Biblical
Framework
Charles Clough
Lesson 27
We’re going to do the first
of 4 appendices. The appendix really is to deal with the question of the
interpretation of Gen. 1-11. This isn’t
a quest for non-Christians, [can’t understand] natural history in a biological
sense, history in a physics sense, natural history in a geological sense; those
obviously are going to be in conflict with non-Christian culture. But the issue of interpreting Genesis is
largely one that occurs inside the church.
We said that there’s a great movement in the last 300 years in church
history to forsake the traditional interpretation of Genesis, even to the point
of arguing that there never was a traditional interpretation of Genesis. Interestingly, and kind of paradoxically,
most of this occurs in Christian schools.
One of the odd things to
notice about the modern creationist-evolutionist controversy is that the
loudest proponents of creationism are Christians who have technical
backgrounds, who have nothing to do with the Christian campus. The people who are the most adapting and
accommodating are generally people on some Christian campuses. This isn’t always true, but that tends to be
the case, that Christian schools try to be gentlemanly to the point of being so
accommodating, fearing they will drive the non-Christian away from the gospel,
that they want to speak out of both sides of their mouth. This is just an observation. Every Christian
campus does this; many Christians have gone to college and wound up with an
allegorical interpretation of Scripture.
And it’s funny because on the secular campus, where I think the conflict
is much clearer, where you have clearly a Christian, non-Christian conflict,
there you tend to see a more fundamentalist view of the Scripture. This has just been my observation.
[There seems to be some
technical problem in this section, where the tape slips or whatever, but a word
or words are unintelligible fairly frequently, some I make an intelligent guess
when a word is partially clear and fits the context, others will be noted by ?]
? deals with one of the
three strategies. We said there are
three strategies that have been used to try and reconcile the Bible, science
and the origin story. One of those strategies
is ? capitulation strategy, and in the capitulation strategy the Bible is
totally abandoned, officially, completely, and explicitly, very clear. Representatives of that strategy, being your
liberal church men, the modernists who in the 20th century basically
have taken over every major denomination, one of the things that we Christians
need to learn is our own history, it would really help most of us if we would
know what has happened in the 20th century. The way we’ve been taught, most of us have
gone to secular schools and have had a secular history course, but two big
events in the 20th century are WWI and WWII, and maybe the
depression. But that’s not true, one of
the biggest events in this country happened, and it’s never mentioned in a
history course in the 20th century, and that is, between 1900 and
1925 every major denomination went liberal.
Every single one of them, schools were lost, libraries were lost,
pulpits were lost.
One of the most famous
sermons in America was preached at Riverside Church in New York City, a sermon
so famous that it was paraded across the papers of America, I think it was 1923
or 1925, and it was at a Congregational church, and the pastor either was sick
or out of town that Sunday morning, so they invited a guest speaker, and the speaker
was Harry Emerson Fosdick. If you
rummage through your parent’s libraries, people who lived in the 20’s and you
dig around their books, you may find a book written by Harry Emerson Fosdick, a
very prolific writer. One of his famous
books was The Manhood of the Master,
clearly affirming the humanity of Jesus to ? denial of His deity. He popularized liberalism. On that Sunday morning the title of his
sermon was “Shall The Fundamentalists Win.”
And it was the beginning of the great put-down in America of
fundamentalism. ? Harry Emerson Fosdick
? sermon that Sunday morning was because the fundamentalists in some of the
denominations were question supporting pastors and missionaries who were
denying [? may be: overtly] and clearly the deity of Jesus, the virgin birth of
Jesus, the resurrection, physically, etc.
And Fosdick resented, and the liberal always has resented this, ? to
hold a church organization to a creedal standard, especially when it comes to
money, because the most sensitive portion of the human anatomy is the
wallet. And this always works; so it
was in the early 20’s, the prosperity was all over the country so you had this
building economy, you know, the roaring 20’s.
But what people forget is that the 20’s were really roaring in the area
of ? and only in our day, in the 80’s and 90’s has the evangelical world
attained a little bit of the maturity it had at the turn of the century. We have gone through a dearth, from 25 on
up, the 30’s, the 40’s, but the point is that here’s a guy who with four or
five other men, literally rebuilt evangelical Christianity after WWII. Most of us wouldn’t even be here tonight had
not four or five ? Donald Grey Barnhouse in Philadelphia, Billy Graham, and a
number of ? in New England, these were the men that held the line and fought
the battle until enough younger men could come in behind them and man the
?.
