If evolution is a purely scientific process, I do not see how humans can evolve a conscience that has to do with the notions of right and wrong, which are not scientific concepts. God, somehow, must have provided or instilled that notion of right and wrong, but then we have the start of the story of Adam.
Moorad
________________________________
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of Dehler, Bernie
Sent: Mon 11/17/2008 11:53 AM
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: RE: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
George- the way I see it, is that sin was always there. Only, humans have evolved a conscience so then it became known to us. For example, a bear or lion can kill another of its kind simply for selfish reasons. It can also rape. That is not a sin for them (it is actually normal evolution- part of God's plan). But they are also not offered eternal life and a relationship with God. When humans evolved the conscience, we are able to view that as 'sin' whereas lower animals are 'blind' to that. With our conscience, we are no longer 'blind' to this and many other spiritual things (unless we get calloused to sin and then blind ourselves). We then have a choice to receive God or not- being "born again" and becoming "new creatures in Christ." I think being born-again is the "next-step" in evolution, and then the methods of evolution actually change (no longer ONLY "gene-driven" but now additionally driven by the head and heart, amongst other biological things). We can add !
"gene-therapy" (head) to the evolutionary process, for example, along with compassion for the weaker (heart).
So when humans evolved, they recognized sin. I don't see them as taking a wrong turn. However, when humans are individually confronted with God (in general revelation) or even ultimately the gospel, then they have a choice to make. This is the time they can become new creatures by being born again... or stay on the old animalistic path. The old path leads to death. The new path is narrow and leads to eternal life.
I'd like to know your opinion of what you think I have wrong, regarding the above.
And Moorad- yes- 100%- the Bible does get reinterpreted in light of modern science. I like the two books approach: God's Word and God's works. Both books must be read. Both contain truth. To ignore one book would be to look at reality in a very warped way (may as well believe the Earth is flat and the Sun orbits the Earth). Some accept a literal Adam with evolution, but I think with evolution Adam must be metaphorical since nothing was passed down from just one man genetically and evolution works in populations.
...Bernie
-----Original Message-----
From: George Murphy [mailto:GMURPHY10@neo.rr.com]
Sent: Sunday, November 16, 2008 3:38 PM
To: Alexanian, Moorad; Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
Moorad-
I agree that 'we could have not have "fallen" if we were not in an
"un-fallen" state,' but I think language of "fallenness" isn't the most
appropriate. Rather, as I discussed in my 2006 article, I think that the
image of "taking the wrong road" corresponds better both to the picture
given in the early chapters of Genesis & to what happened to early
humanity - though I don't think the former is a blow by blow description of
the latter.
Shalom
George
http://home.neo.rr.com/scitheologyglm
----- Original Message -----
From: "Alexanian, Moorad" <alexanian@uncw.edu>
To: "George Murphy" <GMURPHY10@neo.rr.com>; "Dehler, Bernie"
<bernie.dehler@intel.com>
Cc: <asa@calvin.edu>
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 11:28 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
George it was nice meeting you and listening to your talk in New Bern, NC. I
want to view this issue of sin as simply as possible without, I hope,
distorting or minimizing the depth and importance of this problem.
Jesus came to undue something we did. However, what did we do? Surely, we
could have not have "fallen" if we were not in an "un-fallen" state for
otherwise we would be "fallen" creatures and not deserving of eternal
punishment. If God turned some sort of lower form of being into a human,
since evolution could have not accomplished that, would not then that be
Adam. The issue then becomes, were there many Adams turned or only one? Are
we then only reinterpreting Scripture to accommodate our knowledge of
evolution? However, this seems somewhat contrived.
Moorad
________________________________
From: asa-owner@lists.calvin.edu on behalf of George Murphy
Sent: Fri 11/14/2008 5:04 PM
To: Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
Bernie -
1st, sin was not "always there." It only arose in the world when creatures
came into being who were able to be aware to some extent of God's will for
them & to be able to either obey or disobey it. (With my qualification "in
the world" I am bypassing the question of an angelic fall.) There was no
sin before there were "theological humans" - not because our consciences
create sin (God decides what is sin) but because there was no one for whom
the concept "sin" was meaningful.
Then note that I said nothing about a "fall." When humans, in the above
sense, came into being they could in principle have progressed toward the
goal God intended. They didn't. That's what I meant by the process getting
off track.
