Athens: GOD, Unknown gods, Stoics, Epicureans, Evolution, and the Chain
of Being Part 2. Acts 17:16-31
Paul knows something when he is talking to an
unbeliever. He knows that deep inside their soul they know God exists. They
understand that truth but they are rejecting it, so basically what PaulÕs
strategy is in a simple way when he is communicating to an unbeliever is to
tweak that suppressed truth. So like a Jack-in-the box all of a sudden that
suppressed truth is going to pop up and move from being suppressed to being out
in the open. Then the person has to respond one way or the other—usually
in anger and resentment. That is what the Holy Spirit uses. If we look at John
chapter 16 Jesus talks about the fact that the Holy Spirit is going to convince
the world (unbelievers) of sin, righteousness and judgment. That is what the
Holy Spirit uses to convict people of the truth. So when we think about
witnessing and communicating the gospel to unbelievers it is not just a matter
of shooting them with our gospel gun. It is not just a matter of doing drive-by
evangelism where we throw a tract at them and just say, Believe on the Lord
Jesus Christ and you will be saved. But we enter into a conversation with the
individual, treating them as a person, and sometimes this ends up being a
life-long conversation. Sometimes it takes two or three times going over the
gospel with sometimes with people, but maybe even dozens of times over a period
of decades before they respond to the gospel. And throughout that time God the
Holy Spirit is working.
Remember that the apostle Paul probably heard the
gospel dozens and dozens of times before the Lord Jesus Christ appeared to him
on the road to Damascus. So when that happened as he was headed to Damascus he
had a clear understanding of who Jesus was and knew exactly what Jesus had
done. He had a clear grasp of the gospel so that as soon as he saw the risen,
resurrected Lord Jesus Christ he immediately responds in faith because it was
that last piece of evidence that gave him that knowledge of the gospel.
So Paul knows exactly the kind of person he is talking
to at the Areopagus because he himself was that kind
of intellectual target audience who kept rejecting the gospel. He is not going
to let his audience hide behind some sort of subterfuge, some sort of
camouflage technique used to suppress the truth in unrighteousness. He is going
to be very clear.
His sermon in vv. 22-31 give an explanation of what he
is teaching. The introduction begins by using the idol to the unknown god as a
starting point for his talk. He doesnÕt view this as a point of common ground,
he is not saying that this Òunknown godÓ is the God of Abraham, Isaac and
Jacob; he just says this shows and is indicative of their God-consciousness.
Now he is going to tell them about the real God.
He gives a description of God, focusing on God as the
creator, and that is so important as we will see in vv. 24-29. And then he
challenges them in vv. 30, 31.
Acts 17:22 NASB
ÒSo Paul stood in the midst of the Areopagus and
said, ÔMen of Athens, I observe that you are very religious in all respects.ÕÓ
That word ÒreligiousÓ is the Greek word deisidaimon—the
last part daimon is translated
ÒdemonÓ—and he is using this word because in Greek it also had the
connotation of being religious or superstitious. He is sort of tweaking them a
little bit because he is using a word that also has this implication of
demonic. He is indicating that the source of their religious system and their
superstition has its origin in Satan and the demonic.
Acts 17:23 NASB ÒFor while I
was passing through and examining the objects of your worship, I also found an
altar with this inscription, ÔTO
AN UNKNOWN GOD.Õ Therefore what you worship in
ignorance, this I proclaim to you.Ó
We need to look at how the Egyptians,
the Babylonians and the Greeks all looked at this idea of the chain of being.
What this is going to do is help us get a handle on why Paul takes this
approach with the Stoics and the Epicureans. He is not emphasizing God as the
creator because that just seemed like a good idea. He has a strategy, and that
is something that we ought to think about when we are witnessing to people.
Every person is different and we need to think through several different
strategies for how we are going to communicate the gospel to people, and truly
listen when we are explaining the gospel so that we understand whether they are
hearing us correctly.
So lets understand a little bit about
these ideas of origins, how these different cultures and religious systems
viewed how life ultimately began. And the one thing they have in common is that
matter is eternal—just like the big bang theory. If you push everything back according
to modern views of origins and evolution, it all goes back to some
super-compressed, dense mass of matter that exploded. Well, where did that
matter come from? If we look at these primitive stories about origins they all
start with something that is already there. There is no creation out of
nothing.
Quote
from The Book
of Knowing the Evolutions of Ra and Of Overthrowing Apep. This is an Egyptian document, and E. Wallis Budge was one
of the foremost Egyptologists of the 20th century makes the
observation that the word that is rendered in the English ÒevolutionsÓ in the
Egyptian is kheperu, and it is derived from a root word which means to
make, to fashion, to produce, to form or to become. It is a creation type term.
