A Thinking Reed

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

Some thoughts on Christianity and evolution

This is a bit late for the Darwin 200th birthday bash, but I thought it might be worth jotting down some thoughts on Christianity and evolution. This post could serve as a kind of summary of things I’ve been thinking and reading about over the last few years, though naturally they’re all subject to revision:

1. The argument over “literal” vs. “non-literal” readings of Genesis 1-3 is, in my view, a total red herring. It just seems clear from the text itself that what we’re dealing with there is myth or “saga” (to use Karl Barth’s term). That doesn’t mean that the stories don’t contain memories of some historical events, but their main point is to illustrate key truths about God’s relationship to creation and to humankind.

2. “Young earth creationism” is an intellectually bankrupt position and not worth taking seriously. Not only does it require rejecting virtually all modern biology, but also geology and astrophysics. A “young earth” is simply not tenable given current knowledge about the physical world. Moreover, as noted above, nothing in the Bible compels us to posit a young earth.

3. “Intelligent design” has always struck me as completely beside the point. Once you grant that life evolved through a gradual process, it seems unnecessary–or at least premature–to assert that God tinkered with the process at various observable points. Better to think that God superintends the entire evolutionary process.

4. A common response to evolution among mainline Christians–at least in my experience–is to accept it, but to keep the scientific and religious outlooks in hermetically sealed compartments. Apart from rejecting “literal” readings of Genesis, evolution has too often been prevented affect theology’s content.

5. Specifically, there are several particular areas where evolution poses a challenge to traditional Christian beliefs that are still taken for granted, even among people who reject creationism.

5a. The problem of evil: traditionally (though not unanimously) Christians often held that death and suffering only entered the world when human beings sinned. Thus God could be relieved from any responsibility for the world’s suffering. But modern biology tells us that death and suffering not only pre-dated human beings, they are inextricable parts of the evolutionary process itself. Without them, life wouldn’t have been able to develop. This would seem to require a re-thinking of God’s relation to these processes.

5b. Humans as part of creation:
Christian theology has usually emphasized humanity’s transcendence over nature, focusing on our reason or free will or some other capacity that sets us decisively apart from the rest of the animal kingdom (though the Bible itself has a more balanced and “earthy” view). But we now know not only that we emerged from animal life, but that many of the differences we once thought were unique to humankind have been shown to be present to some degree in other animals, including reason and morality. This challenges the anthropocentrism of much traditional theology, but opens the possibility of a truly theocentric theology, which only seems proper.

5c. Original sin: Just as evolutionary theory denies that suffering entered the world with humanity, it also denies that humans lived in a paradisiacal state of innocence prior to a historic “fall.” And if there was no historic fall, then it’s difficult to know what to make of the teaching that, because of Adam’s transgression, humanity was cursed with death and incurred an inherited guilt, with the implication that each one of us would be properly damned were it not for Christ’s atoning death. This isn’t to deny that human beings are “turned in on themselves,” to borrow Luther’s phrase. But this should probably be seen as a legacy of our evolutionary heritage and/or cultural transmission.

5d: Atonement:
The abandonment of a “forensic” account of original guilt would also seem to require re-thinking the atonement as a sacrifice for human sin required to balance the books with God. We might say instead that, in the Incarnation, God pledges God’s love to creation by identifying with it, including with the suffering victims of the evolutionary process, and re-creates human nature in Jesus, making possible our participation in a new humanity lived in restored relationship with God, each other, and the rest of creation.

5e. Eschatology: if humans are embedded in the physical world in a much more profound way than we previously imagined, we can begin to recover aspects of the Christian tradition which hold out hope for a redemption of all creation.

6. Some Christians have tried to avoid some of the apparent implications of evolution by positing a “cosmic fall”: sin and suffering entered the world through the actions of supra-human intelligences (the devil or his minions), and this accounts for the evil we see in the world. I think this is untenable for a variety of reasons, preeminently because it implies that the world isn’t really God’s creation, since it developed from a primal state of affairs that was corrupted at a fundamental level. This view skates too close to gnosticism and is contrary to the balance of the biblical witness.

