Although I fully subscribe to the science of evolution and
cosmology, my main interest in it – as a pastor, parent, and teacher – is the
faith of our children, and this faith is threatened far more by a misguided and
ignorance-based insistence on teaching certain parts of the Bible as science
than it is by exposing our kids to the most rigorous and challenging scientific
thinking. Even if some try to protect them from it, children will eventually be
introduced – in high school or college or through their own reading or
curiosity – to modern science. At that point, if they have been led to believe
that they must choose between science and faith, they will either give up on
science, or – more likely – they will leave their faith behind. Either of these
choices is a tragedy, because it is a false choice, one that neither the Bible
nor faith asks them to make.
Genesis, and, indeed, all the books
of the Bible, stake a claim on the truth, yes, but literal scientific
factualness was a non-issue for the ancient writers and readers of a pre-scientific
age. The Bible is a multi-century collection of different kinds of books
(poetry, hymns, history, love songs, letters, sermons, etc.), and people of
faith have always used their capacity for thinking and reasoning to
interpret them. If I tell my daughter that she is a gem, I am communicating
something truthful to her, yet no one would even consider discussing whether or
not she is really (“literally”) a gem. The Christian does not exist who does
not use some kind of judgment to decide which aspects of scripture are to be
interpreted literally and which are to be understood metaphorically, and Martin
Luther reminded us that “plain reason” is a partner with Holy Scripture in
understanding the word of God.
There are two distinct accounts of creation in Genesis
(different authors, different styles). The first account ends and the second
begins in the middle of what we call Chapter 2, verse 4. (Those helpful monks
who outlined the text with chapters and verses a few hundred years ago didn’t
always locate the most logical breaks.) In the first account, the method of
creation is simply the spoken word: “Let there be….” In the second it is a
hands-on process: God forms a mud-man and breathes life into him; God plants a garden. The first account has
the sound and repetition of a liturgy; the second is a narrative, a story. To
attempt to correlate either of these with the instruments of science is to miss
the real questions the writers are addressing (For example, the main question addressed in the second Genesis account is, “If God meant the
world to be good, how did it get so messed up?”)
And then there’s the book of Job. In the 38th
chapter of this book we come upon yet another explanation of creation, in a
narrative in which God himself tells the story. In this delightful and somewhat
sarcastic exchange, God is saying, in effect, “Tell me about it if you think
you know so much!” and the passage suggests still another method of creating:
the builder’s arts of carpentry and construction:
“Where were you when I laid the foundation of the earth?... Who stretched the measuring-line upon it?... Who laid its cornerstone?... Who shut in the sea with doors and made it fast with a bolted gate?... Who can tilt the waterskins of the heavens?”
Next time you hear someone say, “I believe literally in the
creation story of Genesis,” I propose two questions; 1) “Which one?” and 2)
“What about Job 38?” If a creationist reading of Genesis requires a literal
Adam and Eve, for example, and is used to launch expeditions to seek Noah’s
Ark, then shouldn’t this declaration to Job from the mouth of God cause us to
develop science projects such as, “How big are the bolts on the doors which
hold back the sea?” and “Where should we travel to find the cornerstone or the
pillars of the earth?” I suspect that even literal creationists read these as
metaphors, but why? Why is this passage less worthy of a literal interpretation
than those in Genesis? And if there are no literal gates holding back the sea,
then what is the writer trying to say? Do we look for a scientific meaning or a
theological one?
We don’t need to protect our children (or the Bible) from scientific
inquiry. We can “put the truth out on the street and let it take care of
itself.” We can teach our children that there is no conflict between the
theological world-view of Genesis and the discoveries of science. We can be at least as open-minded as reformer
John Calvin (hardly a flaming liberal), who, in 1557, wrote:
Genesis described in popular style what all ordinary men without training perceive with their ordinary senses. Scientists, on the other hand, investigate with great labor whatever the keenness of man’s intellect is able to discover. Such study is certainly not to be disapproved, nor science condemned with the insolence of some fanatics who habitually reject whatever is unknown to them.*
The Roman Catholic Church only recently (1992!) admitted
that it was a mistake to try to silence Galileo and his theories over 300 years
ago. Sadly various school boards and whole church bodies (this time influenced
by a blinders-on fundamentalism) are making the same mistake regarding
evolution. I don’t want them teaching my kids – in church or in school.
*Ironically, the Texas School Board just replaced Thomas Jefferson with John Calvin in its outline of the study of civilization's ideas. Thus, I propose that this quote be engraved over their office door.
1 comment:
Yes! And again, yes. You nailed it (with apologies to Job 38).
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