaux. she’s probably working on her PhD. in Palentology now.

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