CHAPTER 3
CREATION: THE BURIED TRUTH OF MAN AND NATURE
We’ve already
observed that the event of biblical creation clearly defines the Creator-creature
distinction against the pagan Continuity of Being belief. It also opposes
paganism with another distinction: the man-nature distinction. As parts
of the created universe, man and nature both are sharply distinguished from the
Creator, but they are also distinguished from each other. The picture looks
like this:
CREATOR
_____________
Man
________
Nature
In this chapter I
concentrate on the man-nature distinction. This distinction is crucial for
everything that follows early Genesis in the Bible. So important is this
distinction to God’s plan that paganism suppresses it like it does the Creator-
creature distinction. In the fleshly mind, these spiritually vital distinctions
have been buried underneath the Continuity of Being doctrine. According to that
old pagan doctrine, God, man, and nature differ only in degree, not in kind.
WHAT IS MAN?
Let’s begin with
man first. The Bible and pagan culture radically disagree on what man is. To
see just how radical the disagreement is, I will begin with a look at the
biblical narratives of man’s creation. Then I will show how man’s design
utterly sets him apart from all the universe. Finally, I will introduce the
concept of “divine institutions”--the fundamental features of human social
existence according to God’s Word.
God’s
Description of Man’s Creation. The “close-up” picture of man’s creation is given
in Genesis 2:7,15-25. God says He miraculously formed man from the
earth. The term “dust” in this context is sometimes interpreted by those
following an accommodationist strategy as metaphorical for man’s upward
development from primates. They think by so doing they can accommodate the
Genesis narrative to the evolutionary worldview. Unfortunately for this
approach, the term “dust” in this context is used for literal earth particles
of bodily decay after death (Gen. 3:19). Clearly, at death man does not revert
back to his supposedly previous primate existence! The narrative, therefore,
speaks of a literal, instantaneous creation of man.
If the narrative’s
literal meaning weren’t clear enough from 2:7, it certainly is from 2:21-22.
Unlike any other species, the human female is derived from the one original
body. This is not an incidental detail; it relates to the entire plan of
salvation as I note later. There is simply no room in this narrative for
evolution of man from primate. This literal interpretation of Genesis 2 is
given in the New Testament (I Cor. 11:6-9; I Tim. 2:13-14).
Also note that man
is assigned to a task that involves labor and moral responsibility (2:15-17).
Such a task requires social intercourse with other human beings (2:18).
Accomplishment of the task involves study of nature and linguistic description
(2:19-20).
The other narrative
of man’s creation (Gen. 1:26-30) reports that mankind as male and female
is made in God’s image. In the ancient world kings would set up images of
themselves down among the people for them to worship (see Dan. 3). The images
were their glory. Here God sets up an image of himself down at the creature
level of existence, not to be worshipped, but to be respected for His glory
(Jas. 3:9). This image of God is to rule God’s earth by subduing it and filling
it by procreation.
God put into these
narratives observational data that have immense significance. We are uniquely
designed for a glorious role in the history of the universe. Let’s look at some
key features in man’s design.
The Unique
Design of Mankind. Man’s design is fundamentally related to God’s plan for the universe.
Want a biblically correct “self-image”? Lay hold of these four truths that
define the man-nature distinction!
1. Of central
importance is the truth that man is an image of God in both body and
spirit. This truth is the foundation for all revelation, including the
Incarnation of God the Son. Yet it suffers from two opposite distortions. On
one hand, there is the distortion of Mormonism which holds to the belief that
“as man is God once was, and as God is man one day shall be.” Holding to the
traditional pagan notion of the Continuity of Being, Mormonism erases the
Creator-creature distinction. God the Father, in Mormonism, is not only the
archetype of our body but He actually has a physical body Himself (and
procreated children with His wives!).
On the other hand,
to avoid idolatry Christians usually restrict the “image” to the invisible,
immaterial part of man, leaving it utterly unrelated to the form of the body.
As John Pilkey writes: “No one disputes that the ‘image of God’ refers to
conscience and reason; but the view that this image has nothing to do with the
body is profoundly erroneous. . . .because it implies that God, in the
Creation, failed to harmonize the form of the body with these faculties. The
enemies of Christianity can sense the futility of this theological flaw and
have exploited it with profound effect. If the form of the human body derives
from any other source except divine faculties, then we might as well say that
human form derives from purely casual causes, unrelated to the ideal mind of
God. Darwinism is the logical result, namely, that God caused the animal and
human forms to occur. . .without regard to any dimension of His own
essence.”[1]
This is not just a
neat philosophical point. It has directly to do with the Incarnation of God in
Jesus Christ. When God the Son came into the world, He spoke of the human body
to the Father, “A body thou hast prepared for me” (Heb. 10:5). The ancient
Church father Tertullian pictured God at creation bending over His clay as He
made man: “Imagine God wholly employed and absorbed in it--with his hand, his
eye, his labor, his purpose, his wisdom, his providence, and above all, his
love which was dictating the lineaments of this creature. . . . Whatever was
the form and expression which was then given to the clay by the Creator, Christ
was in his thoughts as one day to become Man, because the Word, too, was to be
both clay and flesh. . . .”[2] Thus through a human body God could “fully” be
contained (Col. 2:9) and seen (John 14:9). Through a human body, the Son rules
forever (Heb. 1:3). Thus in his body and spirit man is a theomorphism, utterly
unlike any other creature.
