Sunday, April 30, 2006

Evolution and Calvin: A Speculation (but what isn't?)




I have been reading the amazing book by Michael Polanyi, a distinguished chemist and philosopher, called Personal Knowledge and came across this very interesting passage on the evolution of man:

"A further step was achieved by the aggregation of protozoan-like creatures to multicellular organisms. This enabled animals to evolve a more complex physiology based on sexual reproduction, a manner of propagation which greatly strengthened their personhood. The story of the Fall presents a strangely apt symbol of this event. For as one part of the body took over procreation and the animal ceased to survive in its progeny, lust and death were jointly invented. And as the achievement of metazoic existence established the rudiments of this tragic combination, a finite personal destiny arose to challenge the surrounding deserts of deathless inanimate matter." - Polanyi, emphasis added

Now my brother, being an evolutionary biologist, would be able to go further and such in explaing this significance, but what strikes me as theologically important is the "Fallability" of human (and all) nature which Calvin so aptly described in his sermons on Job. Being a Reformed Christian I happen to believe in a "historical, personal Fall" of Adam and Eve and how this reconciles with evolutionary theory and structure is well beyond the scope here; so I leave that fact as something you can either accept with me or allow you to call me a raving "hardcore fundamentalist." What interests me in this is that as a Calvinist it is always a hope that the requirement of the Fall will be made more clear since we affirm that it was ordained and superintended by God.

Calvin deals with this through Job by answering the question of how Job is "perfect" yet can still be righteously afflicted by God. He does this by making a distinction, almost three levels of perfection. The first is God's perfection and rightness, which is the definition and highest for of all perfection:

"There is also another kind of righteousnesse which we are lesse acquainted with: which is, when God handleth us, not according to his lawe, but according as he may do by right. And why so? Forasmuchas our Lord giveth us our lesson in his lawe, and commandaundeth us to do whatsoever is conteined there: although the same do farre pass all our power, and no man be able to performe the things that he hath commaunded us: yet notwithstanding we owe him yet more, and are further bound unto him: and the lawe is not so perfect and peerlesse a thing, as is the sayd infinite rightfulness of God, according as we have seene heretofore, that by that he could find unrighteousness in the Angels, and the verie daysunne should not be cleere before him. Thus ye see how there is a perfecter righteousnesse than the righteousnesse of the lawe. And so God listed to use that: although a man had performed all that is conteyned in the lawe: yet shuld he not fayle to be condemned." -Calvin, emphasis added.

What Calvin is saying is there is "Creator" righteousness and "creature" righteousness, and the latter is far from the former, even if the entire revealed law of God is followed. As Paul Helm says: "God's own perfect righteousness is a se, underived and maximal, while Job's own righteousness observance of the law is an instance of the creaturely righteousness of one who, though 'sound', is sinful and imperfect and who in any case has whatever goodness he has from God." So even if Job is righteous as accords to the law and human righteousness, he is still not perfect or righteous as compares to God, and never can be. Thus there is an intrinsic "unrighteousness" and "Fallability" in all of creation. Calvin uses the Angels as a perfect example because even though they have never been given the law, they are yet condemned outside of God's saving work:

"Paul calls the angels who stood in their uprightness 'elect' [I Tim. 5:21]; if their steadfastness was grounded in God's good pleasure, the rebellion of the others proves the latter were forsaken. No ther cause of this fact can be adduced but reprobation [!], which is hidden in God's secret plan." - Calvin, Institutes of the Christian Religion

Helm sums this line up by saying: "According to Calvin the righteousness of the unfallen angels is a righteousness for the continuance of which they are dependent moment by moment on the goodness of God for giving them that righteousness, or at least for not withholding it." Does this mean the creation was not "very good" as Genesis records it? Absolutely not! It just means that "very good" does not mean perfection in the fullest sense. The creation was "very good" but also inevitably "Fallable" in the sense that Calvin has outlined - it is good but not perfect.