So it’s a very fascinating
history of our country and you never hear it, unless you happen to take a
course in American Church History. But
that pertains to this appendix because ? during the 20’s and 30’s, their
accommodation became the mainstream.
What we have presented in this course so far, the strict interpretation
of Genesis, is a new thing, in the sense that it was resurrected in the 60’s, and
it was not held by many of the evangelicals all the way back. In fact, even in the Monkey Trial, the
Scopes Trial in Tennessee, Williams Jennings Bryan did not hold to a totally
literal interpretation of Genesis, a fascinating side note of history. One of the reasons he lost to Clarence
Darrow, it is felt, is that he was fundamentally inconsistent. Bryan was trying to oppose evolution but he
also had compromised himself in the area of not having a holistic view of Gen.
1-11. He was trying to get ages in and
all kinds of things in there. He wasn’t
consistent, and Clarence Darrow was a very consistent and logical attorney and
he just chopped Bryan to pieces, and made him look like an idiot along with
everyone else that was a creationist at the time.
So it’s important that we
look at why, since 1960, the early 60’s, has there been a resurgence of strict
creationism in our camp. It is still a
controversy inside our Christian camp, and that’s why I warn you that you can’t
assume that just because someone trusted the Lord Jesus Christ that they’re
going to agree with you in the area of Gen. 1-11, it’s not going to happen,
because the church, for over 100 years has been in a… either they’ve wanted to
not do this, this was the modernist, what they tried to do was try an
accomodationist strategy. And to
accommodate they would try to squeeze time into the text, and they would try to
smear out any differences between what the text appeared to say and what
evolution was saying, trying to reduce tensions, that’s all. And many of them had good intentions in
doing this.
However, by the mid 20th century it became clear that the
accomodationist strategy was unraveling because at every point that a
compromise was made, it resulted in another compromise. We call this logically the slippery slope
argument. And men who were in their
50’s back in 1960 were the guys that really began to articulate it, they began
to get very, very concerned about the way things were going, and they said
there’s something wrong in our whole approach.
It was during those years that they redrafted things, and out of that
came what we now know as strict creationism.
So we call that a counterattack strategy, and I deliberately call it a
counterattack strategy, this is my vocabulary.
I call it the counterattack strategy to draw attention to the fact that
these people are countering, the image here is often that, oh gee, these people
must be so terribly uneducated, surely they have sophisticated, they’ve gone to
science schools, they’ve gotten their degrees in math and science engineering,
what is wrong with them, why do they insist on this strict stuff when they know
darn well it creates such tension, and they’re taking on the whole world by
doing this, why do they insist on doing this, don’t they realize that there are
other people in the church who took an allegorical interpretation, that kind of
stuff. Why I’ve said that this is a
counterattack strategy is because these people are very informed. It is precisely because they do know the
Genesis text; it is precisely because they are trained in the sciences, that
they did what they did.
The problem was, and most of
these men who did this, as I said, were not people who lived on Christian
campuses. They were men who worked out
in the everyday world of science and engineering, who had to deal with
this. It would be like you working as
an accountant or a business man and every day you’re dealing with finances,
etc., and you follow you an agenda that’s getting you into economic
trouble. And you begin to sense there’s
something wrong here, and so you say wait a minute, hold it, there’s something
wrong in my basic premise that’s getting me in trouble. So it’s a reexamination
of that. That’s more like what’s
happened here. So yes, I am fully aware
that what I have taught in these classes is in massive collision with the world
system. But it’s deliberately that way,
that’s right, because that’s the way it is.
So the half of the tension, obviously, is are we right in saying Genesis
should be literally interpreted, and that’s the question we are dealing with
tonight.
The first section, page 103,
deals with hermeneutics. Hermeneutics deals with the rules of interpreting
literature, which causes us to get back to the issue of language. To do that go back to Gen. 1 and look at the
text to refresh our memory, and turn to John 1 and we’ll flip-flop between the
two, because we want to observe something because the heart of the problem of
interpreting literature is one’s view of language. It’s quite obvious, if you look at Gen. 1 that the verb of
creating is a verb of speaking, notice verse 3. The first thing that is
recorded to have been created after the earth is light, and the light is a
result of God speaking, “God said, Let there be light,” and if you have a
modern translation it’s in quotes, “Let there be light,” a sentence, with nouns
and verbs in it that have meaning, was spoken.