7. Other Christians have gone to the opposite extreme and embraced a kind of nature mysticism. They view the natural world almost as ultimate reality itself, thinking that whatever happens in nature is right and embracing a kind of ethical Darwinism. The error here is to treat nature not just as God’s good creation, but as a finished product. Instead, we should see nature as “in process” and “groaning in travail,” destined for a redemption where suffering and evil will be banished and all God’s creatures will be given the opportunity to flourish. Nature by itself doesn’t provide the standard for morality, though the study of nature can provide us with knowledge about what’s good for us and for other creatures.

In a sense, I think some very conservative Christians have sound instincts in rejecting evolution, since it does pose challenges to certain traditional formulations of the faith and requires a significant re-thinking of what is essential and what isn’t in Christian belief. But if rejection isn’t an option, as it’s not for me, it’s not enough to treat science and religion as “non-overlapping magisteria” as Stephen Jay Gould suggested. Religion makes truth claims, and Christianity in particular makes claims about God’s relation to and involvement with the world. Consequently, as our knowledge of the world changes, our understanding of how God relates to it may have to change too.

9 responses to “Some thoughts on Christianity and evolution”

  1. As to #3, above, have you ever seen a bowler, having let go the ball, use a whole lot of body motion to try to gesture the ball into a good hit? Is that what it is like for God to “superintend” the evolutionary process? About equally useful, is it?

    As to #5 in all its parts, it looks like you are abandoning the whole core of the Christian myth. If Jesus is not the Apocalyptic savior whose entire theological role is defined by the mythic cosmic history you just denied, who was he? What do you think, now, of Bart Ehrman’s view of the historical Jesus? What do you mean by “a redemption of all creation?” Accomplished by whom?

    As to #6, perhaps I miss what you are alluding to, but are you rejecting, say, Milton’s presentation of the Christian myth in Paradise Lost? He does make the fall of man the work of the Devil, after all.

    As to #7, you write, we should see nature as “in process” and “groaning in travail,” destined for a redemption where suffering and evil will be banished and all God’s creatures will be given the opportunity to flourish. But surely such an ending contradicts modern science every bit as hopelessly as the beginning posited by Young Earth Creationism? And why suppose the evolutionary process, totally dependent on death (if not suffering), is going to arrive at any such result? Too, without the moral drama of the Fall, how explain why God took the universe through all this agony to arrive at a peaceable end he could have made from the start?

    And given your acceptance of evolution, what happens to (a) the myth of libertarian free will and (b) the idea of the objectivity of values?

    If sociobiology often seems silly in its particulars, mustn’t the basic idea that our behavior and our values are a gift of evolution as much as our hair color and voices be right?

    And doesn’t that undermine any idea that we could understand what God might be up to?

  2. Okay, in the order of your comments:

    1. Obviously “superintend” would need to be cashed out with some account of divine activity. At a minimum, though I’d want to say that God sets the constraints of the universe that make evolution possible (likely even?).

    2. I don’t know anything about Ehrman’s views, but clearly I’m going to deny that I’m abandoning the core of the “Christian myth.” My view is probably closer to that of someone like Karl Rahner or John Macquarrie: it’s possible to engage in some amount of “de-mythologizing” without abandoning the core of the faith. I take this to be compatible with a high view of the Incarnation.

    3. In talking about a “cosmic fall” I’m not just referring the view of Milton, but of contemporary theologians like D.B. Hart who advert to a cosmic fall story to account for natural evil.

    4. Does an eschatological redemption of creation contradict what science tells us about the fate of the universe? Only if we suppose that any cosmic redemption has to emerge immanently (as it were) from the cosmic process itself. But if the resurrection of Jesus is a foretaste of that redemption, then it should be seen as a new creation not strictly derivable from existing cosmic processes.