And it has a derived sense of to roll something. In the text the words are
placed in the mouth of the god Nebertecher, the lord of the
universe—and he is also the sun god Ra, and he says, ÒI am he who came in to being
in the form of the god kheperu (translation: I came in the form
of the god evolution, change) and I was the creator of that which came into
being.Ó So there is this god that comes out of him. How do we know? Regarding
his own origin we have this statement: ÒI came into being from primordial
matter.Ó How does that differ from the big bang? The primordial matter was
already in existence and the god comes out of this matter. He is part of the
universe; he is not separate and distinct from the universe. ÒAnd I appeared
under the form of multitudes of things from the beginning. Nothing existed at
that time (primordial matter did!) and it was I who made whatever was made. I
made all the forms into which I appeared by means of god-soul which I raised up
Nu (the
sky goddess).Ó
All of these gods and goddesses are
basically part of matter, a part of creation. They are all part of the same beingness, as we will see. We see this same kind of
structure when we look at Babylonian mythological cosmology. They donÕt have an
ex nihilo
creation either. They have these gods that are really matter. They are a part
of the creation. Mankind and everything in creation is created out of something
from these gods and goddesses. They are really personifications of matter. What
is eternal? Matter is eternal.
What happens today in many Old
Testament faculties is that they have views that the Babylonians mythologies
and the Egyptians mythologies were written, and where did Moses live? He grew
up in Egypt, and he gets his ideas for Genesis chapter one from the Egyptians
and from the Babylonians. And they say what we need to do is understand Genesis
chapter one in light of the Babylonian and Egyptian cosmologies. So they
retranslate. They translate the beginning of Genesis chapter one, ÒIn the
beginning.Ó That begins with the Hebrew preposition bu,
which normally mean Òin,Ó but it can mean ÒwhenÓ. So they translate this, ÒWhen
God began to create the heavens and the earth, the earth was without form and
void.Ó What they have done is polluted the ex nihilo creation of Genesis 1:1 by
saying that verse is saying the same thing as all these other pagan
mythologies. What they are saying is, when God began to create matter was
already there. This begins a process and a rationale for compromising with
evolutionary beliefs, so that today there are more and more Bible colleges and
seminaries and schools deserting any kind of literal belief in Genesis 1-11.
And it affects all kinds of different people.
What the Greeks thought of creation.
According to Orpheus their view was that time existed first. There was no
actual beginning. This is one reason when I teach Genesis 1:1 I emphasize that
Genesis 1:1 isnÕt simply a topical sentence. It is not parallel to Genesis 2:4.
Genesis 1:1 is a clear statement of ex nihilo creation. Genesis 1:2 then breaks and
there is a contrastive conjunction ÒBut É the earth became formless and void,Ó
indicating some sort of transformation from the original created state. We
believe that between Genesis 1:1 and 1:2 is when the Satanic
rebellion occurred. If you donÕt put it there then we donÕt have anything in
the Bible that talks about the beginnings of evil, the beginnings of Satan, or
the beginnings of even the universe.
The Greeks thought that time always
existed, but that it was cyclical, that history repeats itself over and over
again, ad
infinitum, for eternity. There is no actual beginning. Time is always
there, and then time generates chaos. See, some people want to say, ÒChaos!
ThatÕs like without form and void. See, thatÕs where the Bible got it.Ó It is
just a perversion of what the Bible originally taught. They
are suppressing the truth and re-explaining things. So there view was a
time-generated chaos which was an enormous space
containing night, mist and the upper regions of the air, or what they called
ether. Time commanded and the mists spun around with such speed that the mass
congealed and solidified into the shape of a huge egg. This broke into two halves which became the heaven and the earth. IsnÕt this
time plus random chance that just generates matter and everything else? So that
was the starting point with Orpheus.
Homer came along. He saw that the earth was flooded by Oceanus (the god who personified
the ocean), and a vast sea surrounded the earth. So once again everything seems
to come out of water.
We can draw certain conclusions from
this. First, all pagan myths begin with the existence of some sort of matter,
or the gods themselves are often the personifications of matter. Just like in
modern forms of evolutionary theory it starts with the eternal existence of
matter. Everything comes out of that. ThatÕs why we talk about this chain of
being. Everything basically participates in what that stuff is—even the
gods. They are not completely separate from it, they are just part of the
system.