Then in verse 5, after the act, and you notice there’s no other verb of
to create in verse 3, it just says “Let there be light” and it happened. There’s not some intermittent verb that says
God said, gee I want to make light, and then He set out to compress atoms or
something, that would be a verb, and then He said, oh, now I have light. The
only verb we see in the text is speaking, a verb to speak. So what immediately comes out of this is
that all of reality, energy, mass, atomic structures, whatever you want to talk
about, is a result of language.
But it’s not the language of
man; it’s the language of God. So
language takes on a very highly elevated position in Scripture. Language, God’s language, is above all. We fundamentalists like to turn to God’s
Word, God’s Word, God’s Word, and I’m not using the word “God’s Word,” I’m
using the word “God’s language” simply as a device to make us think a little
bit clearer. Because if I keep using
the word “God’s Word” we all think we know what “God’s Word” means, therefore
we don’t listen, therefore we don’t catch it, so I won’t use “God’s Word” so
much, I’ll use “God’s language.” So God
speaks, and there’s a linguistic structure to all of nature. The idea is that language is superior and
that means that language shapes everything else. Why do I make a point about that? Because those who would argue we can’t be literal in our Genesis
interpretation, argue like this: they say all language is conditioned, language
is approximate, you always speak out of your own world view, you always have
expressions and idioms in language, ? language is figurative anyway, so
language accommodates itself to something that’s not quite really ready for
language. That’s true of human
language, but everything that exists has come into being through the hyper
language, or the ? language, which is God’s Word, God speaking. So that means that we, if we start right
here in the Scripture, the third verse of the Bible gives us a doctrine of
language, and that is a doctrine that collides, absolutely, emphatically
and completely with the view of language as articulated by 20th
century philosophers, and everyone else that’s driving this wagon of
deconstruction, and in schools today…
Cindy was telling about the
problems of an English teacher in school today, and the big thing today in
interpreting literature in English or literature class is that the language is
basically a tool of deception, it’s a bias, and to understand a doctrine you
have to tear it up and say Shakespeare didn’t really mean this, the whole
Shakespearian drama set of literature is a propaganda device, whether
Shakespeare intended it or not, nevertheless it came out that way, so King Lear
and all the rest of it, it’s just propaganda, it’s propaganda of Shakespeare’s
world view. So the feminists will climb
all over it and say see, it’s all loaded with masculine dominance, it’s loaded
against the woman, so this is all just propaganda. What they do, as they keep yakking like this week after week in a
classroom, what you finally wind up with is gee, is language capable of
communicating anything, and you come out with a very low, low, low view of
language.
If you diminish your view of
language, what else happens? You can’t
think without language, so if you can destroy language, you’ve destroyed
thinking, and if you’ve destroyed thinking the next step is that you’re left
with emotions. So this is why everybody
wants to emote and make these mindless statements and responses, just an
emotional response to something, no thought given, because if you can’t have
language, and language isn’t an available tool then I can’t think because I
don’t have any tools to think with. So
the battle of our own time has largely to do with this, and if you have a low
view of language you’re going to interpret Genesis in a very figurative way, in
a very simplistic way, it’s going to come across to you that it’s all metaphor,
it’s just men, the ancient Jewish people trying to express themselves and their
ideas. But you see, here’s where you
get in trouble. If you’re going to be a Christian, you have to be a fundamentalist
and get to the truth, because if you don’t go far enough in your faith to see
that God literally speaks in verse 3, that God literally speaks that sentence,
then you have no support for your whole theory of language.
Our whole idea of Genesis is
that it’s to be interpreted literally because language is a bona fide tool with
which we understand the world. If you
write me a letter, do you intend me to have trouble interpreting it, and that I
have to sit and read your letter 45 times and get 53 interpretations out of
it? It may come across that way, but
you certainly don’t intend that. You
intend to communicate an idea to me when you write a letter. Can’t we accord the same opinion about God?
When God wants to speak to us, does He really intend that we have this
tremendous problem understanding what it is He’s trying to say; it thwarts the
whole idea of language. So from a
Biblical viewpoint there shouldn’t be an interpretation problem to start with
in Genesis. This is history. The only
reason people have problems with it is that it doesn’t line up very well. Remember I showed this overhead, which
clearly shows we have a problem; on the right hand side the Genesis text is
giving us a narration of events that conflict in very, very fundamental ways
with the left side of the diagram, which is what we’re taught in evolution in
the school system. It doesn’t require a
genius to see we’ve got a big problem here; we’ve got major conflicts going on
from one end of that list to the other. So what do you do about that?