Polanyi's discussion of the evolution of inanimate to animate creation seems to give us some specualtion on this - for the essense of life requires the essense of fall and death. There was immortality in lifeless creation until the reproductive aspect, or "lust as Polanyi calls it, entered the picture. But with this advance in the first signs of "personal" life came the existence of death, the final enemy of Christ in the Scriptures. So life as created is inherently "Fallable" in the sense that to achieve its original created righteousness it was outside of divine righteousness, and thus the Fall was inevitable and necessary to life itself as creation found itself with Adam and Eve. But this of course opens the door for the full redemption of creaturely righteousness with the "divinization" of the Christians in Christ. For we are now and will be finally clothed with righteousness and perfection in Christ and live in a new heavens and new earth. As John writes:

"Behold, the dwelling place of God is with man. He will dwell with them, and they will be his people, and God himself will be with them as their God. He will wipe away every tear from their eyes, and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning nor crying nor pain anymore, for the former things have passed away." - Revelation 21:3-4.

Amen. Come, Lord Jesus!

Note: I am not supporting or attacking evolution in this article, only pointing out some interesting overlaps and implications. Reformed theologians have taken both sides of the debate; Calvin (a version of the theory was around in his day) and Alvin Plantinga denying evolution whereas B. B. Warfield and Charles Hodge defended it.

11 Comments:

At 5:56 pm, Blogger RJ said...

Let me see if I understand. Fallability is built into creation, and thus the fall was as predestined as anything else? I understand that this can make sense in the grand realm of absolute soveriegnty you think in - that God could cause the fall, require it even, and then condemn us for it - but I still fail to see why this is a beneficial bit of theology to hold, or at all in line with Christ's central message.

And that's my problem with Calvinism. I think it's true, it's just incomplete, and what it's lacking is huge and very important, and what truth it does contain is mostly useless. So you've deduced which Angels will be saved, and how their grace is merited. Wonderful! In the mean time, there's genocide in Sudan!

 
At 3:27 am, Blogger Hans-Georg Gadamer said...

Needless to say, I think you have misrepresented Calvinism here, although your "I think it's true" comment it interesting. Just a few points because I know you're just going to brush me off as a Calvinist anyways (when did "Calvinist" become a swear word?):

1. Calvin's work on Job is not to decide which angels were saved, rather to shed some light on the question of how a "very good" creation could nevertheless fall. It is not answering the question "why", no one can answer that as Paul makes clear in Romans 9. Calvin is only speculating on how it could fall and feels justified with the text of Job. You may not agree with him but he is speculating anyways.

2. God's absoulute sovereignty is attested in Scripture by a legion of passages (Acts 2.23, 4.27-28; Matt. 17.12; Jn. 19.11; Prov. 16.33; Dan 4.34-35; Ps. 135.6; Acts 17.25-26,28; Job 38-41; Is. 60f, etc.). It has been held by all orthodox theologians through the centuries (Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, Edwards) and has only been challenged by modern "open-theism" and other such cushy American-like theologies. Of course the discussion of how God works with "free" agents is tricky and by no means settled (incompatiblism vs. compatablism, etc.) but the central thesis of absolute control in all events is quite clear. Why a certain event happens is not as clear, but that doesn't mean we say "God's not in control and working." The alternative to sovereignty is a pathetic God who just persuades, which is useless.

3. As far as Sudan goes, two points:
a. If you are not working within God's plan than anything you do in Sudan will be useless. I think we American Christians take the "American Dream" creed a bit far and think we are the masters of all destiny, if we work hard enough at it. What a load of rubbish. Of course, I think it is certainly true that God wants us routing out injustice in Sudan, but to accuse Calvin or Calvinists of being insensitive to those concerns in general is missing the point.
b. The Sudanese Christians are definitely all in for the sovereignty of God, believe me. I have talked to many ordinands who have been there and few of the African Christians are in doubt about God's sovereignty, even in the case of family members being murdered. In this case they have a much better understanding of God than we do as they are forced to either accept God's control in the face of struggle or believe that he is absolutely useless over there. Easy choice when you take a look at Scripture.

