Posted on 01/21/2006 6:49:47 AM PST by truthfinder9
I wonder why Ken Ham's followers continue to let him lie about other Christians? When will they wake up and take him to task?
Old-Earth Creationism:
A Heretical Belief?
By Greg Moore
Ken Ham is an ardent young-earth creationist. As president of Answers in Genesis, he generates a steady stream of articles critiquing the old-earth view. Although I disagree with most of his assertions, I respect his right to express them. However, Hams article, The god of an old earth,1 crosses the line of amicable debate. By declaring the god of an old earth cannot be the God of the Bible and the god of an old earth destroys the Gospel, he is accusing old-earth creationists of heresy.
Disagreements in the body of Christ are inevitable. And history has shown debate in the church can be edifying and unifying when it is conducted properly. This requires focusing on the things that unite us and avoid passing judgment on nonessential matters (Romans 14:1). But, that is not the spirit of Hams paper. By claiming old-earth creationism violates orthodox Christian teachings, he seeks to denigrate and marginalize it. That only serves to divide faithful Christians and prevent them from having fellowship together.
Given the seriousness of Hams charges, it is important to take a critical look at this issue. It is not my purpose to defend old-earth creationism on scientific grounds. There are many excellent resources that can assist readers in that regard.2 Rather, I will examine why Hams accusation of heresy is both baseless and inappropriate.
BIBLICAL THEODICY
Hams claim the god of an old earth is not the God of the Bible is based on the question of theodicy. This is the question of how a loving, righteous and omnipotent God can allow evil and suffering in a world He created and sustains. Ham argues a loving God would not allow millions of years of animal violence and death for no reason; hence, animal death must be a result of Gods judgment on human sin and could not have been part of the initial creation. While this may sound impressive, there are a number of problems with this argument.
First, God needs no reason for the things He does. As Creator, all things occur by His providence and for His purposes (Colossians 1:16). It is clearly a mistake, then, to think that Gods choices are determined by anything or anyone outside Himself. The Bible tells us God does what He pleases, He answers to no one, and He is under no obligation to any of His creatures (Isaiah 46:10, Job 23:13, 33:13, 41:11). It also tells us God knows in advance what He will do, what the results will be and nothing can thwart His plans (Psalm 33:11, Isaiah 46:10, Job 42:2).
Nor is Gods loving character in any way impugned by animal death. Whatever God does is by definition proper and just. As Calvin states: Gods will is so much the highest rule of righteousness that whatever He wills, by the very fact that He wills it, must be considered righteous.3 Thus, in light of the biblical doctrine of God as Creator and Sustainer, it is wrong to question Gods character (Job 40:8). Instead, we should trust His goodness and care, knowing in all things, God works for the good of those who love Him (Romans 8:28).
Second, it is wrong to presume animal death is not loving. We must look at animal death from Gods perspective. Just as Gods thoughts are not our thoughts and His ways are not our ways (Isaiah 55:8), so His definition of good is probably different as well. Numerous verses of Scripture tell us God provides food for the carnivores of the Earth thereby condoning the death of some animals for the survival of others.4 Thus, according the Bible, animal deathat least carnivorous activityis a blessing from the hand of a loving Creator.
Since God is the Creator, He has the prerogative of creating things for limited use. Just because something dies doesnt mean death is a bad thing.5 The world was created for the purpose of accomplishing Gods plan for humanity and animal death plays an essential role in Gods creation. A healthy ecological system depends on a continuing cycle of life and death. Also, many things that are important to human lifecoal, oil, limestone, topsoil to name but a fewall come from the death and decay of animals.6
Third, Hams argument does not solve the question of theodicy. Ham focuses on Gods loving nature but ignores His omnipotence. God is the sovereign first cause of all things.7 Not only did He create all things but in Him all things hold together and everything works out in conformity with His will (Colossians 2:17, Ephesians 1:11). Thus, the why and when of animal death is superfluous. Whether animal death was part of the initial creation, or something that was imposed at later date, God is ultimately responsible for it.