That’s where the game of
footsy comes in, and that’s how accomodationism started, can’t we get rid of
some of this, this is an embarrassment, here we are, modern people e going
around with this ancient document that conflicts so much with what the world
says. We want to get to the gospel, so in order to get to the gospel we’ll try
to get rid of this embarrassment. The
problem is, if you dilute this you never do get to the gospel, because now the
Christ that you’re talking about isn’t the Christ of Scripture, it’s another
Christ. As one guy said, Jesus Christ
is a chameleon, He takes on the color of the environment, it becomes a
content-less slogan unless we’re talking about the Christ of the Scripture,
that’s the only Christ there is, there’s no other Christ. There’s reconstructions of men, trying to
reconstruct Jesus, and there’s the liberalist Jesus and the modern Jesus, and
the ecumenical Jesus, there’s lot of Jesus’.
But the real Jesus is defined only in Scripture, so we have to go through
this embarrassment, this Genesis text that conflicts completely with our
world. It’s part of a load we carry as
Christians, and we shouldn’t look upon it as a load, or as an embarrassment,
it’s defining answers for which the pagan has none. That’s what we’ve tried to say as we’ve gone through creation,
the fall, the flood and the covenant.
We said point after point after point after point, whether it’s in
psychology, in the area of language, the area of knowing, the area of morals,
whether it’s in the area dealing with evil, it’s not that there are other
answers out there, they don’t have any answers.
Do you know what the word in
the Greek and Hebrew for unbelief is, it’s translated by this anemic little
word in our English called “vanity,” but what it really means is just hot
air. Unbelief is just a lot of hot air,
and we have to show people, hot air, that’s what it all is, it doesn’t have a
basis. It’s hard to do that. It’s not just that you can just call it hot
air; you’ve got to show that it’s hot air, and that’s what we’ve tried as we’ve
gone through here. It’s not that there
are many answers in the world, there are very few answers, and the Bible gives
the only answers in the final analysis.
So hermeneutics and
presuppositions, what do we mean by this?
We mean that how you interpret literature is controlled by your doctrine
of language, and in turn your doctrine of language derives from your
presuppositions about whether or not God’s Word is God’s Word. That’s your starting point. If you start off denying that you’re going
to come out with one view of language; if you start affirming that, you’re
going to come out with another view of language. That’s because everything hinges on the fact that in Scripture we
go back to this two-level idea, we have the Creator and the creature; we have
Language with a capital “L” up here and we have language down here with a
little “l.” This Language isn’t the
same as this language. It corresponds
with it, but this is the Language of omniscience. This is Language that is perfectly and logically consistent in
every detail, it is a Language that commands a total and perfect knowledge,
whereas we are finite creatures and we have pieces, and we understand a little
bit here and a little bit there, and it looks conflicting and foggy to us.
In John 1, after we’ve
thought a little bit about Genesis 1, think what John has done for us in his
Gospel. What John has done under the
inspiration of the Holy Spirit is he has digested and extended the meaning of
Gen. 1. In Gen. 1 God speaks and He
says “Let there be light” and there was light.
God says “Let there be” this, and there was that. What John does, he says now isn’t this
interesting, “In the beginning,” now there’s a phrase, a direct copy from Gen.
1:1, let’s line those two statements up.
Gen. 1:1 says “In the beginning God created,” and we know that He
created by means of language, God said and it was, God said and it was, etc. Now John comes along in the New Testament
and he says, “In the beginning was the Word, and the Word was God.” What do you think impressed the apostle John
about the Genesis text? [can’t hear
answer] precisely. What’s bothering 20th
century people? The whole issue of
language. Look at the word that he uses
for the Second Person of the Trinity.
Logos! This is the word that
means thought, it’s the word that means expression of thought. It means the thought and the word of the
thought that expresses it. So what John
is amazed at, and under the Holy Spirit he writes this in his gospel, “In the
beginning there was language, and language was with God, and language was God.”
That’s the high order with which he held language.
Think of the implications
this has for training people to read.