2. Through his
body, man rules nature. Unlike bodiless angels, man’s spirit directly rules
nature beginning with that part of the earth that makes up his own flesh. Thereupon,
he can reach out with his brain, mouth, and hands to name nature and subdue it.
No one has put this point more succinctly than the Medieval theologian Hugo St.
Victor: “The spirit was created for God’s sake, the body for the spirit’s sake,
and the world for the body’s sake; so that the spirit might be subject to God,
the body to the spirit, and the world to the body.”[3]
Man’s dominion rule
is fulfilled by God only through the Incarnation in Christ (I Cor. 15:24-28;
Heb. 2:5-9). At that future day, man’s dominion rule will extend over even the
angels (I Cor. 6:2-3; Heb. 2:5)! All of nature awaits this glorious moment
(Rom. 8:19-22).
Before then,
however, every man must be spiritually perfected through the exercise of
ruling, starting with his own flesh and working outward. Even the sinless Son
of God had to be perfected in this manner of exercising human dominion (Heb.
2:10; 5:7-9). In the next section I will use this point in discussing a
biblical view of scientific knowledge, and in later Parts of this framework I
will show how it undergirds our spiritual growth (sanctification). His dominion
role separates man from nature.
3. All humans
are made from Adam’s single body. Unlike angels, each of whom are
individual creations, and unlike animals which were created in male-female
pairs, mankind is made from one body. In an absolutely unique way, the woman
was taken out of the man. Thus the genetic composition of the human race
originated in that body of clay in Eden.
Why the special treatment
for man? Because man is central to God’s plan of showing forth His glory. God
will one day need to save men from their sins. The entire race must be designed
to be “redeemable” so that one Savior can somehow die for the many (Rom.
5:12-19; I Cor 15:21-22). The woman must derive from the man if the man is to
be the central head of the original human race in sin and salvation. Such
racial solidarity marks off mankind from all animals, angels, and pagan
concepts of what man is.
4. Man through
his spirit chooses, judges, loves, and knows. The creation narratives
report that the first man was faced with the moral choice of obedience or
disobedience as well as the task of knowing and naming. Far from some grunting
primate, the first man was fully capable of rapid learning (Gen. 2:19),
conversing with God (Gen. 2:16-17), and singing a love song (Gen. 2:23). These
reports have stunning implications!
Choice, conscience,
love, and knowing reveal the presence of the human spirit. Man’s spirit as part
of the image of God is what enables him to be a responsible, conscious knower
(Prov. 1:23; I Cor. 2:11). It provides man with these finite versions of God’s
“communicable” (Q)ualities of sovereignty, holiness, love, and omniscience.
Interestingly no one doubts these qualities exist yet they cannot be
measured, touched, tasted, or seen--precisely the very same features
unbelievers claim make them doubt God’s existence!
a. Choice.
Because man is created with his own spirit fashioned in God’s image, he can never
escape the Presence of God in the depths of his heart. He has to submit to Him
with a heart of faith and the presupposition of the Word of God, or he has to
rebel against Him with a heart of unbelief and the presupposition of autonomy.
Here is why man, unlike animals, is held ultimately responsible for his eternal
destiny. As the “lord” of nature, man alone has the (q)uality of choice that
corresponds but is not identical to the (Q)uality of God’s sovereignty.
Regardless of which
response he makes, however, his thoughts and speech will always betray his
chosen presuppositions. As manifestations of his spirit, man’s thoughts and
words reveal its basic orientation toward God. This is why God judges us by our
words (Matt. 12:34-37).
b. Conscience.
Although man knows that he himself fails, he can never restrain himself from
making real moral judgments (“that is wrong”, “you ought to. . .”). These
judgments are not intended merely as opinions or likes and dislikes; they
intend to appeal to some transcendent moral authority. Where is the authority
for such judgments? It cannot come from experience with nature because whatever
is the state-of-affairs, isn’t necessarily what is right. “Rightness” is not an
arithmetic mean.[4] Moral authority cannot come from other people or from
society. History shows that entire societies are judged as wrong. Only two
sources of moral authority for such judgments are available: the self or God.