So in conclusion I think it is unfair to pin those comments on Calvinism, especially since it was Calvinism that made American what it is and once again we are in need of its guidance in my opinion (read Abraham Kuyper's "Lectures on Calvinism")

"But you're just a heartless Calvinist!" - as far as it goes, sure, although not heartless more than anyone else.

 
At 9:39 am, Blogger RJ said...

Well that sure opened a can of worms.

1. This question only makes sense within a Calvinist framework in the first place. If we affirm the free will of active individuals, anything originally good can choose to fall. It's only when you see agency as entirely restricted by it's nature that such a topic becomes necessary to discuss.

2. I'm not going to debate interpretations of God's soveriegnty here, as that's far too grand a topic in it's own right, and if these 3 comments haven't killed any chance for real discussion on the evolution topic you really wanted to address, that certainly would. Suffice it to say that the, "everyone othodox always beleived this" arugment is weak. Among other things, this modern "open-theism" American theology that's challenged traditional conceptions of orthodox soveriegnty was the first to also recognize that micro-organisms might be more influential in causing sickness than demons.

3. What the Sudanese think about God in their current situation is rather irrelevant to my point that Calvinism is overly involved in useless theology.

Acting within God's plan? What does that even mean? Aren't we upset with the evangelical obsession over "God's plan", and our legalistic attempts to deduce those esoteric secrets?

Look, all I'm saying is that while Calvinism represents a nice, neatly packaged, and even true description of God's soveriegnty, but I think it's got a weak grasp on grace, and has some really bizzare practical applications. As I've said before, it's like Newtonian physics: it'll get you to the moon, and it's "true", to an extent, but it's not a complete and whole description of things when you really get down to it.

 
At 10:21 am, Blogger CharlesPeirce said...

I'm not sure I want to get into this, but since that's never stopped me before...

I can't make much sense of the idea of "God's absolute sovereignty." Biblical passages talking about God notwithstanding, it's never seemed to me like a very useful or relevant concept (when phrased like that). I think it's barbaric to trot out passages like Romans 8 in the midst of suffering or genocide (unless, of course, you knew they were a comfort to a specific person.) That Christ is suffering in Sudan along with the victims there is much more practical than some idea of "control" or "sovereignty," which doesn't have much application. Christ's Lordship, Christ's resurrection and Christ's suffering seem to me to have a lot more to do with our day-to-day lives than "God's absolute sovereignty." To be perfectly honest, I think it encourages quietism on the part of modern evangelical believers. That's the bottom line.

I'm going to name a new fallacy after you: Ad Chapman. It means to appeal to your own preconceived notion of "orthodoxy" in order to discount other ideas instead of attacking them head on.

"If you are not working within God's plan than anything you do in Sudan will be useless."

That's not a sentence or a concept that leads to a discussion or an idea or further work--it's the God card. It ends the conversation.

"In this case they have a much better understanding of God than we do as they are forced to either accept God's control in the face of struggle or believe that he is absolutely useless over there."

That's an absolutely false dilemma. I don't agree that the Sudanese understand God's control better than we do, and I don't agree that those are one's only options in such a situation. What you're saying is that, when faced with genocide, people must either grant that

(1) God is in control, and this is somehow part of his plan; or

(2) God is useless.

WTF? That's like telling someone who gets turned down for a job that it wasn't God's plan, and they either need to accept that or turn away from God. That doesn't make any sense. Are we prophets?

I don't have much to say about your original post. As far as sex and death going together--absolutely, from a biological standpoint. As far as any deep theological meaning stemming from a Calvinistic account of Genesis...that's not even worth me discussing, because you know what I think. =)

Stick that in your bolluxed knickers!

 
At 10:21 am, Blogger CharlesPeirce said...