Solving the question of theodicy is a matter of adopting the correct starting point. Standing on the Bible we have the answer. Evil and suffering exist for good reasons: God, who is altogether good and can do no wrong, sovereignly decrees they take place for His good purposes (Isaiah 45:7).8 Therefore, the old-earth view of millions of years of animal death before Adam and Eve is not a problem. Animal death is part of Gods eternal plan, it works for His good and the good of His people, and just because God has decreed it, it is righteous.
DEATH BEFORE SIN
Hams claim the god of an old earth destroys the Gospel is based on the contention that death before human sin is not theologically supportable. Ham reasons if there was death before Adam and Eve sinned (known as the Fall), death cannot be the penalty for sinand, if death is not the penalty for sin, then Christs death was unnecessary and meaningless.9
Before examining this issue, it is important to clarify the young-earth and old-earth positions on death. Both young-earth and old-earth creationists believe there was no human death before Adam and Eve sinned. Where they disagree is on the origination of animal death. Young-earth creationists insist all deathboth human and animalbegan at the Fall. Old-earth creationists maintain there was animal death inside, outside and before the Garden of Eden.
Young-earth creationists have developed a number of arguments to support their position. Several of these arguments deal with the issue of whether animal death is good and consistent with Gods loving nature, which was discussed in the previous section. Here I will address what I consider to be their other major assertions.
The Initial Creation Did Not Include Death and Decay10
This argument focuses on three statements of Scripture: Romans 8:20the creation was subjected to frustration, Romans 8:21the creation will be liberated from its bondage to decay, and Romans 8:22 the creation has been groaning. Young-earth creationists claim these statements indicate the initial creation was perfect, literally heaven on earthbut, at the Fall, the creation was changed to an earthly place that included death and decay. This they say is the frustration and bondage to decay Paul speaks of in Romans 8.
However, while Romans 8 tells us when the bondage to decay will end (when the children of God are glorified), it does not tell us when it began or what the nature of that bondage is.11 Thus, it cannot be proven that Romans 8 refers to a changed creation and the introduction of animal death. Also, the Bible gives no indication the physical laws governing the pre-Fall world were different than today. Rather, the Bible tells us the creation was earthly and not heavenly (1 Corinthians 15:47) and that it was transitory from the beginning (Psalm 102:25-26).12
In addition, not all Bible scholars believe Romans 8 speaks of the physical creation. Some believe the bondage to decay is the earths present service as a graveyard of the dead. They suggest Pauls metaphor of the creations groaning is drawn from Isaiah 24-26an apocalyptic picture of the earth as a graveyard awaiting the resurrection of the dead. Isaiah states the earth mourns because it has been made to cover her slain.13 This does seem to fit the context of Romans 8 that speaks of the earth being set free from bondage when the children of God are glorified.Death Before Sin Violates the Biblical Doctrine of Death14
This argument also focuses on three statements of Scripture: Romans 5:12death entered the world through sin, Romans 6:23the wages of sin is death, and 1 Corinthians 15:26the last enemy to be destroyed is death. Young-earth creationists maintain these passages indicate all deathboth human and animalis the result of Adam and Eves sin.
However, the issue being dealt with in these passages is clearly human death. Romans 5:12 states death came to all men as a result of sin, and both Romans 6:23 and 1 Corinthians 15:21-26 speak of spiritual redemption which limits the meaning to human death. If these passages are interpreted more widely, Christ's redemptive purpose would need to extend to the animal kingdom, which is implausible.15 Therefore, while these passages support the view that human death is the result of sin, they do not support the view that all death is the result of sin.
In reality, animal death before the Fall is not a theological problem. Adam and Eve were not immortal by nature. Eternal life was only available to them through the supernatural tree of life in the Garden of Eden. And, if they were not immortal, then it must follow that the animals were not immortal either. However, unlike Adam and Eve, the animals did not have access to the tree of life. Hence, because animals had no way to achieve immortality, they would have had no possible way to avoid death.16
This argument focuses on Christs death and resurrection. Young-earth creationists argue if deathall deathis not the penalty for sin, death could not be used to atone for human sin; thus animal death before the Fall destroys the reason Christ died and the meaning of His resurrection.