Whichever is chosen, everyday moral judgments reveal the chosen authority of
man’s spirit.
Moral judgments
show the human (q)uality of conscience as derivative of God’s (Q)uality of
holiness. Being relative to one’s spiritual growth and experience of revelation
(I Cor. 8:7; Heb. 5:14), man’s moral judgments are not always correct in content,
but they show inherent awareness of the moral authority of the absolute
Person.
c. Love.
Another evidence of the human spirit made uniquely in God’s image is love. Love
requires the existence of another human spirit for it can never be truly
exercised apart from a personal relationship. It is not good that anyone be
alone, even Adam in Eden (Gen. 2:18). All men acknowledge directly and
indirectly throughout their entire life their need to be loved. Simultaneously,
all men thrive when they love one another with significant giving of their
self. Real love is not limited just to the parent-child or man-wife
relationship. Love is the deepest and only authentic motive behind ethics.
Yet the (q)uality
of human love can never be identical to the (Q)uality of God’s love. God’s love
depends upon nothing in the universe for it pre-existed creation within His
triune nature. Human love, by contrast, remains fragile, always dependent upon
creature existence. To exist human love requires an environment in which man’s
existence is unthreatened so that it is “safe” to give. This environment cannot
be supplied by the pagan worldview because it has no Infinite Personal Creator
Who loves with sovereignty and omnipotence. Paganism can only produce fear and
self-protective schemes. Real human love, in other words, presupposes biblical
creation and sets man off from nature.
d. Knowledge.
Perhaps the most studied characteristic of man is his capacity to reason, to
think conceptually, and to speak his thoughts in language. While pagan thinkers
today try very hard to explain human knowledge on the basis of evolutionary
development from animals, the Bible clearly draws a line between man and the
animals in this regard (e.g., note use of aloga meaning “unreasoning” in II
Pet. 2:12). The (q)uality of knowledge emanates from man’s spirit and is a
finite form of the (Q)uality of Omniscience.
Man’s other
spiritual features of choice, conscience, and love presuppose knowledge for
they could not be exercised without it (Lk. 1:1-4; Jn. 20:31; Eph. 1:17ff). Yet
it is also true that correct choices, obedience to conscience, and exercise of
authentic love open up knowledge (Jn. 7:17; Eph. 3:17-19). All men take for
granted that conscience controls the knowing process whenever they moralize that
one is “obligated” to accept the truth once it is known.
Human knowledge is
similar but not identical to omniscience. Human knowledge presupposes a
standard of truth; omniscience is its own. Human knowledge presupposes
universal truths (men use the terms “always”, “never”, etc., and express their
philosophy of life as a totality); omniscience is universal truth. Human
knowledge derives from sensory perception and reasoning; omniscience is
independent of both. Human knowledge can imagine things to create by various
tools (language, machines, etc.); omniscience can create directly. Finally,
human knowledge is, in the final analysis, “circular”; it always depends upon
presuppositions that control its reasoning.
Central to human
knowledge is language. Yet human language is quite limited as anyone knows who
has struggled to express an “impression” or “intuition”. Over the past century
or so, studies have exposed further limitations in human language and the
thought behind it. Evidences consist of semantic and logical paradoxes,
problems with infinity in mathematics, and multiple geometries each of which
isvlogically consistent but which contradicts the others.[5] Various
philosophers and poets in this century have sought to “get beyond” language in
ways very similar to anti-rational mysticisms of ancient pagan religions.[6]
As with all the
other features of man’s spirit, however, language exists at two levels--the
level of God and the level of man. Man’s language requires for its
justification a higher, perfectly rational language or in modern terms, an
ultimate “metalanguage”, for its validity. Of course, the Bible provides
exactly that in the Second Person of the Trinity as the Word of God Who
created, upholds, and constantly directs the universe (Jn. 1:1-4; Col. 1:16-17;
Heb. 1:2-3; 11:1-3). Since within physical creation only man possesses language
and the knowledge expressed in it, the man-nature distinction is shown again.
In both body and
spirit, therefore, man is uniquely designed in the image of God and set apart
from the rest of the universe. Such a special creature needs special social
structures to which I now turn.
The Divine
Institutions.
The term “divine institution” has been used by Christians to speak of those
absolute social structures instituted by God for the entire human
race--believers and unbelievers alike. Though modern paganism views them as by-
products of man’s psycho-social evolution, the Bible insists God Himself
installed at least three of them at creation.
1. The first
divine institution is responsible dominion (Gen. 1:26-30; 2:15-17; Psa.
8:3-8). Although the earth and its produce is the Lord’s (Psa. 24:1), mankind
was assigned to manage it under God’s authority. Man was placed as a derivative
“lord”. Later, at the fall (see next chapter), this dominion would become
perverted but not taken away.