Of course images of "roads" or the crude diagram I sketched have serious
limitations. There is no need to think that there was precisely one path
that would have led from Point A to the eschaton. Similarly, there are many
wrong paths. & as I tried to indicate in my sketch, the work of Christ
doesn't immediately put us back on one of the original correct paths but
rather reorients our path so that we're headed back to where we're supposed
to end up rather than away from it.
There is a sense in which the "fall" is in each of us, and more than that,
it's in each of us over & over. Genesis 3 is our story. But it's not just
the story of everyman and everywoman, for its presented in scripture as a
story set at the beginning of the human race. When Steve has the 2 parts of
my response up on his blog, take a look at my responses to Denis L's
position.
Shalom
George
http://home.neo.rr.com/scitheologyglm
----- Original Message -----
From: Dehler, Bernie <mailto:bernie.dehler@intel.com>
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 2:42 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
David said:
"My specific concern is that it starts to sound like panentheism or other
such systems in which humanity is inevitably becoming more "godlike." There
are plenty of new-agey worldview systems out there in which humans, along
with the rest of the universe and "god," are evolving together towards a
common future. These systems tend not to have any notion of sin and
redemption, which of course are essential to Christianity."
The idea is "Christian" (not panentheism) because becoming born-again, a new
creature, is all about Jesus and His work (the Christian gospel). In
biological evolution, you have isolated groups, then change. In this case,
an isolated group is one with the spiritual nature- although it is not
'inherited' in the new gene pool but passed along in the meme, rather than
gene.
George said:
"But what's missing here is that after humans form, (at stage 6.1 or
something like that) the evolutionary process got off track, and the work of
Christ in his ministry, death and resurrection and the subsequent work of
Christ and the Spirit through the church (.e., you stage 7)are directed to
getting the process back toward the ultimate goal God intends."
Thanks for your contribution, George. You are implying that creation was
good at some point, and then got corrupted (went off-track). But you and I
both accept a non-historical Adam- no real person named Adam. We did not
fall into sin- sin was always there and our conscience arose (via evolution)
to recognize sin as sin. The creation of the conscience was an evolutionary
thing, it detected the problem of sin, and God made a way for a solution,
which is another step in evolution. So there's no literal historical "fall
event," so I still see the straight-line progression. The "fall" is in each
one of us when we recognize our sinful nature.
...Bernie
________________________________
From: George Murphy [mailto:GMURPHY10@neo.rr.com]
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 10:59 AM
To: Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
Bernie -
If I may butt in - & not really deal with Lewis's views - it looks to me as
if you're arguing for the same sort of thing Teilhard & other process
theologians have in mind. I.e., the work of Christ (which would have to be
stage 6.5 in your scheme) is seen as part of the general evolutionary
process. & in one sense it is - in Christ God becomes a participant in that
process. But what's missing here is that after humans form, (at stage 6.1
or something like that) the evolutionary process got off track, and the work
of Christ in his ministry, death and resurrection and the subsequent work of
Christ and the Spirit through the church (.e., you stage 7)are directed to
getting the process back toward the ultimate goal God intends.
Diagramatically (if this shows up right) it's not just
1__2__3__4__5__6__7__8
(8 being the final Kingdom of God) but
1__2__3__4__5__6_6.1 8
\ /
\ /
\ 7
\ /
6.5
On the gospel being "ther nex step" in evolution, I would prefer to speak of
the church, the Body of Christ, as the next stage in evolution, as Teilhard
did. But that needs to be placed in the "crooked" diagram I sketched rather
than a straight one.
Shalom
George
http://home.neo.rr.com/scitheologyglm
----- Original Message -----
From: Dehler, Bernie <mailto:bernie.dehler@intel.com>
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 1:39 PM
Subject: RE: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end (spiritual evolution)
Hi David- let me state it this way, and tell me what you think (lots of
steps are skipped, like in biblical geneologies :-) :
Evolutionary sequence:
1. Big bang (nothing but energy- no matter)
2. Elements form (matter forms)
3. Stars form
4. Planets form
5. Biological life forms
6. Humans form
7. The "spiritual man" forms
That is taking Lewis' ch. 11 literally. Where's the error? Yes, God does
something new in step 7 (directly intervening and creating a personal
relationship with humans/God), but there's always something radically new
anyway in each major stage- so why is that a problem? This seems like an
interesting impact on evangelism- a message for scientific people to accept
the next stage... become a "new creature" and enter into a relationship with
God. I feel like I'm spear-heading something here... taking Lewis farther
than he intended- has anyone else wrote or espoused this possibility of the
gospel being in-line with evolution as "the next step?"
