Folded rocks at Hartland Quay, Devon, suggest that the “creation” of today’s landscape occurred over long periods of geophysical activity. |
The
account of creation in Genesis 1 remains problematic for many people (and is
exacerbated because Genesis 2 appears to offer an alternative narrative). We can
be caught between two extremes: a literal six-day “creationism” and the
assertion that “science” relegates Genesis to the level of myth (at best) with
no relevance to today’s world. The debate among Christians can go further and
lead to sometimes bitter and even divisive arguments about biblical inspiration
and authority.
However
some misunderstandings arise simply because we assume biblical writers are saying
things which they never intended. So before we examine what Genesis 1 does (and
does not) say, we need to note that Hebrew (biblical) literature in general
stems from a way of thinking that is completely different to ours.
Evocation not explanation
The former
Chief Rabbi, Jonathan Sacks, who ought to know how the Hebrew mind works, has
written that “when the Hebrew Bible wants to explain something, it does not
articulate a theory. It tells a story.”1 He points out that western
ways of thinking (especially since the 17th century) owe much to the
Greek mindset that analysed and speculated.
By
contrast, Hebrew writers evoke images rather than offer explanations; they
assert but rarely analyse. For example, when Hebrew people looked at nature, they
didn’t try to work out why it was the way it was; they simply saw in it a
reflection of God’s character, and let that inspire their worship and inform
their theology.
Or
take the age-old problem of innocent suffering: it is never addressed as a
philosophical issue on the Bible, and no “answers” to it are offered. Instead
we see the unfortunate Job wrestling with simplistic, inadequate and downright
false “answers” to his plight. He ends up none the wiser except to realise that
God is bigger than he thought. Elsewhere, the Bible reassures us that God is
always present to support us, if not always to remedy our ills, whatever the
circumstances.
The
same is true in the New Testament. Its authors were mostly Jews steeped in
Hebrew ways of thinking, even though the earliest documents were written in the
Greek language. Paul, for example, uses a number of word-pictures to describe
the purpose and effect of Jesus’ death on the cross. These include a sacrifice
of atonement, an example, redemption or ransom, reconciliation, rescue from
evil, and rendering the old Mosaic law redundant. But Paul never discusses how
these relate to each other. Like a well-cut diamond, New Testament statements
about Christ’s death flash different facets of truth when seen from different
angles. It was later theologians who tried (with mixed success) to fuse the
images into a coherent theory.
The
pre-Christian Greek philosophers Plato and Aristotle both influenced the
thinking of Christian leaders from early times. Their perspective in turn
formed a basis for the “Enlightenment” of the 17th century from
which sprang today’s “scientific” outlook, which focuses more on fact than on
meaning. And that led many Christians to assume, wrongly, that Genesis 1 was a
factual account of how the universe came into being.
However,
one of the most influential theologians of the early church, Augustine of
Hippo, had rejected this possibility as early as the fifth century AD. Sadly,
his strictures were forgotten even though in other matters his systematic
exposition of biblical teaching laid a foundation for much of the theology
which has shaped the church ever since.
In
a detailed exposition of Genesis, Augustine claimed that Genesis 1 was not to
be taken literally. He upbraided Christians for talking nonsense about what was
known in his day (which was far less than what is known now) concerning the
motions of the planets and the events of the natural world. He even – long
before the idea of evolution was conceived – suggested from his reading of Scripture that God built in to the universe the
capacity for continuous development and change (which of course we observe in
small ways to the present day).2
Theology not science
Genesis 1 sets
the scene for the entire biblical narrative. It is theology, never intended by
the original author to be read as science or history, but intended instead to
answer the question (which has been repeated by philosophers and scientists
ever since): why is there something rather than nothing? It’s primarily about
God.
First,
it tells us that God is greater than the
universe, and existed before it came into being. He stands outside the
universe. He is not trapped or enclosed by it, yet is present everywhere within
it. Interestingly, Augustine pointed out what now is generally accepted, that
time as we know it only began when the universe was formed (cue debate about
the nature of “eternity”). The first message of Genesis is that God is a powerful
and resourceful creator of all things. It’s a reminder that “With God, all
things are possible” (Matthew 19:26).
Secondly,
it tells us that the universe had a
definite beginning. Many people (theologians included) down to the 20th
century believed in a “steady state” universe that, like God, had always
existed (reducing the creation account in Genesis to relate to the Earth alone).
Current understanding, based on astronomical observations, physics and maths is
that there was a “Big Bang” when the universe as it now is3 came
into existence. The fact that this matches Genesis is interesting but no more;
the agreement is not “proof” of anything. The point is that the creation was
not a chance or accidental event, but was deliberately instigated by God. Genesis
is hinting that therefore there is a meaning and purpose to the universe.
Thirdly,
it reveals that God is orderly and
systematic. Creation was carefully planned and guided, stage by stage. This
is the purpose of the narrative’s use of “days”. They have been variously
interpreted as (a) literal 24-hour periods of creation; (b) long unspecified
eras (as in Psalm 90:4 and 2 Peter 3:8); and (c) a vision revealed to the
author over a series of days (or nights). But the imagery they evoke is of natural, logical and above all unhurried
progress. Current understanding suggests that huge swathes of time are required
for physical and chemical processes to develop the conditions required for life
to flourish.
Elsewhere
in scripture, we discover that God remains closely involved with his creation.