Here is the
biblical doctrine of creative labor. The first picture of God in the
Bible is as a laborer. He expresses His character in His work (“glorifying
Himself”) and, as He finishes each part, He evaluates and enjoys it. In similar
fashion God assigned labor to Adam. God let Adam investigate and create names
for natural objects (Gen. 2:19). In so doing Adam was evaluating (imputing
value to) the objects (Gen. 2:20).
Of course, Adam’s
dominion labor wasn’t identical to God’s. When he named an object, he wasn’t
creating ex-nihilo; he was merely discovering something of God’s prior
creative labor and evaluation (Gen. 2:18). Gary North points out the economic
implications of this point: “The problem of value is central to the science of
economics. Is value determined objectively or subjectively? Is the value of
some scarce economic resource inherent in that resource, or is it derived from
the evaluations of acting men? In short, is value intrinsic or imputed?
. . . How can we reconcile the fact that something objectively good, like the
Bible, is worth less in a particular market than pornographic literature? . . .
The Bible affirms man’s ability to impute value, for man is made in the image
of God, and God imputes value to His creation. . . .Men cannot make absolute,
comprehensive value imputations, since men are creatures. But they can make
value imputations as limited creatures which are valid in God’s eyes, and
before the rebellion of man in the garden, this is what man did.[7]
For some today, it
is a radical message that labor was instituted before the fall! Labor, whether
manual or intellectual, expresses the spiritual character of the soul. It
beckons evaluation.
2. The second
divine institution, marriage, is defined in terms of the first. The
woman was brought to Adam specifically as a “helper”. Why did he need help?
Because of his calling before God to rule nature. Unlike animals, mankind’s
so-called sexual differentiation is not merely for procreation; it is also for
dominion. The “one flesh” relationship, while truly romantic and sexual, occurs
inside the larger context of the first divine institution. Later in this series
I point out how marriage under the Mosaic Law included very unromantic,
business-like, economic arrangements in order to protect its dominion function.
That marriage is the chief means of dominion is seen in the New Testament. The
man-woman distinction typifies the Christ- Church distinction (Eph. 5:22-33;
Rev. 19:7-8) in which the Church completes Christ in His calling.
Mankind cannot
express God’s image except as both “male and female” together (Gen. 1:27). This
is because God has certain characteristics that are “feminine” in nature (e.g.,
Matt. 23:37). Moreover, the woman’s role as “helper” in Genesis 2:18 is not
meant to be a demeaning, secondary one. The term used for “helper” elsewhere is
used of God Himself (Exod. 18:4; Deut. 33:7). (Contrary to contemporary
propaganda that the Bible is “patriarchal”, it reveals the equal value of the
woman as no other document in the ancient Near East.)
Undeniably,
however, the Bible places emphasis upon the man as the one who receives his
calling from God which then shapes his choice of wife. She is not only his
needful helper; she is his “glory” (I Cor. 11:7-9). The man defines himself in
terms of God and of his wife. Together in a division of labor man and wife
separate from their own families to build a new one (Gen. 2:24). Only in a
nuclear family, in contrast to an extended family, does a young man have to
face full leadership responsibility directly under God.
Opposed to this
biblical picture are the usual media male role models of the comical stumbling
father-fool or the adventurous, unmarried gun-slinger, both of which emphasize
male irresponsibility and immaturity.
3. The third
divine institution is built upon the first and second. Marriage normally leads
to dominion through a family. In the Bible it is the family, not the
individual, that is the basic unit of society (property, for example, is titled
under Mosaic Law to families). When God sent His Son, He sent Him not to a
church, not to a state, not to an isolated existence; He sent Him into a
family.
Note in Genesis
1:28 that mankind was to populate the world, but it was to be done in
conjunction with ruling it. In other words, population growth rate should be
related to successful rulership. Family and marriage cannot be separated from
dominion. Where dominion is perverted and the environment ruined, starvation
and poverty follow. Where marriage is dishonored and where families are broken,
society collapses. No amount of laws, programs, or “redefinitions” of marriage
and family can save the day. To provide for dominion and prosperity God
designed divine institutions, and no other social arrangements will produce
them.
The family is the
human’s first school, first church, and first state. As I point out in the next
section, man as God’s image-bearer has to consciously learn most of his
behavior in contrast to animals that possess extensive instinct. The family is
the training ground. There man first learns of authority, love, and
responsibility. In response to his parents, he discovers humility under
authority--either voluntary or enforced (!). To support this family function,
the Mosaic Law eliminated children who learned neither (Deut. 21:18-21). A
successful society requires successful families.
This third divine
institution, like the first two, also carries over into the spiritual realm.