However, there are several problems with the young-earth view of sin, death and the atonement. First, while human death is linked to human sin, it moves beyond the teaching of the Bible to claim all death is the result of human sin. Second, since animals are incapable of sinning, they are not in need of a restoration of relationship with God and it is wrong to extend the consequences of human sin to them. And third, while it is true there is no remission of sin without the shedding of blood, Christ's blood, it does not follow that there could have been no bloodshed before sin.18
It is very important to emphasize the crucial importance of Christs death. Without it, we would have no hope of eternal life. However, animal death before the Fall does not diminish the significance of Christs death because there was no need of atonement before there was sin.19 Only human beings are capable of sin, only human beings are subject to judgment and only human beings are offered the salvation Christ earned on the cross. One can only wonder how animal death could interfere with Gods plan for humanity, a plan that included the Fall.
The Restored Creation is a Picture of the Original Creation20
This argument focuses on prophetic scripture, usually Isaiah 11:6-9, that speaks of a future time when the wolf will dwell with the lamb. Young-earth creationists claim this passage speaks of a restored creation and, because this restored creation contains no animal death, the pre-Fall creation must not have included animal death.
However, Scripture is silent about an Edenic restoration. The restoration promised in Acts 3:21 is not of Eden but of Christs restoring the kingdom to Israel (Acts 1:6). This will not be a return to the pristine condition of Edenic innocence prior to the Fall, but a fulfillment of Gods covenant with Abrahama rebirth of the nation he was promised.21 The Bible also states the promise we are looking forward to is not a return to Eden but a new heavens and a new earth (2 Peter 3:13). In fact, the former things will be destroyed and will not even be remembered (Isaiah 65:17).
In addition, some Bible scholars believe Isaiah 11:6-9 speaks figuratively of future time when hostile nations will live peacefully with Israel. Calvin believed it speaks allegorically of bloody and violent men, whose cruel and savage nature shall be subdued.22 The Wycliffe Bible Commentary explains the picture of animals living together peacefully symbolizes the removal of all natural hostility and fear between men.23 However, regardless of whether Isaiah is taken literally or figuratively, it does not prove there was no animal death in Eden.24
Orthodoxy and heresy
Ham claims Christians who hold the old-earth view are worshipping a different God and he encourages them to return to the loving, holy, righteous God of the Bible. While he doesnt explicitly accuse old-earth creationists of heresy, that is the practical effect of these statements. Are these charges warranted? To answer this, it is important to understand the basis for determining whether a teaching is orthodox or heretical.
Orthodox can be defined as whatever teachings are sufficiently faithful to Christian principles that those who adhere to them should be accepted as fellow-Christians. Heresy can be defined as teachings that compel true Christians to divide themselves from those that hold them.25 It might seem these definitions provide an effective way for determining whether a teaching is aberrational, but they dont. The problem is not all teachings carry the same weightsome warrant division, while others can and should be tolerated in the church (Romans 14).
The Bible reveals the doctrines that are essential to the Christian faith. These include the deity of Christ (and the doctrine of the Trinity), Christs bodily resurrection from the dead, salvation by grace through faith alone, and the Gospel.26 While there are many other important doctrines, these are the only ones that are declared by Scripture to be necessary for salvation. Other doctrines may be Biblical and should be believed by those who want to be faithful to Scripturenevertheless, those who deny, or who are confused about them, can be born-again and saved.27
The Bible also tells us it is the job of the whole church to stand together in unity and judge what is heretical (Ephesians 4:12-13).28 Therefore, since the whole churchall Christian denominations whether Roman Catholic, Eastern Orthodox, or Protestantagree on the essential doctrines of the Christian faith, this is first litmus test of whether a teaching is heretical. A second test is whether the Bible explicitly condemns the teaching or states it is not to be tolerated in the church.29
Lets start with the second test. Does the Bible explicitly condemn the old-earth view of long creation days or animal death before the Fall? No. In fact, as we examine the writings of the church fathers, we see these issues were openly debated and never considered a test of orthodoxy.30 Therefore, there is no justification for labeling old-earth creationism a heretical teaching on the basis of Scripture or the teachings of the historic Christian church.