Secondly, the mechanics of creation
involve some sort of procreation. In some cases the two gods have sex and the
result is that one gets pregnant and gives birth to the earth, or different
things like that. There is always some sort of procreative activity
which leads to something coming along. So there is no such thing as
creation out of nothing.
All of these ancient cosmologies tell
stories where already existing material is transformed into something else. One
part of the universe causes or self-generates another part of the universe.
This shows a basic continuity between
all existing things, between all living things whether you are talking about a
god or a rock. The only difference is the amount of being that each one of these
things has. They are all part of the same system.
That has tremendous implications fro
all kinds of things, but if you want to think about something just think about
environmentalist thinking and the pantheism that is part of that. This ends up
with man being one with the universe. We have to learn to be one with the
universe!
Satan makes the same kind of claim when
he suggests that Eve can be like God. ÒGod doesnÕt want you to eat from that
tree because you will be like Him. But see, isnÕt that fruit good? You can be
just like God.Ó So she can be one with God and elevate herself up the chain of
being.
The bottom line is, we have to be clear
whenever we are talking to other people that we maintain this clear distinction
between the creator and the creation, because the God that we are talking about
isnÕt a god like any other god. He is totally distinct.
The God of the Bible is a personal,
infinite God who exists as a triune person. He is eternal. All of His
attributes He possesses in an unmeasured or infinite manner, but yet He is
personal. He can carry on a personal relationship with an individual. He exists
in three persons—Father, Son and Holy Spirit. Everything
is created by Him. God is completely and totally distinct from the
finite universe where we find angels, man, animals, vegetation, matter energy,
etc.
In the pagan view you have an infinite
impersonal universe. On the Christian side ultimate reality is personal and
infinite. So as persons we have value. In an impersonal universe there is no
basis for personhood or individuality. So there is an infinite impersonal
universe that just exists out there. And then we have the Òcircle of being.Ó Inside that is God, angels, man, animals, nature, rocks, whatever.
This leads to something called monism because ultimately everything is one in
being. This is indicated by the Buddhist ying-yang
symbol. In postmodernism these are just different constructs, but they are just
part of the same being. Everything is one, there is no separate entity called
God who is over against creation.
So which side of the dividing line are
we as Christians? We are on the side which as a distinct, unique God. And so we
canÕt let people try to force Him into that circle of being.
As we have gone through this we have
been sliding from mythological explanations to philosophical explanations of
origins that developed in Greek culture. Henry Fairfield Osborne, who is a
former director of the American Museum of Natural History, wrote a book called From the Greeks
to Darwin. He is an evolutionist. He said:
ÒWhen I began the search
for anticipation of the evolutionary theory I was led back to the Greek natural
philosophers and I was astonished to find how many of the pronounced and basic
features of the Darwinian theory were anticipated even as far back as the
seventh century BC.
There is nothing new under the sun. All
Darwin did was take some ideas that had always been there, reshaped and
reformatted them a little bit, and came up with some new definitions; but it is
the same ideas that flow out of the ancient pantheistic monism.
L. T. Moore in his book, Dogma,
dealing also with pro-evolutionary books says:
Evolutionists must find a
cornerstone in Greek philosophy for their doctrine. They should give this honor
to Democritus whose doctrine of mechanical and Adamistic
monism, in which all phenomena are reduced to material particles moving
according to natural law, is in the real sense of the word modern science.
Get that? He is saying in this idea of monism everything is
just reduced to DNA, to molecules, to physical laws. There is no such thing as
soul or spirit. Modern psychology has rejected the whole idea that there is a
soul or spirit. Everything is material; everything is just the result of your DNA
and the way it is coded into your system. So you are not responsible for
anything!
Our worldview today that comes out of
this whole view of the chain of being goes back to this idea that everything is
just basically chemical. This goes back to a group of philosophers called the
pre-Socratics. Socrates taught Plato; Plato taught Aristotle. Pre-Socratics is
before Socrates. This is really early; they are just playing guessing games,
trying to figure out the ultimate nature of reality. They had the view that
monism is the view that all reality is of one kind—it is neutral monism
or material monism or pantheistic monism, but it is all one kind. Remember,
monism is it is all one; we all want to be one with nature, we all want to be
one with everybody else. One with nature is always horror, and always will
because there is no real ethical foundation. Pantheism is the belief that God
and the creation are identical.
On monistic pantheism the ultimate
reality or the basic stuff of the universe is identified as God—air,
fire, water; these are the gods and so you have just the personification of
those particular gods.