God reveals Himself in family terms--Father and Son. Because man is a
theomorphism everything about him and his social existence reveals God’s
character to him. Precisely because of this fact, the fleshly mind of paganism
unceasingly seeks to bury the evidence. Paganism seeks to deny ultimate
responsibility and replace it with the concept of victimization. It seeks to
deny marriage and replace it with juvenile individualism. It seeks to deny
family structure and replace it with every other arrangement imaginable. Yet
this entire rebellious program finally self-destructs because God is not
mocked: disease, poverty, crime, and death are the unavoidable results.
Exercise 3.1.
1. Read Job 38:1-3;
40:1-8; 42:1-6 and answer these questions: How does God characterize human knowledge?
Would Job have stopped thinking the way he did if God had not initiated the
conversation? What is shown here about man’s moral judging capacity? How does
Job finally respond to God?
2. Read Proverbs
1:23. The phrase “pour out my spirit” is often interpreted as referring to some
non- verbal, emotional outburst. Yet in this verse “spirit” and “word” are
paralleled. Adding insight from I Cor. 2:11, what does the Bible tell us about
the human spirit and the phenomena of language, thought, and knowledge?
3. Using similarity
relationships between the (Q)ualities of the Triune Creator and the (q)ualities
of man, defend the following two propositions: (1) “only Christianity provides
a basis for genuine human love”; and (2) “only Christianity provides a basis
for genuine human knowledge.”
WHAT IS NATURE?
I have shown the
human side of the man-nature distinction; now I turn to the nature side. By
“nature” I include all of creation that is not man--rocks, water, plants,
animals, angels, and stars. The first lesson taught to the first man was that
nothing in nature fits his need for a personal relationship (Gen. 2:18-20). In
his present mortal state man is temporarily lower than the angels and is
confined in some way to the local part of nature which we now call planet earth
(Psa. 8:3-8). It is with this local part of nature that I will devote most of
our attention.
I will begin with a
look at the overall design of nature in distinction from the design of man.
Then I will deal with man’s relationship with nature through the exercise of
his dominion. I will show you four very significant universal limitations on
this dominion that doom all carnal dreams of rebellion against God.
Design of Nature. Old writers of centuries
ago used to refer to nature as “dumb” and “brute” to distinguish its essential
character from that of man. These writers did not use the word “dumb” like we
do today, as a synonym for “stupid”. “Dumb” used to refer to the inability to
speak thoughts through language, i.e., speechlessness. “Brute” meant
without ability to know. These writers, we shall see, were nearer to the truth
than they knew.
Whereas Adam could
not find a speech-laden, personal relationship with any part of nature, he
could and did receive revelation about God from nature. Natural (or general)
revelation is spoken of everywhere in the Bible (e.g., Job 38-41; Psa.
19:1-6; Acts 14:17; Rom. 1:18-20). The creation is said to “glorify” its
Creator. But if nature doesn’t personally speak to us, if it is “dumb”, then
how can we learn about God from it? How, without language, can information be
transferred from nature to our minds? How does nature “glorify” God?
Nature contains
patterns and forms that we recognize as products of a thinking, speaking,
spirit-mind, similar to our own. It is precisely the meaning of these patterns
and forms that modern paganism (in its evolutionary form) denies by ascribing
them to chance. Pilkey notes: “The whole point of the Creationist-Darwinian
debate is whether the leonine form, for example, originated as a perfect idea
in the mind of God or as a casual exercise in feline development. . . .The
evolutionary philosophy begins to lose its appeal the instant that a mind
begins to suspect that certain visible forms have eternal value.[8] The form
and behavior of a lamb, for example, instead of being the accidental outcome of
chance-driven mutations and natural selection, was purposefully designed to
communicate redemptive knowledge to man (note its appearance on the Throne of
God in Rev. 5).
Nature, while not
originating its own thoughts in speech to us as another person would, is loaded
with information from God’s thoughts. You can see and recognize this
information not only in heavenly patterns (Psa. 19:1-6) and in large-scale
animal forms (Job 38-41), but in what has been recently learned about the
biological cell and its genetic codes. Note here that I am claiming
not merely that forms exist, but that we also recognize that the forms
carry a message.
To show the
difference between merely saying a pattern is observed and saying the pattern
carries meaningful information to our minds, I adapt an illustration from A. E.
Wilder-Smith. Imagine looking at a series of apparently random dots and dashes
arranged in a sequence. As your eye looks along the sequence, you notice a
pattern (. . . _ _ _ . . .). If you are knowledgeable of Morse Code, you
immediately see the pattern as containing a message, “S.O.S.”, the
international sign for help. If you are not knowledgeable of the Morse Code
“language”, you merely notice an interesting pattern but do not see any message
in it. To “get the message” or for the pattern to be meaningful, you and the
originator of the pattern must share a common language.[9]
In much the same
way nature is filled with forms and patterns noticed by all men everywhere. The
Bible insists that such patterns actually are carrying meaningful messages
about the Creator. They contain information about His character, that He plans
and purposes. They “glorify Him” and “show His handiwork”. We “get the message”
because the patterns resemble objects we make and think about with our personal
spirits acting through our bodies. Our spirits recognize the Presence of
Another Spirit Who thinks information-filled thoughts.
