Them's fightin' words, against the cherished beliefs of many "Evangelicals," I know. In fact, I discovered last month that the denomination in which I was baptized, the Lutheran Church Missouri Synod, has as one of its beliefs, which no LCMS pastor can preach contrary to, a commitment to literal six-day Creationism.* Not the reason I left, but a decent reason to stay out, even were I not so enamoredly Catholic. I really think that Christians' bad arguments and irrationally dogmatic insistence on literal six-day Creationism cause atheists and other unbelievers to reject not only this peripheral issue, but the entire idea of Christianity, and the amazing person of Jesus Christ. At the very least it makes a tempting straw man argument that we should not provide the enemies of our Faith.
Raphael wasn't lying, either: School of Athens (1511, C.E.) |
If we skip ahead a bit to day six, we see that on the sixth day God first creates the animals (24-25), then he creates man, male and female (verses 27-31). In this account, then, we have this order:
(1) All Plants, (2) All Animals, (3) Man and Woman
But in Chapter 2, we get a very different and temporally contradictory order:
(1) Man, (2) At Least Some Plants, (3) Animals, (4) Woman.
"At the time when the LORD God made the earth and the heavens--while as yet there was no field shrub on earth and no grass of the field had sprouted, for the LORD God had sent no rain upon the earth and there was no man to till the soil, but a stream was welling up out of the earth and was watering all the surface of the ground--the LORD God formed man out of the clay of the ground and blew into his nostrils the breath of life, and so man became a living being. Then the LORD God planted a garden in Eden, in the east, and he placed there the man whom he had formed." Later, in verse 18, we hear God saying that he wants to make a partner for man, and as a result in 19, he forms the animals, followed by woman as the final solution to man's loneliness:
God always has the best solutions for man's problems. |
(1) Man, (2) At Least Some Plants, (3) Animals, (4) Woman.
Now I say "at least some" plants for the sake of argument. Literalists have tried to rationalize their irrational interpretation of the text by explaining that the second account mentions only certain kinds of plants. Yet logically, if we're going to be woodenly literal, these plants also would have been made on the third day of creation along with the rest, before man. To make matters worse for the literalist case, in the first account, animals are made first, while in the second, animals are made for the purpose of ruling them out as a suitable partner for man, who has not only already been made, but is situated in the garden. Again the literalists demonstrate their intellectual dishonesty by translating the simple past verb "formed" as pluperfect "had formed" (cf. New International Version) to try to extricate themselves from this problem. Scholarly consensus agrees this is not how the Hebrews read the text, nor is it a good translation based on Hebrew mechanics (nor does it solve the plants-or-man-first timing problem).*
"...and he became a living being." Sistine Chapel (1512, C.E.) |
A good way to study your scientific origins. Leave the problem of your spiritual destination to the Bible. |
Similarly, if we wish to know the scientific origins of the world to fully appreciate its complexity, orderliness and beauty, we cannot expect the Scriptures to answer questions they were never written to solve. Rather, we must use the brains, principles of reason and clues from the existing world that Providence has given us to sift out what is probable and accept this as the truth whether or not it agrees with our prejudices.
Notes:
*From the LCMS website: After some gobbledy gook about not wanting to impose a "litmus test," the LCMS says this: "Official members of the LCMS (congregations, pastors, rostered church workers), of course, pledge to honor and uphold the official position of the Synod on doctrinal issues, including its official position on creation" which then links to a PDF that says this:
"We teach that God has created heaven and earth, and that in the manner and in the space of time recorded in the Holy Scriptures, especially Gen. 1 and 2, namely, by His almighty creative word, and in six days. We reject every doctrine which denies or limits the work of creation as taught in Scripture. In our days it is denied or limited by those who assert, ostensibly in deference to science, that the world came into existence through a process of evolution; that is, that it has, in immense periods of time, developed more or less of itself. Since no man was present when it pleased God to create the world, we must look for a reliable account of creation to God's own record, found in God's own book, the Bible..."
*The context of the story reveals that the original Hebrew word in Genesis 2:19a (http://interlinearbible.org/genesis/2-19.htm) can be rendered only in simple past tense and not in past perfect or pluperfect tense. The majority of English translations use this tense.
Another resource that gives the same judgment is the online Biblical study tool Net Bible: "Or “fashioned.” To harmonize the order of events with the chronology of chapter one, some translate the prefixed verb form with vav (ו) consecutive as a past perfect (“had formed,” cf. NIV) here. (In chapter one the creation of the animals preceded the creation of man; here the animals are created after the man.) However, it is unlikely that the Hebrew construction can be translated in this way in the middle of this pericope (context), for the criteria for unmarked temporal overlay are not present here. See S. R. Driver, A Treatise on the Use of the Tenses in Hebrew, 84-88, and especially R. Buth, “Methodological Collision between Source Criticism and Discourse Analysis,” Biblical Hebrew and Discourse Linguistics, 138-54. For a contrary viewpoint see IBHS 552-53 §33.2.3 and C. J. Collins, “The Wayyiqtol as ‘Pluperfect’: When and Why,” TynBul 46 (1995): 117-40."
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