We have Thales who came along and said
primordial matter was water, and water is the foundation for everything in
existence. Then we have Aniximander who lived a
little later than Thales. He said no, itÕs not water; primordial matter is hot
and cold, wet and dry. Some have said that his book on nature is the first
primitive presentation of a written theory of evolution. Then there is Anaximenes a little later. He said ultimate reality is just
air. Air is the basic stuff of life; it is equated to the soul. When sent out
it becomes fire, when it is condensed it becomes wind and cloud, and when it is
more condensed it becomes water. When it is condensed more it is the earth,
becomes stone. Everything comes form this primordial air, and that explains
everything in existence. Next is Heraclitus who lived at about the same time.
He said the universe is continually changing. But it is a change in oneness, so
that even though there is change it is all within the same oneness or unity.
Parmenides came along and said no, they are just one.
Ultimately they are all just talking
about the same thing. You start off with this one primordial matter that
explains everything else in existence. This goes on through a whole chain of
different philosophers until we get down to Socrates, Plato and Aristotle.
Plato originates the idea of rationalism. He has the idea that there are these
ideas are the ultimate reality. He called them forms or absolutes. They might
be called the absolute good or the summum bonum, but
that is God, and it is up in a different realm. But the realm we see is the
realm of matter, which is individual things—the ideas or being
itself—and everything comes out of that. Once again God is not something
totally distinct. With Plato, out of its perfect fullness being necessarily
creates all possible things with all possible transitions. So being is the
source of everything from within itself; it is not set apart from the things
that are there.
Then we have Aristotle. He was the
first to really articulate this whole chain of being as God, angels, mankind,
animals and vegetation. He said:
The universe resembles a
large and well-regulated family in which all the officers and servants, and
even the domestic animals are subservient to each other in proper
subordination. Each enjoys the privileges and prerequisites peculiar to its
place, and at the same time contributes by that just subordination to the
magnificence and happiness of the whole.
In other words, everything is just this
one chain.
That leads in our history to Epicurus.
Who are we dealing with in Acts 17? The Epicureans and the Stoics. Epicurus was
originally a follower of Aristotle and he denies any purpose in nature at
all—everything is just a product of chance. He emphasizes that there are
just these basic components called adams,
and they just have this randomness to them. So there is an infinite number of
worlds, there is no God—the Epicureans Paul is talking to are basically
what we would called today Òatheists,Ó there is no God in their
system—the universe is eternal, and everything on the earth evolved
directly from the matter on earth itself. Paul is witnessing to people who are
not any different from the people that you and I are witnessing to. They are
just a bunch of materialist evolutionists.
One of the famous Roman Epicureans was
Lucretius who wrote a six-volume work on this. He basically says, Nature is
free and uncontrolled by proud masters, and runs the universe by herself
without the aid of gods. (Can you say the words Òrandom chanceÓ? Basically that
is what evolution is: time plus chance equals order and sophistication.) He
also said:
I have taught you that things
cannot be created out of nothing, nor once born be summoned back to nothing.
There is no ex nihilo creation.
The Stoics were also pantheistic monists,
and they emphasized a simple life and submission to circumstances. Epicureans
are not pursuing pleasure for pleasureÕs sake. The best way to understand
Epicureans is they are pursuing happiness, but happiness isnÕt ephemeral, it
isnÕt a momentary stimulation of our nerves so that we feel good; it is a
long-term happiness. Therefore they bring in a certain ethical system because
only through responsibility and hard work and things like that can you truly be
happy. In Stoicism they emphasize that things are going to happen to you and
you just have to learn to accept and live consistent with your circumstances,
and then you can have happiness.
But what they all have in common is this
same concept of being. When Paul comes along he starts to talk about
resurrection and God as the creator they canÕt fathom that, because they have
been immersed in their truth suppression so much that they redefine it. That
doesnÕt mean that nobody listens to him because there are certainly those who
do respond to Paul and to the gospel. They are going to form a nucleus in Athens.
But most of them do not.
Paul says:
Acts 17:24 NASB ÒThe God who
made the world and all things in it ÉÓ See how much that disagrees with
everything they think? He doesnÕt back off.
Ò É since He is
Lord of heaven and earth, does not dwell in temples made with hands.Ó What he
is going to do when he talks about resurrection, because God is the creator,
because Jesus is God, resurrection and victory over death is possible. In Greek
thought that was not possible. Resurrection was a foolish, impossible notion.
So Paul emphasizes at the start who God is. This has
to be a vital aspect whenever we witness to people that we make sure they
understand who God is, and that we are not talking about some generic concept
called G-o-d; we are talking about the specific God who is the creator of the
heavens and the earth and is omnipotent, omnipresent and omniscient.