With regard to the first test, whether old-earth creationism contradicts the essential doctrines of Christianity, I cannot speak for all Christians who hold an old-earth view. Admittedly, some old-earth proponents are theistic evolutionists or Darwinists and I cannot state with certainty what they believe. However, because Hams article identifies Dr. Hugh Ross as the main spokesman of the progressive creationist movement (the day/age view of Genesis), I will respond based on the beliefs of the Reasons To Believe (RTB) Ministry31:
The charge that a groups beliefs are heretical is a serious one that should not be made lightly. Some Christians "cry wolf" whenever a teaching seems to conflict with their beliefs. Such a practice merely divides Christians and ignores the biblical guidelines for determining what is heretical. In uncertain or borderline cases, we should always give the benefit of the doubt to the group in question. Ultimately, only God can judge human hearts; thus, the principle of "innocent until proven guilty" should always be the first rule we follow.32
Has Ham met the burden of proof for leveling a charge of heresy against old-earth creationists? No. We can state with certainty that mankind lost fellowship with God at the Fall, and human deathboth physical and spiritualentered the creation. This is stated in the Bible. However, there is no basis for claiming Christians must hold a young-earth view or that old-earth creationism is damaging to Christianity. In fact, one can argue old-earth creationism is a positive force in the church because it removes roadblocks that open the way for an aggressive advance of the Gospel.
The ninth commandment
The ninth commandment, You shall not give false testimony against your neighbor, has much to say about how we are to conduct ourselves in these matters. The duties required by this commandment include preserving and promoting the good name of our neighbors, defending their innocence, speaking the truth in matters of judgment and discouraging slander.33 The sins forbidden by this commandment include prejudicing the truth and the good name of our neighbors, passing unjust sentence and raising false rumors.34
Simply put, we are to follow Jesus command to love our neighbor as ourself (Mark 12:29-31). We are bound to meet other Christians with whom we disagree on matters of faith and practice. We do not have to agree with them but we do have an obligation to love them, treat them courteously and deal with them as we ourselves would like to be treated (Matthew 7:12). We may strongly disagree with their ideas and vigorously contend against them in the public square, but we must still show respect for these people in spite of our differences.35
The Bible lays out several principles in Romans 14 we should follow in dealing with Christians whom we disagree with. Obviously, this does not apply to the essential doctrines of the Christian faith. However, apart from the teachings the Bible instructs we cannot deviate from, there are numerous areas where we can disagree. The specific examples the Apostle Paul uses to articulate the principles involve the eating of meat sacrificed to idols, but the principles apply to other situations as well.36
First, we are not to have a judgmental attitude toward one another on non-essential matters. Paul says in Romans 14:3, the man who eats everything must not look down on him who does not. In other words, we are to be respectful of those whose views differ from ours on matters where the Bible does not provide clear principles or guidelines. In verse 4, Paul goes on to say, Who are you to judge someone else's servant? This is a reminder that we answer to God and only He knows our hearts and can properly judge our motives.
Second, we are to decide for ourselves what is right and wrong when it comes to the non-essentials of the faith. Paul says in Romans 14:14, I am fully convinced that no food is unclean in itself. But if anyone regards something as unclean, then for him it is unclean. Each one should be fully convinced in his own mind. In other words, a particular belief or practice is wrong for those who believe it is wrong, but others are free to disagree. Paul reminds us in verses 5-6 that the key test is whether the belief or practice is for the Lord.
Third, we are not to engage in divisive behaviors regarding non-essential matters that can affect other believers walk with the Lord. Paul says in Romans 14:13, make up your mind not to put any stumbling block or obstacle in your brother's way. While we may object to their beliefs or practices, we should respect them for their sake knowing they are fellow partakers in the faith and God is working in their lives.
Whether Hams behavior violates the ninth commandment and the principles outlined in Romans 14 is between him and God. However, it is fair to say that his article makes divisive statements about old-earth creationists and those efforts need to be evaluated in terms of the impact they have on the body of Christ. Christians debating non-essential matters should not act like boxers whose goal is to demolish one another. Rather, we should make every effort to do what leads to peace and to mutual edification (Romans 14:19).