Do you know why literacy was promoted in Western civilization? To read the Bible, to converse with God and
understand what He had said. Think of
this. Who defined the modern German
language? Luther. How did he do that? By translating the Bible. Luther set up modern German. Who was it that basically structured the
English language? The King James
Version of the Bible. Why were there
great demands in the 18th and 19th centuries to teach
children to read? So they could read
the Bible. Why did people learn to
read? There were only about 3 or 4
books in the average American home; one was Blackstone’s commentaries on the
law, which amazingly was a best seller in New England, colonial America, the
Bible and the Almanac. That was
basically most people’s library, the people who could afford it had classic
books of course, but that was it, and people learned to read because they
wanted to learn what was on God’s mind about themselves. That’s the high order, the great motivation
behind literacy.
Now as we come to our day,
when systematically we have by law excluded ? claims from the classroom, and
we’ve got a problem with literacy. All
kids can read in the sense that they understand the letters, but they can’t put
them together into coherent thought.
Why is that? No motivation. Why should I bother to learn how to read and
go through all the disciplines of learning language and expressing myself in
language when there’s nothing really there that you’ve shown me that’s worth
talking about? I can understand
football without reading. I can have a
good time, I don’t have to learn to read to have a good time. I don’t even have to read to do a lot of
manual labor. So what’s the motivation?
We can’t talk about that, it’s a violation of the separation of church
and state. So by snapping the umbilical
cord underneath the theistic justification of language, we’ve destroyed the
motive to learn language. It’s very
simple.
So we want to understand
when we come to Gen. 1-11 it’s built on this very high order, and John, when
John writes of this he is so excited about the fact that there’s thought,
there’s reason, somebody is talking out there, that he calls the second
personality of the Trinity “the Word,” the very one noun that he can find in
the Greek language to describe that which is most significant about that Second
Person of the Trinity. He expresses the
nature of God Himself, He has a message and can be read. Enough said about language and Genesis.
Now let’s go on page 104 to
the traditional interpretation. We’ve
mentioned that if you want to learn about the Old Testament, often you can get
interpretations by watching what the New Testament does with the Old Testament
and I’ve listed many phrases. But I want to take you to Matt. 19:4-5 because it
is a classic instance of Jesus apparently not knowing what every college
freshman knows who has taken a course in Biblical criticism. Jesus, to the modern man, makes a terrible
mistake here. He is dealing with a very
practical question, notice, very practical, divorce. “And He answered and said, Have you not read, that He who created
them from the beginning made them male and female,” if you have a marginal
reference, somewhere there should be a reference to where that is taken from, I
think you’ll find a reference to Gen. 1.
In verse 5, “And said, For this cause a man shall leave his father and
mother, and shall cleave to his wife; and the two shall become one flesh,” and
this points to Gen. 2.
What does every freshman
learn in a course on the Bible in our skeptical classrooms? That there are two accounts of creation,
Gen. 1 and Gen. 2, and they’re both in conflict. Isn’t this interesting, that
Jesus either is unaware of the conflict, or as the author of both Gen 1 and 2
He knew very well there was no conflict, in which case the joke is on the
people who think there’s a conflict.
And it must say something about the fact that the way they perceive the
story is somewhat flawed, so flawed that they really honestly have convinced
themselves that there’s a conflict there, they’re unable to read is the
problem. In all seriousness, they are
unable to read the text. Here we have
the author of the text interpreting the text for us, and we have teacher after
teacher, article writer and textbook writer after textbook writer telling us
all Jesus is wrong, Jesus shares that 1st century Judaism, He was a
man of His time, He was trapped in His own age, trapped in His own culture, He
couldn’t transcend His own culture, didn’t really have the added benefits that
we have today, and didn’t really know what He was talking about.
This is an example of why we
say that the literal straightforward interpretation of Genesis that we have
promoted is the same one you find in the New Testament. Turn to Matt. 23 to see another little
casual reference to Genesis. It doesn’t
require a genius to see that the New Testament authors have no sense whatsoever
that the narrative of Genesis is somehow symbolical. Matt. 23:35, who is the speaker here? Jesus, same guy that made the mistake in chapter 19 makes another
one. Look at this: “That upon you may
fall the guilt of all the righteous blood shed on earth, from the blood of
righteous Abel to the blood of Zechariah, the son of Berechiah, whom you
murdered between the temple and the altar.”
Imagine that, Jesus believes in a literal Abel, He actually believed
those stories in Gen. 1, and He also points out that there was no blood shed
before the murder story in Gen. 4. That’s interesting. What do you do about this? If you’re going to
capitulate, what you’re going to say is yes, Jesus believed in literal
interpretation, He was just wrong, that’s all. But if you’re an accomodationist
what are you going to do; you have a problem.