Notice I said,
natural patterns “resemble” patterns of man- made objects, not that they are
identical. Unbelievers often try to oppose the so-called teleological argument
for God (argument from design) by citing instances of chaos or apparently
useless features. But the Bible doesn’t teach that every part of nature can be
“read” correctly. Much of nature has been irreversibly damaged by the fall (see
Chapter Four). Even some of the parts that weren’t ruined by the fall in
original Eden, had to be explained directly to Adam using spoken words (Gen
1:28-30; 2:16- 17). So nature doesn’t always carry a clearly understandable
message, but it does carry significant amounts of information about its Maker
from His Spirit to our spirits.[10]
Just because the
design of nature does glorify God, the carnal mind must somehow falsify it. The
information that natural designs convey about their Creator must be shut off.
The easiest way to bury this information can be inferred from Wilder- Smith’s
Morse Code illustration above. By denying (or suppressing or forgetting) the
Morse Code language rules, the “S- O-S” pattern loses all meaning. In like
fashion, by suppressing the human spirit’s sense of eternity (Eccl. 3:11) and
the personal God of eternity, paganism shuts off reception of the information
coming to it from nature (Rom. 1:21).
However, paganism
can never leave matters alone. The suppressed yearning of the human spirit for
God can’t stand total meaninglessness. Thus it redirects itself and fabricates
meaning for all the natural design it observes (Rom. 1:22). It exchanges the
information about God attached to natural design for pseudo- information that
man’s mind makes up and imposes on the forms and patterns (Rom. 1:23).
The design of
nature, therefore, is a two-edged sword. On one hand, it is general revelation
to all men everywhere of the character of God as Creator and Sustainer. On the
other hand, its brightness causes the rebellious to shut their eyes and drives
them to idolatry. Man’s response to nature’s design shapes the quality of his
dominion to which I now turn.
Man’s Limited
Power over Nature. Adam’s dominion over nature was limited to that part of nature
nearby, the earth. Someday his dominion would extend over all nature into the
very heavens through Christ, but not yet. Not only was Adam limited as to
space, but also as to time. Adam was created mortal, that is, subject to
possible death. Compared to the future resurrec- tion body, his original body
was mortally vulnerable; he could self-destruct. Here is the physical
aspect of man’s limited dominion. Although this physical limit does have an
absolute outer boundary (neither Adam nor his progeny could auto-resurrect or
ascend to heaven in their mortal bodies), man had plenty of room to expand his
dominion. Starting with that part of material nature closest to him, his own
fleshly body created from the earth (I Cor. 15:42-49), he could work outward
over all the earth. The first divine institution, responsible dominion, is to
produce workmanship and projects that God will one day judge the value of. Only
if man remains in communication with the Designer of nature, will such dominion
produce acceptable fruit.
This strange,
provisionary status of mankind in mortal vulnerability is vitally linked to the
plan of God. If Adam had not sinned he could have lived forever, never having
to die. His body cells apparently were like today’s one-celled creatures such
as the amoeba which, apart from an accidental interference, never have to die a
natural death. They simply perpetuate their existence unendingly. Arthur
Custance draws our attention to a fascinating implication: Adam and Eve had to
be created with bodies capable of endless continuance and under no necessity of
dying in order that the Redeemer of man’s body might Himself likewise be under
no necessity of dying, while yet remaining truly representative of man as
created.[11]
Dr. Custance’s
point is that Christ’s death was not a premature death in a body that
would have naturally died, but it was a substitutionary death in a body
that did not have to die. Christ, in this regard, came into the world in a body
like that of the original Adam, a body not subject to natural death. Of course,
here is another reason why evolution cannot be reconciled with biblical faith
because it insists that death is “natural”.
In God’s plan not
only does a mortally-vulnerable body permit a substitutionary death, but it
also allows two additional features of salvation. First, unlike a resurrection
body, it permits genuine repentence to take place. Once the resurrection body
is given the eternal status of the person is fixed (John 5:28-29). Second, the
death of the mortal body rids the saved person of his fallen flesh (I Cor.
15:50-57).
Thus man’s dominion
is bounded physically by the Word of God. Now I turn to another limitation.
Man’s Limited
Rights over Nature. Man’s dominion over nature is also limited morally. The Bible
has a very powerful doctrine of ecology although pagan environmentalists
regularly attack the Bible as a chief, if not the source of our present
environmental problems. Clearly in Genesis 1:29-30; 2:15-17,19 God determines
what Adam “ought” to do with nature. These are morally-based environmental
regulations.