    6. Does sociobiology imply the denial of free will and the objectivity of values? I don’t see that it necessarily does. Maybe a reductionist view of consciousnesses would imply such a thing, but I think it’s possible to view the evolutionary process as conditioning mind and values without determining them. Indeed, I think any reductionist view of mind is liable to undercut itself: consciousness would seem to require some kind of transcendence if we’re to suppose that it’s capable of apprehending anything, including the truth about the evolutionary process!

  3. Lee,

    As usual, a most compelling, thoughtful post.

    As someone who accepts both evolution and Genesis, (a science buff who also accepts Genesis as literal), I often wonder where all the big hub-bub comes from. I like your ‘hermetically sealed compartment’ idea, although I would dispense with the ‘hermetically sealed’ part (implying the one must not be aware of the other).

    For my own part, as a Christian, the more I delve into science, the more I stand in awe of God the Creator.

    But the reverse is also true … I love pondering the scientific repercussions of some things written in Scripture. Just what exactly happened …cosmically speaking…. when the sun stood still for one day as recorded in Joshua 10? Did the earth stop rotating? If so, what about all the other implications of THAT occurring?? Did time stop? (You’re getting a glimpse into how my brain works!!)

    I see religion and science as two totally and completely separate aspects of life that have no reason at all to interact. When I am studying science, I do not expect to be taught about spiritual issues. When I am studying Scripture, I don’t expect to be taught science. Neither exists for those purposes, and to expect each to explain or teach about the other is like expecting philosophy to teach you how to cook.

    It amazes me the number of Christians that feel the need to balance/combine/explain evolution and Genesis, which ends up producing the silly theories you mentioned. One would think folks have never run into any other contradictory things in their lives. Christianity expects one to accept a lot of unbelievable things that Christians never think twice about (virgin birth, life after death, just to name two).

    Science is no different … think about the utterly intriguing paradoxes that quantum mechanics has brought to light.

    Your post brings up other paradoxes I’ve never even thought about.

    My (perhaps simplistic) theory is that once in heaven, all this dichotomy is going to make perfect sense. Think about how as science progresses we are getting explanations of things that a century ago folks would have considered pure science fiction. Once we “know as we are known” I believe we’ll have the understanding of things that God does.

    One suspicion of mine is that as long as Christian groups can busy themselves fighting the teaching of evolution and such, they don’t have to focus on the parts of God’s teaching that are much more difficult to come to terms with, such as how we are to treat God’s creation (other people, animals, and the earth).

  4. I was going to write something general, and then saw that Brenda had done well enough. So I’m taking on the subpoints of #5.

    5a. Death might have a different conceptual structure in Scripture. In the Old Testament, for example, you have only one reference to a plant dying. (I think you have more references to trees clapping their hands!) Death and biological death are not identical concepts.

    5b. I took a class on Old Testament Hermeneutics from Meredith Kline, who studied the idea of the “image of God” from a more textual standpoint. He rejected the scholastic ideas on this point. “Humanness” is not the image. (Angels share it.) I could (and do) imagine other creatures capable of all kinds of intelligence and subjective awareness not available to us as humans. But the “image of God” is not called into question by that fact. And for all I know there is something like a revelation to them that excludes us. If that is the case, I hope whales don’t go tampering with their revelation to include us in it.

    5c. I don’t know how evolution could deny a paradisiacal state before the fall. The state could have been an intrusion into the natural order that would have lasted but did not. It would not even have to be a supernatural intrusion, for that matter.

    5d. I don’t see why the evolutionary account is incompatible with an historical fall, so forensic guilt is still possible, as is the need for forensic justification.

    5e. No problem here.

    For any of these, it is one thing for someone to say he or she just finds such ideas implausible. My point is that holding such views along with evolution does not deny the laws of logic. Some ways of harmonizing may be far-fetched. But what I’ve found is that if one far-fetched possibility shows something to be logically possible, there are often other less far-fetched views that haven’t been considered that are also logically possible.