CONCLUSION
As brothers and sisters in Christ, we need to conduct ourselves honorably in all things (Hebrews 13:18). Where we disagree on the non-essentials of the faith, our overriding goal should be to work for unity in the church. When we are unwilling to acknowledge our fallibility, we reveal we are more interested in winning a discussion than in the discovery and triumph of truth. Our reputation is much better served if we show ourselves ready to be corrected when in error, rather than if we keep obstinately to our viewpoint when the evidence shows it to be wrong.37
The charges Ham makes against old-earth creationists in The god of an old earth are clearly unwarranted. While he is a passionate champion of young-earth creationism and would like all Christians to hold that view, the ends do not justify the means. There is no basis for claiming the old-earth view violates Scripture, contradicts the essential doctrines or does damage to the Christian faith. Equally important, it is the job of the whole church, not individuals or groups within the church, to judge these matters.
Of course, there are Christians on both sides of age-of-the-earth debate who are guilty of poor behavior. To this end, we must always be mindful that it is love that builds up (1 Corinthians 8:1) and our conversations should always full of grace (Colossians 4:6).
END NOTES
Ping for later reading
The this diatribe, the author has become what he accuses Ham of being. His reasoning has very poor logic - apples and oranges.
He is one of the most rude and un-christian persons that I have ever encountered.
He is always correct and anyone who believes otherwise is ignorant.
Hugh Ross suffers from PRIDE!
Hugh Ross presents a very poor Christian Witness.
I prefer Gerald Schroeder on the origins of the universe.
b'shem Y'shua
***Hams claim the god of an old earth is not the God of the Bible is based on the question of theodicy***
A 21th century Marcionite?
I suppose he beleives in the "Demiurge".
Great reference. Thank you for posting it.
Thanks for the very interesting article. I sure am grateful that my salvation is not based on my opinion on the age of the earth. I have problems with the young earth view more because of the method originally used to determine the age of the earth by Ussher, than anything. The Bible doesn't state the earth's age but deriving it from geneologies seems questionable, at best.
The idea that animal death is solely the result of the fall implies that God created carnivores and nevertheless intended for them to frequent salad bars.
Plus, it raises the prospect of a world with insects multiplying by the billions and billions and never, ever dying. Camping would be a bitch!
Um, you didn't know about the pop quiz? Better get the T/F questions on predestination correct! (I've got crib notes if ya wanna borrow them - worked for George Costanza!). :-)
Please read this article as well as some of the others linked here starting about half-way down the page.
You obviously know little about Ross or read little. Having read and met him I can say your claims that he is "unchristian" and always believes he is correct are catagoriclly wrong and perhaps dishonest. He couldn't be further from either. Or perhaps your Jewish pride prevents you from seeing that.
It's amazing that the "Christians" at AIG lie so much. Article after article, book after book, they reference genealogies. To say otherwise is to be ignorant or dishonest.
There isn't one "young-earth evidence" that doesn't fail in a few seconds of examination:
Introduction to the Creation-Date Debate
http://www.geocities.com/darrickdean/cr3.html
Is There Really Scientific Evidence for a Young Earth?
http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~tisco/yeclaimsbeta.html
Biblical Creation
http://www.evidence.info/apologetics/creation.html
A Matter of Days: Resolving a Creation Controversy
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1576833755/
Actually, only the isolated young-earth groups think Ross has been "thoroughly refuted." They also act like Ross is the only old-earth creationist, problem is that there are quite a few out there, in fact a long list of respected scholars, theologians, etc. Ken Ham & Co don't want you to know how small the YEC world is becoming. There's their amazing honesty again.
Introduction to the Creation-Date Debate
http://www.geocities.com/darrickdean/cr3.html
Is There Really Scientific Evidence for a Young Earth?
http://www.gps.caltech.edu/~tisco/yeclaimsbeta.html
Biblical Creation
http://www.evidence.info/apologetics/creation.html
A Matter of Days: Resolving a Creation Controversy
http://www.amazon.com/exec/obidos/ASIN/1576833755/
The second link should be:
Is There Really Scientific Evidence for a Young Earth?
http://www.lpl.arizona.edu/~matthewt/yeclaimsbeta.html
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