...Bernie
________________________________
From: David Opderbeck [mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com]
Sent: Friday, November 14, 2008 10:01 AM
To: Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end
I don't think Lewis is making those distinctions; he's trying to make an
analogy with biological evolution.
If all you mean is that conversion is an "evolutionary" process in the sense
that it is gradual and happens over time, I think that is a fair statement,
at least if we are understanding "coversion" to mean the entire ordro
salutis.
But the analogy still breaks down because Christian conversion is obviously
teleological, while natural evolution is not (at least from a human
perspective). Moreover, Christian conversion doesn't happen in accordance
with natural laws -- it specifically requires divine intervention.
So, it seems to me a limited analogy. The classical notion of a
"pilgrimage" or the Pauline idea of running a race seem more apt.
On Fri, Nov 14, 2008 at 12:49 PM, Dehler, Bernie <bernie.dehler@intel.com>
wrote:
Hi David-
Evolution is different in different realms. For example, there is the sex
act in some biological evolution, but not all. For chemical evolution,
there is no sex. Same with planetary evolution. DNA mutation plays a part
in biological evolution, but no part in planetary or star evolution.
Therefore, there's nothing wrong with the next step of evolution, getting
born again, being by choice. Evolution also creates new things, for
example, the ability to hear, see, talk, think, etc. The new thing in this
case is the introduction of the spiritual man, and the way it is received.
I'm still looking at to why this chapter can't be taken literally. Any
other ideas? Does this seem foolish, or am I picking-up on something new?
...Bernie
________________________________
From: David Opderbeck [mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 3:14 PM
To: Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end
That conversion is analogous to biological evolution. Biological evolution
happens "naturally." Conversion doesn't.
On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 4:41 PM, Dehler, Bernie <bernie.dehler@intel.com>
wrote:
I guess a clarifying question of mine would be "What does Lewis say in Ch.
11 that is figurative and can't be literal?"
...Bernie
________________________________
From: David Opderbeck [mailto:dopderbeck@gmail.com]
Sent: Thursday, November 13, 2008 12:01 PM
To: Dehler, Bernie
Cc: asa@calvin.edu
Subject: Re: [asa] CS Lewis and going-off the deep-end
It's an interesting analogy. But read it carefully -- nowhere is Lewis
suggesting that we simply evolve into new creations. His focus is on
transformation, of the sort that only comes through submission to Christ.
He uses the metaphor of evolution to suggest that this process, as it occurs
in Christians here on earth, isn't always obvious and often is gradual. But
without that crucial aspect of transformation by Christ and in Christ,
you're really starting to talk about a different gospel, I think.
On Thu, Nov 13, 2008 at 2:46 PM, Dehler, Bernie <bernie.dehler@intel.com>
wrote:
One thing I wanted to share and see what feedback I get.
I kind of feel like I might be going-off the deep-end. The reason why is
because of how I understand C.S. Lewis in "Mere Christianity" (online here:
http://lib.ru/LEWISCL/mere_engl.txt )
In his last chapter, 11, "The New Men," he offers evolution as a metaphor
for gospel transformation. Here's why I think I might be going-off the
deep-end: I'm starting to see what he wrote as literal instead of
figurative. It seems so profound and touching, I'm wondering if what he
says about evolution isn't really just an analogy, but literally true.
By evolution, I mean "total evolution" not just biological evolution. Total
evolution explains how everything evolves- from the big-bang, to elements,
to stars, planets, etc. Maybe the work of Christ is the latest injection
according to total evolution? He talks about "the next step" in evolution-
the ability to be born-again.
Anyway, I feel strange taking something that was offered as an analogy to be
thinking of it quite literally.
I'll likely be giving a presentation of this chapter 11 at one of the
meetings I hold, so I would appreciate feedback on this chapter.
...Bernie
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Received on Mon Nov 17 13:07:54 2008
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