  5. Thanks all for the excellent comments!

    Brenda,

    I agree with you to some extent: Scripture isn’t a science text and science doesn’t deliver religious truths.

    But I don’t think I can buy a complete separation of science and spirituality either. Both of them purport to tell us truths about the world, so we can’t rule out ahead of time that there might be areas of overlap or conflict.

    Though, notice that most of the views I was criticizing in the post are positions that theologians have derived from the Bible, rather than explicit teachings of the Bible itself (or so I would argue). So maybe the (apparent) conflict is more between theological and scientific interpretations of the world.

    Rick,

    5a. That’s an intriguing suggestion. I’ve often wondered if the “sting” of death is actually the fear and dread of it and that this is supposed to be the result of sin. If we really trusted God, then maybe we wouldn’t see death as threatening?

    5b. I think I agree with what you say here.

    5c-e. I think you’re right that one can take these views without violating any logical obligation. And how far-fetched something is will be, to some extent, a matter of individual judgment. Given that, though, I still think it’s worth thinking about ways of understanding the biblical teachings that don’t seem to fly in the face of what we (think) we know about how life evolved.

  6. 5a. Lee, we’re told that we became subject to evil and death. I would say that that is not the same thing as biological death. Death takes over our vision rather than trust in God. A doctrine of the Fall becomes then not only ontological, but existential. Part of the problem is that doctrines have been framed in “substantial” ways rather than “personal” ways, and the end result are understandings of the Fall that are incredibly anthropocentric. But again, if the focus is not on biological death or not, but first on became subject to…

  7. “Given that, though, I still think it’s worth thinking about ways of understanding the biblical teachings that don’t seem to fly in the face of what we (think) we know about how life evolved.”

    Revisiting is always worthwhile. And in some cases we find that the standard view may itself have had some foreign elements in it that were unnecessary.

    Gould does mention that the NOMAs bump into each other. I think this is right. But we can sometimes wonder if the bump is a misreading of one or the other. And in the case of theology, we can wonder whether the bump is caused by an unquestioned assumption. I’m just more inclined at that point to work the theological problem again from the text without regard to where the scientific boundary is. That something may well be wrong with past work, I am quick to agree with. It’s how we go from there that I may (or may not) handle differently.

    I don’t know if you were following John Halton’s recent discussion on similar issues: http://www.confessingevangelical.com/?p=1876. He had some interesting thoughts on “hiddenness” that were worth unpacking. As with you, I liked poking at his ideas a bit to see if they stood up. I think that his formulations have some real promise to them.

  8. Great summary, Lee. Unless we dispatch with the creationism red herrings we really won’t get to the more pressing questions that you mentioned in 5. I find that the general problem evolution introduces is that it complicates the problem of evil (as you inferred). No longer can we so easily ascribe all evil, specifically natural evil and suffering, to the fall of our original ancestors, so where do we lay it? To say God created a world in which all this was a possibility doesn’t necessarily implicate God as guilty of it all, but it certainly makes it look as though God is scarily comfortable with open-ended, messy processes. Can we say that such a process in all its complexity, beauty, and tragedy is more attractive than the young-earth model? I think so. Evolution is certainly grander, bigger, and thus more awe-inspiring than the quick-fix version of creationism, but the simplicity of creationism does have its aesthetic merits which may be why it will continue to be attractive to some.

  9. Christopher–I think that makes a lot of sense. If biological death is “natural,” then maybe it’s our fear/dread of it that’s unnatural (and that drives us to do things we shouldn’t?)

    Rick–thanks for the link; I’ll definitely check out John’s posts.

    Jason–Thanks. I think you pinpoint a key issue: how much control do we think God has over the way the universe goes (“open-ended, messy processes” vs. a more closed deterministic view). You can guess where my sympathies lie, but I still think there are a lot of problems, and maybe more questions than satisfying answers…

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