Later in the
progress of revelation God gives more such regulations involving limits on working
animals (Exod. 20:10; 23:12), on planting the soil (Exod. 23:10-11), on
damaging fruit- bearing trees in war (Deut. 20:19), and on killing and
capturing animals (Deut. 22:6-7). The moral order is that the Creator is
ultimate owner of nature, not man; man is merely an underlord and steward.
Pagan critics of
the Bible cannot rightly understand it because of their presuppositional belief
in the Continuity of Being. Under this dogma, there is no personal Creator and
Source of moral authority over nature. Thus Bible passages like Genesis 1:29-30
are misinterpreted inside the pagan grid as giving mankind autonomous
lordship over nature instead of a derivative one. Then the Bible is blamed for
justifying arrogant disregard for the environment. Of course, the irony in the
pagan position is that it tries to make moral judgments about what “ought” to
be done without ever justifying the source of such judgments!
Man’s Limited
Knowledge of Nature. Besides the physical and moral limitations on man’s
dominion over nature, there is the widely ignored mental limitation.
Although man as a spiritual knower recognizes some of the information God’s
Spirit put into the design of nature, man always must live with the Creator-
creature distinction. God’s Spirit is incomprehensible, and His thoughts toward
us and nature are incomprehensible. Man’s knowledge of nature, therefore, can
never be complete because the ultimate wise plan behind every fact lies nowhere
in man or nature itself; it lies with God. Job rightly wrote, “The deep says,
‘[Wisdom] is not in me’; and the sea says, ‘It is not with me.’”(Job 28:14).
This mental limitation has two parts: reason and experience.
1. Reason.
In my discussion of man’s knowledge as a finite version of God’s omniscience, I
noted the limitations of man’s logic, language, and thought. Let’s look at one
very important example. Every student of plane geometry remembers the “parallel
line” axiom. It states that given a line l, and a point P not on
that line, there is one and only one line m in the plane of l and
P which passes through P and never meets l no matter how
far out in space l and m are extended.
P m-- -- -- -- --x
-- -- -- -- -- --
l
_______________________________
Supposedly, all of geometry
can be logically deduced given this axiom and nine other axioms. This so-called
Euclidean geometry was thought to describe physical nature perfectly.
Something, however,
in this parallel line axiom troubled mathematicians. Unlike the other nine axioms,
it asserts a claim about what happens in far off space. Morris Kline explains:
“What is objectionable about axioms which assert what happens far out in space?
The answer is that they transcend experience. The axioms of Euclidean geometry
are supposed to be immediately convincing statements about the properties of
space. But how can one be sure of what happens millions of miles away?”[12] By
the end of the nineteenth century mathematicians had devised new axioms that
conflicted with each other. One claimed no parallel lines through P and
another claimed more than one parallel line through P. With these new
axioms, conflicting non- Euclidean geometries were created, having just as
rigorous logical structure as the old Euclidean geometry.
The discovery of
alternate, perfectly logical mathematical structures that radically conflict
with each other exposed the limitations of human reason as a dominion tool.
Kline notes the dispair that resulted: “The appearance of non-Euclidean
geometries. . .led scientists to question whether man could ever hope to find a
true scientific theory. . . .Even more devastating to philosophy was the
realization that man can no longer be sure of his ability to acquire
truths.”[13] Such despair, please note, is a paganistic over-reaction to the
limitations on reason. Paganism insists on an all-or-nothing agenda. If the
carnal mind can’t have God-like omniscience, it denies knowledge can exist at
all. By way of contrast, the Bible-believing Christian rests in God’s
omniscience as perfectly rational, not his finite version, and so does not
plunge into this sort of despair.
2. Experience.
The other part of man’s mental limitation is easier to appreciate. As the
following diagram shows, regardless of how much man extends his direct observation
through instruments and historical observations of the past, his still has
limited experience. He can extend his data-collection into space with
telescopes and into the microworld with microscopic techniques. He can study
very small intervals of time with ultraspeed filming, and, to extend his
observation of the past, he must rely on historical records of other men.
The problem is that
no matter how many pieces of data and experiences man has (let us call the
total “n”), he always faces the next unknown (the “n + 1”th datum). Experience
is always local in time and space. In both experience and reason,
therefore, man’s dominion over nature is mentally limited.
To exercise his
dominion in a godly fashion, man must submit to the authority of God’s directly-spoken
Word (special revelation = the Bible). God told Adam how He made the world,
what He named in it, and what Adam was to do with it. Because of His plan for
man to exercise dominion, we can rest assured that our reason and experience,
though limited, is sufficient for the task. Sufficient, that is, if we
worshipfully and obediently go about the task. We express our obedience when
we proceed intellectually within the biblical framework allowing His
interpretation to control our interpretation of nature. A
Special Limitation in Constructing Histories of Nature. Today, of course, a
major attack on biblical faith comes from evolutionary cosmology. While I
address some details of this question in Appendices A, B, and C, here I provide
you with a general criticism that applies to any pagan natural history.