This comment has been removed by a blog administrator.

 
At 2:47 pm, Blogger Hans-Georg Gadamer said...

1. Gav - great comment, as usual. Thanks for the link.

2. Charles - I don't hate you ideas about telling people Jesus is suffering with them, that is true enough. Kenotic Christianity has been an interesting and wonderful development through Moltmann and others this century (20th), fine and good. I still think it is important to have a grand understanding and trust that God is doing something with this planet and it is more than suffering with us. I know you are not a huge fan of "redemptive-history", but to some extent I think it is a Biblical concept, which is important. It is also something which gives the Church mission and purpose, and assurance and comfort as we face troubles. Unfortunately (or fortunately, both I guess) the main troubles we face as Christians in the West is not getting our Starbucks order right. Not exactly true, but I certainly haven't had to go to the firing line for my faith recently. I think that is wonderful and don't thank God enough for it, but it is something to take into account.
As far as the sovereignty or useless comment, I admit that I skipped a few steps and didn't show my cards. The inbetween parts (for me) are that if God is not in control of what is going on (not saying how that totally works with human free will and such - too big!) then I find no ultimate value in believing in him. That is just my opinion and others may not agree, but it seems Biblically supported by Paul with the resurrection or vain comment. You don't have to agree, but a God who is not in control isn't really God to me, so I do find that useless. The Sudanese Christian might not, so I take that back. I hope that clears up the missed steps in there.
One more comment on the "absolute sovereignty" deal. I think it has never really meant anything to you because you have never really thought about the implications or taken it seriously. I know you love to focus on the immanence of God through Jesus' brohterhood with us, fine and good. But the Bible portrays Jesus and God in quite royal and sovereign ways which can not be thrown away. Take a look at Revelation again and see how many times the throne comes up. I agree that this in perverted form can lead to quietism, but it need not. I think it is more like a summon to action in all sorts of ways (liturgical as well as political) since we know the King is reigning and we are to take dominion in his name. We also act because we know Christ will be victorious, even if it doesn't always look like it to us at the time (here comes the cross). So I agree that it could lead to hyper-Calvinism quietism, but I don't think it needs to.

RJ - first off, I agree that the question is only reasonable in a Calvinist framework, but I maintain (below) that this framework has been quite influential in the greatest thinkers in the Church's history. I think a libertarian free will is a bit sketchy and presents some major problems when you try and reconile passages of Scripture with it.

I think Nick is right about my logical fallacy (ad Chapman), I guess I need to qualify more. "Everyone orthodox" is a rhetorical statement with a bit too much emotive force, so it would suffice to keep it to "a good deal of theologians, including Augustine, Anselm, Aquinas, Luther, Calvin, etc." Now that isn't everyone in the list, but it is sure a pretty big group! Especially since we count them as the founding fathers of Western Christianity (if you want to go Greek, fine but there are different issues to deal with). I also think it is important to point out that just because a group finds one thing (demons don't cause typhoid, Mary does) does not mean they are right on all things (God has no idea what is going to happen).

As to the comment about Calvinism being overly involved with useless issues, that might be true of some crappy "Calvinists" in the American Church who think it is all about mind and not whole life, but Calvinism was founded on the mission field. Did you know the average life span of a Calvinist pastor was 6 months? After training the Geneva they would go back to France and the rest of Europe to preach grace (!) and be killed. Calvinism may have turned into some ridiculous speculation (infra vs. supralapsarianism), but it is first and foremost a theology of practice. Calvin's Institutes are not a dogmatics for intellectuals, they are designed for pastors and Christians seeking meaning to their everyday lives. Calvinism is practical first and foremost, though to most Calvinist's shame I agree we get lost in the details. Good points.

