The next book on my January reading journey is my good
friend and colleague Nicola Hoggard Creegan’s Animal Suffering & the
Problem of Evil.
Unlike the books by Stuart Lange and Peter Lineham discussed
above which are historical informative surveys, this one is more difficult for
me to comment on as it gets into areas of science I am ill-equipped to really
comment on. Still, I can’t help myself, so here goes.
The first thing I have to say is that like the others
mentioned above, Nicola is a great writer. It is well constructed and remarkably
lucid and easy to understand considering the depth of the material. I mean it
doesn’t get much deeper than the origins of life and evil! I was engaged from
the get go. It has left me thinking greatly about the issues involved, and I am
being way nicer to my cat! So, thanks Nicola.
The book assumes the position of theistic evolution, i.e.
God created through evolutionary processes accepted by the majority of
biological scientists today. For someone like me still working through the ins
and outs of this view as compared to old earth ideas this is a big assumption. I remain unconvinced that macro-evolution is sufficiently proven for me to jump in boots and all. But, the book from there helps the likes of me see how the origins of the
universe may have occurred more clearly. In my opinion the book achieves this,
showing that a coherent theological construct can be formed which sees
beginnings in this way.
One of the key arguments is that humans are animals and this
has been downplayed in Christian tradition in favour of stressing human
distinctness. This is a fair critique. While I accept I am an animal, my
behaviour gives me away among other things, I wonder, however, if the book under-stresses
the separation of humans from other animals. When I consider the marvels of human
achievement (however flawed), while we are animals, something has transformed
us into a very distinct species with unbelievable capacities. I would still
want to stress our uniqueness. The book itself is evidence of it—a literary
discussion of our origins indicating a tremendous level of sophisticated
thought and self-reflection. Animals are in a different category as I see it.
I found the discussions of the various views on the problem
of suffering very helpful and I now have a new range of books to read and
consider. This is most helpful.
The Fall (or lack thereof) plays a big part in the thesis of
the book. Throughout the notion of an idyllic perfect world which was corrupted
by Adam and Eve’s Fall is rejected; rather, the creation has been blighted by
an earlier fall. The Fall narrative then is not a fall from paradise, but human
participation in the cosmic problem of evil.
There is nothing controversial about positing an earlier
fall, many theodicies consider the presence of the serpent and evil in the
garden as evidence of some earlier fall. So Isa 14 and Ezek 28 were understood
in Judaism and some Christian circles as pointing to Satan’s fall, causing evil
to enter the cosmos. However, to argue that this corrupted the “very good”
creation (so it wasn’t perfect, but very good with lots of “not so good” in it)
is challenging to traditional readings of Gen 1. I find the idea that there was
no “fall” but a kind of enlightenment and participation in evil as intriguing. I
think these form part of the story. However, I am not sure that Paul understood
it thus. Romans 5:12 and 8:19-23 seem to me to be chiastically related
(parallel) and suggest Paul saw death entering the cosmos at Adam’s sin
and so the whole creation is subjected to futility and subjection to decay.
However, Nicola pushes this futility and subjection further back to the
original Fall. This means there is somewhat of a tension with Paul’s thinking.
Of course, Paul was a man of his times (e.g. 1 Cor 11:1-16) and one can argue
that on this he was functioning from his cultural and theological perspective.
Still, the tension remains.
The whole idea of an earlier Fall which has corrupted the
universe is a fascinating idea. Like Nicola, I agree that our experience of
evil speaks of something “personal,” what the Biblical story calls Satan, the
Devil, etc. The construct presented still begs the questions, how, why, who,
etc. In recent times I have pondered “what the heck I am in” as I consider the
world’s story. What fell? How? Why? Is Satan a fallen angel? If so, how does
this relate to God’s omniscience? As a Pauline scholar who cannot deny his
strong theology of predestination (while agreeing that he has an equally strong
theology of human volition along with it), I consider God of the Bible to be
omniscient and am not convinced by counter arguments. I am left wondering what
sort of cosmic conflict led to the world’s corruption, in other words, “what
the heck are we humans caught up in?”
As a biblical scholar I was somewhat uncomfortable with the
use of the Parable of the Wheat and the Tares to speak of all creation
being both penetrated by good and evil through its every part from creation.
The intent of the parable from the mouth of Jesus and as used by the Gospel
writers seems to me to relate to the Kingdom of God and the coming of Jesus
Messiah, and so the church and/or the world from that point on. Still, thinking
more broadly, theologically this is a clever and arguably appropriate lens to
present the view espoused. As long as we are not saying that the parable
originally meant this. Still, the idea of a creation which reflects both
good and evil is certainly our present experience.
Another area I found very stimulating was the discussion of
developments in evolutionary thinking toward acknowledging that the process
involved not only mutations and violent contention, but symbiosis and
cooperation. That is fascinating and greatly helpful for those who find it
troubling that God might use such a process. I still struggle with the idea
that God used violence and death to bring forth life; but this moderates the
picture somewhat and by pushing back the Fall to an earlier point, opens up
vistas for the likes of me to consider.
When it comes to the question of vegetarianism I find it
hard to accept that this is an ideal ethical position when I consider that the
Son of God who walked among us participated in Jewish sacrifices including
eating Passover meals at which lamb is centre stage. Indeed, the Last Supper
was likely a Passover meal (although some dispute this on the basis of John’s
Gospel, but Paul does not, cf. 1 Cor 5). Jesus also ate fish on both sides of
the crucifixion. I see no indication that Jesus had any inclination toward
vegetarianism and did not expect that of his people. Neither does the OT where
from Gen 9 on there seems no issue with eating meat. Paul was also very
comfortable with Christians eating meat sacrificed to idols (1 Cor 8, 10) and eating
any food—“the earth is the Lord’s and everything in it.” (With the caveat that
we do not bring our brother and sister down by doing so). As such, I think Nicola
may be drawing the line between animals and humans a little too close and creating
a theology that is in tension with that of Jesus in going so far as to see it
as an ethical ideal. As such, I will quite happily go on eating meat, but I do
agree that food should be ethically sourced and killed. Paul too leaves room
for different views on this issue (Rom 14–15) and so should we I believe. We
can agree to disagree on this Nicola.
Overall I think the book is a very fine example of Christian
thinking and presents a coherent Christian position. It has caused me to think
deeply about the Fall in particular and the idea that the problem of the
corruption of the cosmos preceded the Adam and Eve story. I remain suspicious of evolutionary constructs but overall an agnostic
where it comes to the various creation views argued by various Christians. That
said, no matter what our view, I would recommend it heartily to everyone who
has an open mind and wants to explore the theological possibilities around
human origins.
Comments
palm angels outlet
ggdb
curry 6
irving shoes