He is “sustaining all things by his powerful word” (Hebrews 1:3); in him “we
live and move and have our being” (Acts 17:28). Not only does this allow for
the ongoing physical “creation” processes (volcanism, erosion, earth movements,
and so on). It also reminds us that God does not act in capricious or arbitrary
ways. Civilisation depends on the continuing regularity and reliability of
physical, biological and chemical processes. (Disrupting that order by human
intervention is fraught with danger, as the current debate about climate change
suggests.)
Fourthly,
Genesis 1 tells us that the universe was
made with people in mind. They were created when everything else was ready.
They were the last to appear in the Genesis account. Scientists today talk of
the “Goldilocks Principle”: the finely-tuned structures of the sun and solar
system are “just right” for human life to exist on Earth4. A bit
nearer the sun (like Venus) and we’d fry. A bit further away (like Mars) and
we’d freeze. If the gravity of the sun and the rate at which hydrogen is converted
into helium (which produces the sun’s heat) varied even by a tiny fraction,
there would not have been enough time for life to develop and thrive on Earth.
Furthermore,
Genesis 1 claims that human beings were given a purpose: to develop the earth’s
potential and create a God-centred community (known as the “creation mandate”).
That is the meaning (sadly misinterpreted at various times in history) of the
words “rule over” or “have dominion over” used in some English translations.
The calling is to care for, not to exploit, God’s Earth, to treat with respect
a physical order crafted by God for good reason.
And
finally, Genesis 1 tells us that God
created human beings “in his image”. At the very least, the author is
suggesting that people alone have the conscious ability to relate to God in a
personal way. The ramifications are endless. Later biblical assertions about
God’s character (loving, caring, just, righteous and so on) remind us that
having been made in God’s image we are meant to reflect God’s nature in our
relationships. Violence (physical and verbal) and exploitation or taking
advantage of people weaker and more vulnerable than others fail to do that.
Darwin’s concept of the “survival of the fittest” in the biological world, a
tautology that is often misconstrued, is not God’s rule for human conduct.
Looked
at like this, the story of God that Genesis 1 tells is timeless. That itself
helps to reinforce the belief that the Bible, rightly interpreted in its
original context, is God’s inspired Word for all time. It does not offer an
opinion or angle on what different generations discover. It explores the truths
that lie behind any facts we might uncover.
Humility not arrogance
By reading
Genesis 1 as theology and nothing else, the controversies melt into
insignificance. And it is important and instructive to note the comments of
some who do not believe that their disciplines give them a right to pronounce
on theological or philosophical matters, whatever their personal beliefs.
So
TV presenter Prof. Brian Cox writes that science cannot (and should not) answer
questions about God. “Science is concerned with answering more modest questions,
and that is the reason for its power and success. The goal of science is to explain
the observed features of the natural world … This is a humble idea; there is no
a priori aim to discover the reason
for the existence of our universe or to build theories of everything.”5
Another
TV presenter and scientist, Jim Al-Khalili, was quoted in an interview that he
was mystified why the physics of the universe speak the very precise language
of mathematics. “For me, not having an answer, not knowing, is fine. I would
like to think I will find the answers. [Who knows] whether I will turn to
religion later in life or have some epiphany?”6
Almost
the final word can be left to Jonathan Sacks’ succinct summary of the different
objectives of religion and science: “Science is about explanation. Religion is
about meaning. Science analyses, religion integrates. Science breaks things
down into their component parts. Religion binds people together in
relationships of trust. Science tells us what is. Religion tells us what ought
to be. Science describes. Religion beckons, summons, calls. ... Science sees
the underlying order of the physical world. Religion hears the music beneath
the noise. Science is the conquest of ignorance. Religion is the redemption of
solitude.”7
Which
brings us back to where we started. We are not accidental landings on the
roulette wheel of physics. We are not orphans in a limitless void which has no
meaning or purpose. Human life on Earth, almost certainly a very rare, if not
unique, development in the universe, was planned and executed by a God who is
both beyond it yet also imminent within it. The rest of the Bible expounds the
reason why, and the responsibilities such an amazing revelation imposes on
communities and individuals.
Think and talk
1. Read how Psalms 8 and 104 celebrate creation
without explaining it. Use them for your own meditation and worship.
2. God’s ongoing creative sustaining of the
physical order: Genesis 8:22; Isaiah 40: 225-26; 42:5-9; Acts 17:24-28; Hebrews
1:3.3. God’s care for what he made: Matthew 10:29-31.
References
1. Jonathan
Sacks, The Great Partnership, Hodder
& Stoughton 2011, p. 44.2. There are references to Augustine’s important correctives in several modern Christian books by authors who are both scientists and Christians who also respect the integrity of the Bible. These include Rodney Holder, Big Bang Big God (Lion 2013) and Alister McGrath, Inventing the Universe, Hodder & Stoughton 2015.
3. Currently, a number of physicists believe, on mathematical grounds, that there have been previous universes or that there may be a number of “multiverses” existing at the same time.
4. In case any reader is not familiar with the children’s story, Goldilocks found three bowls of porridge in the bears’ house: one was too cold, one was too hot, but one was just right.
5. Brian Cox and Andrew Cohen, Human Universe, William Collins 2015, p.169.
6. Interview published in Christianity magazine, December 2015.
7. Jonathan Sacks, op.cit. pp.6-7.
Future posts will explore other issues
from the early chapters of Genesis.
© Derek
Williams 2017
No comments:
Post a Comment