Overall I don't think this is a good space or place to consider the merits of Calvinism, something I see as being the best reading of New and Old Testaments as well as a excellent expression of what the Church Catholic has taught and believed. Your comments are good and keep the issue on focus, especially as to the nebulous idea of "God's plan", something we evangelicals throw around too much. God's plan is the redemption of the world through the multiplication and dominion of his images. Anything that fits within that framework follows, but deciding what does when the rubber meets the road is tough. Totally agree with your comments and challenges, I just don't think there is a theological system (that's right, not perfect) which squares with the entire Scriptures as we have them.

If my responses weren't to the point enough, it might be because I just smoked my snake pipe, only with real tobacco as opposed to the smooth whiskey goodness.

 
At 5:11 pm, Blogger CharlesPeirce said...

Hans--great response. I appreciate you taking the time to write that out and challenge redhurt and me.

It's definitely not that Calvinism necessitates quietism--I'd never say that. Note my original phrasing, with which I tried to be careful:

"it encourages quietism on the part of modern evangelical believers."

Ironically enough, I think Calvinism + evangelicalism + lots of Starbucks leads to quietism. You made the point for me--back in the day pastors put Calvinism to real work in understanding the working out of God's plan in the mission field and in individual churches. It had nothing to do with TULIP. These days, though, teenagers wield it as an unholy weapon of exclusion. YOUR faith is definitely not one of quietism, but when it comes down to it, I'd always err on the side of Christ's immanence vs. God's control (though it's certainly important to have both.)

So when you say

"We also act because we know Christ will be victorious, even if it doesn't always look like it to us at the time"

you're absolutely right--I'd just rather you phrase it that way than "God is in control." If you think those are just two ways of speaking about the same thing, then I guess we disagree about less than we thought.

As for the Sudan, I completely agree with you that we haven't had to go to the firing line for our faith lately. What should we do about that?

 
At 8:25 am, Blogger RJ said...

Chappidy,

I want to echo Chuck's appreciation of your comments. You did a great job addressing everything we brought up, and I appreciate you taking the time to go through all of that.

I think you're right on with what you said about the modernists: just because they discovered microbes doesn't mean they were right about everything. I'm just trying to get you to apply this recursively to the church: just because Augustine had some other points of brilliance doesn't mean he was right on everything. There is a common thread of respect for God's soverignty in the church fathers you've represented, but I think we need to carefully consider the nuances of each before lumping them together in one grand calivinist army. A full investigation in the soveriegnty issue is beyond the scope of this blog, but let me examine one part of it in light of something you said to Charles:

"[Absolute soverignty] seems Biblically supported by Paul with the resurrection or vain comment."

Here you've made a logical equivalent out of soveriegnty over death and election/predestination (the Calvinist issue implied by the original fallibility comment.) This is why I say I believe Calvinism is true, but lacking: I believe Christ to be soverign over things like death, and I believe that in some mysterious way he can both foreknow and choose me as his own and allow me to choose him. I think anything beyond this simple statement is where Calvinist election wanders into absurdity - systematically attempting to formulate the process by which mankind is redeemed and how original sin is formed leads to useless deconstructions of texts like Job to justify the predestination and salvation of angels. This is the mistake of the western church, and goes part and parcel with why our faith isn't stronger than our starbucks: because we've mired ourselves in confusing and useless meta-biblical details rather than focusing on Christ.

Calvinism has a long and diverse tradition in the church that I don't want to play down or ignore. You just can't expect me not to get a little irritated when orthodox Christians are publishing books about the evolution of our sin-ability when much more obvious and beneficial ways to pursue Christ (i.e. the Sudan) are all around us.

 
At 1:46 pm, Blogger Hans-Georg Gadamer said...

Gentlemans - thanks for the comments and congratualtions (what?), but I think there are some important points here, less on the topic and more on common mission and helping us all focus more on Chritus Victor, or whatever.

As just one more semi-defensive comment, with the Paul passage (I Cor. 15:12-19) I was really getting at the justification why I can say "God not in totaly control = usless", not so much equating resurrection with predestination (we Calvinists can talk about other things, you know). Just a clarification on that.

