Creation Archive > Volume 17 Issue 1 > God and evolution: do they mix?
Dumnezeu si evolutia: le putem pune impreuna?
Credinta in Dumnezeu si in evolutie pare o optiune usoara pentru unii. Dar nu este cam mare costul?
de Nancy Pearcey
Cati oameni cunoasteti care sunt evolutionisti teisti, adica care cred atat in Dumnezeu cat si evolutie? Cand te gandesti la asta s-ar putea ca multi cunoscuti sa fie asa. Majoritatea oamenilor, chiar daca ideea lor de Dumnezeu e confuza, chiar cred intr-un fel de deitate. Si daca nu au acordat mare atentie sa gandeasca despre acest aspect, majoritatea cred in evolutie. Amestecandu-le astfel pe amandoua devin evolutionisti teisti.
Nu toti ar folosi insa termenul 'evolutionist teist.' Am intalnit oameni care nici macar nu stiu ce inseamna termenii. 'Teit' vine de la theos, cuvantul grecesc pentru Dumnezeu. Deci evolutia teistica este ideea conform careia Dumnezeu a folosit evolutia pentru a crea lumea. Se presupune ca viata isi are originea din chimicalele non-vii, la fel cum spun si evolutionistii atei, si ca toate formele de viata moderne s-au dezvoltat din primul organism unicelular prin mutatii si selectie naturala. Diferenta e ca se presupune ca Dumnezeu a creat materialele initiale si a pus la punct legile naturale, si apoi a ghidat tot procesul.
Evolutia teistica e foarte populara. Si pare ca ofera cei mai bun dintre cele doua tabere. Ofera confortul si implinirea credintei in DUmnezeu, in acelasi timp siguranta apartenentei la consensul stiintific al majoritatii.
The difficult part about covering this topic is
that there exist so many different forms of theistic evolution. It is
probably no exaggeration to say that there is a different form for
every theistic evolutionist around. Our approach here will be to group
them in general categories, and to present the weaknesses of each.
WHICH GOD IN THEISTIC EVOLUTION?
We could set the various forms of theistic evolution on
a continuum. If we put atheistic evolution on one end, the next would
be some form of non-Christian theistic evolution. Then we come to a
very minimal kind of Christian theistic evolution (God is no more than
a distant First Cause who started it all). People in this group are
quite liberal in their theology as well. Then we come to Christians who
hold on to a relatively orthodox view of the Bible and theistic
evolution.
If we were to continue, the next group would be
the old-Earth creationists, or progressive creationists, who believe
God created the major kinds of living organisms, but that He did it
over millions of years. Finally, separate from those above, are the
young-Earth creationists, who believe God created the world in six
literal days and that the Earth is no more than 10,000 years old.
CAN WE TRUST THE BIBLE?
In accepting evolution, liberal theologians reject a
number of key Christian beliefs. They reject the traditional date and
authorship of many books in the Bible, which in itself represents a
drastic undercutting of confidence in Scripture. If we cannot trust the
Bible when it makes simple claims about when and by whom it was
written, can we trust it when it makes much more important spiritual
claims?
In treating the Bible as though it must be cut
and patched to convey a 'true' picture, liberal theologians are saying
it is full of errors. If the Bible is full of errors, it obviously
cannot be revelation from God.
Take Genesis, for example. Liberalism rejects the
Bible's own claim that God told Moses what to write (Exodus 24:4;
Numbers 33:2; etc.). Instead, it assumes that Genesis is a collection
of writings by authors living much later. These hypothetical authors
(dubbed J, E, D, and P) were writing merely out of their own experience
and convictions. An example can be found in Conrad Hyer's book, The Meaning of Creation. He attributes the content of Genesis 1 and 2 not to God's revelation,
but to the life experiences and religious purposes of its hypothetical
authors, presumably writing hundreds of years after Moses.1
WHERE DID EVIL COME FROM?
A contemporary of Darwin described the theological impact of evolution in these words:
'The evolution of man from lower forms of life was
in itself a new and startling fact, and one that broke up the old
theology. I and my contemporaries, however, accepted it as fact. The
first and obvious result of this experience was that we were compelled
to regard the Biblical story of the Fall as not historic ... If there
is no historic Fall, what becomes of the redemption, the salvation
through Christ?'2
The Bible clearly tells us that evil, suffering,
and death are real, so we are not escapist. However, evil is not
intrinsic to the world. God created a good world. Evil entered by the
free choice of individual human beings when Adam and Eve first sinned.
So it is not contradictory to say that some day God will wipe out evil
and sorrow.
This teaching is both our hope for the future and
our basis for fighting evil today. The theistic evolutionist loses all
this. By denying the Fall, he loses the Biblical answer to the
question, where did evil and suffering come from?
Theistic evolution assumes that evil and death
are intrinsic to God's creation and have been there since the
beginning. In other words, that God created them. God Himself is then
the source of evil. But then God must be an evil God. To avoid this
conclusion theistic evolutionists usually trivialize evil. This
imperfect world is just a stepping stone to a better world which will
evolve from it. Which brings us to the next point.
REDEEMED FROM WHAT?
If there was no Fall, why do we need redemption? If the
problem is not our sin but our animal nature, then we only need to wait
for evolution to raise us to the next stage.
I was talking to a young woman recently who
summed it up well. The answer is so simple, she said, that we often
overlook it. Jesus treated Genesis as though it actually happened, so
that settles it. We may not be able to master a lot of complex
arguments against theistic evolution, but even a child can grasp this
one. Among those who claim to be Christians, Jesus' own treatment of
Genesis closes the question.
Web links
NOTE
-
Conrad Hyers, The Meaning of Genesis: Genesis and Modern Science, John Knox Press, 1984.
-
Cited in Bolton Davidheiser, Evolution and Christian Faith, Presbyterian and Reformed, Phillipsburg (New Jersey), 1969, p. 171.
(Copyright C Bible-Science Association, Inc., PO Box 33220, Minneapolis, MN 55433-0220. Used with permission.
http://www.answersingenesis.org/creation/v17/i1/god_evolution.asp