Here’s where you go one way
or the other, it’s sort of like you have one foot on the boat, another on the
dock and the boat’s going away from the dock.
That’s what happening here with the accomodationists, because whatever
they do to soften the conflict, since Jesus believers in a literal
interpretation, now they’ve got to soften Him, so to accommodate the Genesis
text over here requires us to accommodate Jesus over there, and that’s
precisely why we have counterattack strategy, because these gimmicks don’t work
in the real world. You can’t give up
over here without causing problems over there.
The Bible is like a set of dominoes, you knock one over and it goes all
the way around the room. Here’s
why. These are verses that it’s
imbedded in.
Look at Matt. 24:37, Jesus
is still speaking, what is He talking about?
“For the coming of the Son of man will be just like the days of Noah,
[38] For as in those days which were before the flood they were eating and
drinking, they were marrying and giving in marriage, until the day that Noah
entered the ark, [39] and they did not understand until the flood came and took
them all away, so shall the coming of the Son of Man be.” Notice took them all
away, not some away. Clearly Jesus
knows the details of that Genesis story. Why does Jesus so stubbornly adhere to
these details? Not only does the New
Testament adhere to the literalness of Genesis, and this is another interesting
point, it’s something that’s woven through the New Testament, [blank spot]
… if this line represents
information stored in Gen. 1-11, then the New Testament not only affirms this
information, the New Testament offers additional information that is even more
literal than the Genesis text. I John
3:12 is an example of where the New Testament almost tells us how Cain slew his
brother. Just a little verb stuck in here, but the verb may very well be
asserting details about the first murder that are not recorded in Genesis. Verse 12 says we should “not [be] as Cain
who was of the evil one, and slew his brother.
And for what reason did he slay him? Because his deeds were evil, had
his brother’s were righteous.” If you look up the word “slew” in the Greek the
context of that verb is cut with a knife.
This adds insight into perhaps how Cain got the idea how to kill his
brother. Think about it, no TV, he
couldn’t learn about violence that way, didn’t have any murder stories, where
did Cain get the idea how to kill his brother?
What were knives used for prior to the murder? To kill lambs for sacrifice.
So it’s very easy to think about how Cain watched how his father, Adam,
sliced the throat of a lamb, and it bled to death and that was a
sacrifice. Ah, gee, I wonder what would
happen if I did that to dear brother; it’s these little details.
If you really want to see a
detail, turn to Jude 14. If Jude was
Jesus’ half brother, and it seems likely he was, this comes out of a family of
boys, raised by the same parents, taught, discussed the Bible, apparently in
their home, part of their Jewish culture, and would reflect therefore the
understanding of the Genesis text that was concurrent with Jesus’ own
family. “And about these also Enoch, in
the seventh generation from Adam, prophesied, saying, Behold, the Lord came
with many thousands of His holy ones, [15] to execute judgment upon all,” etc. This sermon of Enoch in verse 14-15 is
nowhere to be found in the Genesis narrative.
Where did it come from then? Nobody knows, whether it’s the Holy Spirit
that added this revelation and gave special memory to the apostles, or whether
in fact segments of this knowledge had been preserved in Jewish tradition,
because Judaism is very rich in tradition, there are these little pieces of
knowledge that the New Testament fills in, little segments. What’s so striking
about these little segments is that they all fit a literal interpretation. Observe in this text, for example, in verse
14, “Enoch, the seventh generation from Adam.”
One of the accomodationists tactics to try to get more time in Genesis
to accommodate, is to stretch the genealogies. How do you stretch a genealogy?
By making one name the grandfather of the next name, or the great
grandfather, and you spread it apart.
Excuse me, Jude says Enoch is the seventh generation from Adam. He doesn’t allow us the rubber band
prop. That’s what I mean when you start
seriously looking at how the New Testament is treating the Old Testament it
won’t permit you to get fast and loose with it, it pins you down even
more.
The traditional
interpretation, and by tradition we mean the tradition of the Jews, the
tradition of the apostles in the early church, this traditional interpretation
has been with us for centuries. And the
irony is, on the part of the accomodationists, that nobody really seriously
knew how to interpret Genesis until 1900.