I was thinking more about our dialogues which can be intense on this issue and how we can forget our common mission, which Charles really brought home in his "What should we do about that?" comment. I want to address that more in a future post (its always the kiss of death when you prophesy these things, cf. Evan's) but a brief comment now will suffice.

I think we are all pretty frustrated with the culture of 21st century America (and the West in general) as well as being pretty disgusted at ourselves for buying into its false messages and anti-Christian propaganda. I think we are all trying to bring the world under Christ's Lordship, and maybe my Calvinistic faith gives me some sort of overarching framework, but the salient point is that we are all trying to bring the kingdom here and now, as much as Jesus will allow us. To me that means I need to not be so concerned about certain doctrinal points and focus more on mission (in a variety of ways, most having nothing to do with building a part of a house for a week and feeling good about it).

So I am (and always have been) encouraged by our common commitment to Jesus Christ as King (even through suffering and death) and I am really looking forward to working with you guys in making this place ready for his worldy enthronement. "On earth as it is in heaven."

So the question is: Who's joining the one grand Calvinist army?

 
At 1:47 pm, Blogger Hans-Georg Gadamer said...

usless. Freudian slip with the intention of Trinitarian particiaption or nihilistic destruction? I think so...

 
At 10:45 am, Blogger JMC said...

God, I hate jumping into these things late (and having nothing relevant to say)… but it has never stopped me before. That said, I have nothing to say that (directly) pertains to the original post, but a few things to say about the subsequent comments.

First, let’s talk about this “absolute sovereignty” thing. My sense is that ,for most of us in 2006, this really comes down to a discussion of agency. That is why words like “control” come up all the time. Redhurt says as much, “If we affirm the free will of active individuals, anything originally good can choose to fall. It's only when you see agency as entirely restricted by it's nature that such a topic becomes necessary to discuss.” Now, Modern Reformed theologians have come up with all sorts of clever, Modern solutions to this (and, as has been said, are not appropriate for this forum). That said, I am not sure (genuinely), but it seems very unlikely to me that the Apostles, the Fathers, or even the Reformers were considering human agency as the primary realm in which sovereignty was worked out. So, there is just this big disconnect that we may need to reconsider. What, exactly, is sovereignty? My sense is that it is not what you (read all of us) think.

In a similar vein, I would point to the (Greek) Fathers and later Western monastic traditions that do deal with human agency. It seems to me that there was a sense that human agency was positively correlated with divine sovereignty for them. That is, the exercise of will is a definitive quality of being human, which, theological, can be understood as exercising the imagio dei. In the exercise of the will, in other words, we are testifying to God’s sovereignty. Additionally, the will is most exercisable in the context of God’s will. In this case, God’s will is not some magic power like gravity that dictates from without, but an abiding presence is worked out in His most perfect creation (hence the monastic emphasis on prayer and work). In other words, these things (divine sovereignty and human agency) aren’t opposition or exclusive, but symbiotic. In understanding agency and sovereignty this way, we avoid all the fatalistic, systematic bullshit that gets panties bunched up left and right. Agency, Deity, creature, and sovereignty are all intertwined.


Second major point, I think Hans, you are deliberately misrepresenting the non-Calvinists in the discussion: “God has no idea what is going to happen.” I don’t know that anyone but a select few would argue that. This, though, gets me back to clarifying what we mean when we say “sovereign.” I think Hans (and many Calvinists) would be uncomfortable with challenges to sovereignty on the grounds that, as Hans said before, it means that God is impotent. Likewise, Redhurt and others are uncomfortable with the Calvinist’s insistence on it because they see it as an encroachment on agency. So, if anyone could (or anyone is still reading this post and is so inclined), maybe let’s do some clarification work because I don’t think anyone is wrong so far, but I do think some nuance and clarify would be helpful. With that, I think we might actually be able to talk about the original post fairly effectively.

 

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