How do you
construct a history? Look at the diagram of man’s limited knowledge. Past
events cannot be directly experienced. They can be known through direct
observations of people who were there, or we can make conjectures
(speculations) about the past. Note that conjectures are attempts at “universalizing”
local experience.
For example, how
can man really know which geometry fits nature one billion miles away
(universalizing space-wise)? Or how can man really know that radioactive decay
constants never change (universalizing time-wise)? There is no direct
method of verification! To build natural histories, therefore, the pagan
mentality has to set forth carefully-chosen universals or constants such
as “c”, the speed of light. Unless something is constant there can be no
knowledge or history whatsover (see Chapter 1). The setting forth, however, by
definition cannot be on the basis of experience; it has to be by faith.
Now the
Bible-believing dominion-man doesn’t have to root his knowledge in such
hypothetical constants of nature. He locates his constants elsewhere, viz.,
in the Creator’s immutability and omniscience. For example, 5 minutes
after God created Adam, how “old” would Adam have appeared to an observer ignorant
of God’s observational narrative--20 years, 30 years? The “normal”
physiological processes weren’t constant in this case. They were radically
interrupted! But godly knowledge doesn’t come crashing down because a
hypothetical constant ceased being a constant. Godly dominion locates its
immutable foundation in the Creator rather than the creature.
The Bible-believing
natural historian is in no hurry to universalize his local experience as the
pagan is. When he attempts to reconstruct natural history, he remembers God’s
question to Job (“where were you when I laid the foundations of the
earth?”--Job 38:4) and is humbled.
Exercise 3.2
1. Re-read Genesis
2 on the creation of both Adam and Eve. Assuming 24 hour days, speculate on the
time schedule of the sixth day--the time of creation of animals, of Adam, of
the “experiment”, and of Eve. Imagine after each creation event, an outside
observer is allowed to film for 1 minute. What would be his “interpretation” of
the age of the objects in his film? Of the time duration separating each film
segment? Why?
2. The creation
story says God created animals and plants to reproduce “after their kinds”. Are
there, on the basis of this text, “constants” that define categories of natural
objects? How does the New Testament utilize these categories to teach further
truth (see I Cor. 15:35ff)?
3. Develop a
personal policy of your own toward living in God’s world. What general features
should characterize the outworking of dominion over nature in your life? What
do you “read” in nature about God’s character (for help use Jesus’ model in His
Sermon on the Mount)? What things in nature prompt you to talk to God?
END NOTES FOR
CHAPTER 3
1. John Pilkey, Origin
of the Nations (San Diego, CA: Master Book Publishers, 1984), p. 257.
2. Quoted in Arthur
C. Custance, Two Men Called Adam (Brockville, Ontario, Canada: Doorway
Publications, 1983), p. 41.
3. Quoted in Ibid.,
p. 20.
4. It is a
well-known philosophical fallacy that you cannot derive an “ought” statement
from an “is” statement. Or as C.S. Lewis put it in his book, The Abolition
of Man, you can’t get a conclusion in the imperative mood out of premises
in the indicative mood. The fallacy still persists in the rationale behind how
public surveys are often used to define “correctness”.
5. See any good
text on the history of mathematics and logic.
6. See Francis
Schaeffer’s works, especially his book Escape From Reason and How
Then Shall We Live.
7. Gary North, The
Dominion Covenant: Genesis (Tyler, Texas: Institute For Christian
Economics, 1982), pp. 38, 59f.
8. Pilkey, p. 230.
9. A. E.
Wilder-Smith, The Natural Sciences Know Nothing of Evolution
(Costa Mesa, CA: The Word For Today Publishers, 1984), p. 57. Wilder-Smith has
three earned doctorates in the physical sciences and has lectured in prominent
universities in the United States, England, and Switzerland. He has some of the
best criticisms of evolution from the viewpoint of thermodynamical statistics
and information theory.
10. Keep in mind
the Creator-creature distinction discussed in Chapter 2. Failure to honor this
distinction has been at the heart of failure to properly phrase the
teleological argument of God so that unbelievers cannot easily counter it. See
John Frame’s comments in his Apologetics to the Glory of God
(Phillipsburg, NJ: Presbyterian and Reformed Publishing Co., 1994), pp.
105-109.
11. Custance, p.
48f.
12. Morris Kline, Mathematics
for the Nonmathematician (New York, NY: Dover Publications, 1985), p. 454.
13. Kline, p. 475.