Doesn’t something strike you as kind of odd about that? The Holy Spirit wrote the text, the Holy
Spirit taught the church, the Holy Spirit indwelt every believer since Pentecost,
and we have to wait until 1940 before we understand what really is going on in
Gen.1. Do we have to wait until the
year 3010 to find out what went on in I Kings?
There’s something wrong here, something doesn’t fit. So that’s the argument for the traditional
interpretation being the correct one.
It’s not saying that tradition is always right, but it’s saying on such
fundamental issues that the church has been screwed up for 19½ centuries and
can’t get it straight in Gen. 1, what on earth are we doing with the rest of
the Bible? There’s something
intuitively wrong with this kind of thought.
Let’s go to the interrelated
structure of Genesis. Genesis is built
with a certain logical coherence. Gen.
1 and 2 very clearly mark off the creation section of the text. Clearly 3-5 deals with the results of the
fall, the fall and its results, it depicts the rise of civilization, the
contamination, and all the rest of it that’s going on. Gen. 6-8 are clearly dealing with the flood,
and 9-11 are dealing with the post-flood situation. Observe what happens. What do we learn about creation? We learn
that there are certain specific kinds; there are certain categories that are
set up here, the Creator/creature distinction, the man/nature distinction. Those are distinctions that were set up and
established at that point. They’re
inviolable, they never are transgressed. We learned here that the introduction
of evil, the origin of evil creates the curse of death, so we said evil has a
point in time where it begins and goes on until God deals with it in the
future. That marks us off from being
pagan; the pagans don’t have an origin of evil, evil always was. Here we have a salvation and we have the
concept of judgment for sin. And here
we have the new heavens and the new earth.
So we have in this microcosm of the first 11 chapters of Genesis the
entire rest of the Bible depicted if you think about it, it’s the whole story:
origins, sin, salvation and resolution.
Now if you tamper with
pieces of this, you rapidly create an unraveling sweater situation. Think for example what happens if in Gen.
1-2 you begin to expand the days into ages.
Why would you do that? Because
what you’re trying to do is accommodate the text to what appears to be a very
old universe, and the old parts of the universe have fossils in them, etc. and
if that’s the case, now what you have done is… here come the dominos, if we do
this little compromise here we wind up having to modify what we mean by this
over here, now it’s really not death that starts in chapter 3-5, it’s only the
death of man that starts in 3-5.
Whereas death always preceded in this case, because days are ages, and
so in all those millions of years we had fossils going on, etc. so we had death
happening; so we had natural evil, so the fall now becomes smaller, does it
not? Don’t you feel what’s happening
here, that this word death is now contracting down, now it’s not death of
animals, we’ve got plenty of death of animals going on before this if the days
are ages.
What we’ve done is we’ve
compromised this word also, because now it’s not natural evil and human evil
that started at the fall, it’s only human evil that starts at the fall, not
natural. So storms, chaos, and things
in nature that are bad must not be bad, because they preceded the fall. If that’s the case, then that also carries
over further on down in the textual structure, because now what we’ve compromised
those two things because we’ve made this little accommodation, now what happens
in the area of salvation? Because this
flood, whatever it is, can’t be found in the strata any more because now we’ve
explained all the rock strata back here, this is where the strata was laid down
because that’s millions and millions of years old, now what we have done is we
have to adjust the flood. So this salvation and judgment gets contracted down
because that becomes a minor Tigris-Euphrates river valley overflow
situation. It’s got to be, because
there’s no evidence of a global flood.
That was all pushed back when we made the days into ages. And if that’s the case, and the flood was
only local, and God said He’d never bring another one, what does that do to the
new heavens and the new earth? It
trivializes the whole covenant now.
I hope you see, this is one
of many dramas that we could show, but you start fiddling around with how you
interpret one part of the text, and you’re going to get in hot water. And this
is the lesson that has been learned for the past 200 years, every time
accommodationism has been tried it winds up doing this, and that is why a
group of men finally said in the 1950’s and 60’s, this has gone far enough, we
are not going to do this any more. As Christians we are going to approach the
text and if the text conflicts then the text conflicts, but we are not going to
use a rubber Bible and stretch it everywhere we want to stretch it.
We come then to some of the
final points, I’ve just listed for you the favorite locations, I’ve just
illustrated one of the several. I
illustrated the first one, on page 105, the days of creation. But there are others, for example, on page
106 I list the Adam to Abraham genealogies, that’s a favorite location for
getting more time, and the problem is the formula, when you have a formula that
X was n years and begat Y, and
the days after he begat Y were n
years, and all the days that X lived were n
plus n years, it tends to give
you the impression, whoever wrote it, meant that the days be taken literally
and the years be taken literally because he’s adding them. He’s locking it all up in a formula
here. You can’t play fast and loose
through this stuff. I think its better,
far more integrity if you have a problem with this, just throwing the whole
Bible out, a lot more integrity to say it’s wrong, just like the
capitulationist say, forget it, just forget it. I can read, it doesn’t fit so forget it. But don’t be a plastic person and start
using rubber to stretch the text to fit every little problem I’ve got.
I conclude on page 106-107
with the pre-Genesis 1 existence, and I want to approach this before we get on
to the next appendix. This seems to be
coming back, for some ungodly reason in our own day, because some evangelicals
in Christian schools are now teaching that Gen. 1:1, 1:2 and 1:3, are to be
interpreted such that verse 3 becomes the first act of creation, so that the
heavens and the earth that are here are speaking of what’s happening beyond verse
3, and the earth therefore, that appears in verse 2 was preexisting. “The earth
was without form and void,” meaning that when God began to create, the earth
was without form and void, at that time that He began to create. Excuse me, but haven’t we lost something
here? If that’s really the case, now if
God created all things, He may have but you don’t get it out of the Genesis
text any longer, because watch what has happened, now this word is not
contained in the actions of creating, this is something that preexisted so on a
time line you have the earth existing here, and then God begins to create, His
creating work starts at point B, but all the points previous to B have this
mysterious earth that came from where?
Beats me!
So what we’ve given up is
something really immense, really serious.
Now we’ve lost God as the creator of all things, and what’s so ironic
about this is, this is exactly what we started the whole course with, many
weeks ago when we read the Enuma Elish
epic, and how did it start, how did a pagan story of origins start? With watery
chaos. What came out of the watery
chaos? The gods and goddesses and all
else. The source of the universe was chaos, just as in the modern version the
source of the universe is chaotic gas, so in the ancient paganism the source of
the universe was chaotic water. But
when evangelicals, of all people, began to ooouuucchh their way these first
three verses, and begin to interpret it such that the earth is preexisting
prior to the work of creation, we once again set off a set of dominos and give
it twenty more years and the people that have been translating the text this
way are going to say oh-oh, guess what we let loose. And we can go to John 1, do you notice John saying anything about
that “in the beginning” was the earth along with the Word. No!
Let’s conclude with that text because John cuts that off even as an
interpretative possibility by something else he says further down in the
text. John hastens to add in verse 3,
and I wish some of the Jehovah’s Witnesses would forget their six week course
in Greek and read verse 3 along with verse 1.
“All things came into being by Him; and apart from Him nothing came into
being that has come into being.”
Wouldn’t you say that’s pretty comprehensive; verse 3 locks it up. Verse 3 prevents you from ever
misinterpreting John the Apostle, and since John begins in verse 1 with quoting
the very words of Gen. 1:1, surely we have here his understanding of Gen. 1.
In language course you could
spend a whole semester on some of these details, I can’t, I only have 4-5 pages
of appendix to do it, but I’ve tried to give you the overall argument, the
overall strategy. You will run into
combinations of what we said tonight, but the thing to remember is you can’t
keep all this in your head, you can’t remember all these details. The best thing to do is just think of the
basic issue, just the BASIC issue, and the basic issue is if you deny the Word
of God over here, and you’re going to deny it every where else, finally. Let it go one way and it will always take
you the other way.
That’s why we Christian
fundamentalists insist on the inerrancy and the authority of Scripture, not
because we’re defending a new idea, we are defending the location of the
inerrancy. Always remember that. As a Christian don’t be embarrassed when
someone says oh, you believe the Bible is without error; yes. Do you believe that you’re without error? I am debating the location, but everybody
holds to inerrancy, every man holds to inerrancy some where, that’s his
authority. So either man is inerrant, or the Scripture is inerrant, but it’s
not the case that we Christians are the only people that believe in
inerrancy. We simply locate, very
clearly for all the world to see, where our inerrancy is. The foot dancers and the ice skaters are
trying to cover up the fact that ultimately they too have an inerrancy, which
they locate in their own heart, their hearts of hearts in inerrant, it’s an
inerrant discerner of what’s true and what’s false.
Next week we’ll deal with
the basic argument, not all the details, but the logic and structure of the
issue in biology, the issue of evolution and creation.