that same review with my comments on it scattered throughout
Genesis, Creation, and Early Man | Old Believing's Blog
and here's what I had to say on the Theokritoff's article in my Seminary thesis on this topic, with my advisor Dr. Christohper Veniamin:
" Interestingly, in a critical review of the first edition of
Genesis, Creation, and Early Man, which acknowledges several strong points in Fr. Seraphim’s work but ultimately lends its weight towards theistic evolution, George and Elizabeth Theokritoff
[FONT="][1][/FONT] write that “The Fathers assume that Genesis has a basis in historical fact,”and therefore “Fr. Seraphim is commendably honest in recognizing that if one believes, as he does, that we must read Genesis exactly as the Fathers did, one is committed then to a thorough-going young earth creationism,” which gives credence to the historical level of the Genesis text. Of this they state: “Fr Seraphim’s approach is fundamentally honest and his arguments usually precise and coherent.”
[FONT="][2][/FONT] However, throughout the review the Theokritoffs attempt to demonstrate supposed contradictions in the Fathers’ interpretation of Genesis, which contradicts their admission that Fr. Seraphim is correct in discerning a consistent view in the Fathers. As we have seen, Fr. Seraphim was deeply convinced that the Holy Fathers are our proper guide to understanding God and His creation, and it is this approach with which the Theokritoffs do not fully agree. Quoting Fr. Seraphim, they write: “he seems to have supreme confidence in the precision of ‘that knowledge of the first and last things which God has revealed to His chosen people, the Orthodox Christians’ (376). It is not always easy to share this confidence.”
[FONT="][3][/FONT] Whereas Fr. Seraphim believed that a careful reading of the Fathers in prayerful pursuit of the mind of the Fathers is our trustworthy guide for our troubled times, the Theokritoffs ask: “Are the Fathers giving us the last word – or contributing to an understanding which we must then bring to bear on problems quite foreign to them?” but as Fr. Seraphim demonstrates throughout his commentary, the theological issues that arise from theistic evolution have already been dealt with in depth by the Fathers.
In his approach Fr. Seraphim is in accord with St. Silouan, one of the greatest Saints of the 20th century. Fr. Sophrony attests that he taught that the Scriptures, being written by the Holy Spirit, “cannot be understood through scientific research which can only provide surface aspects and details, never the substance.”
[FONT="][4][/FONT] Dr. John Mark Reynolds,associate professor of philosophy at Biola University and an Orthodox Christian, concurs with the Theokritoffs’ initial statement: “The Fathers from the first century forward overwhelmingly took a young-earth, global-flood view,” but in harmony with Fr. Seraphim’s approach he states: “Simply discarding the views of the Fathers is not an option for any thoughtful Christian.”
[FONT="][5][/FONT] The Theokritoffs do not in any way advocate the discarding of the Fathers, but they certainly approach them as less reliable sources than does Fr. Seraphim.
[FONT="][1][/FONT] George is a paleontologist and Elizabeth studied Modern Greek and wrote a thesis on hymnography at Oxford, and is author and editor of
The Cambridge Companion to Orthodox Christian Theology.
[FONT="][2][/FONT] “Genesis and Creation: Towards a Debate,” pp. 366, 367.
[FONT="][3][/FONT] Ibid.,p. 372.
[FONT="][4][/FONT] St. Silouan the Athonite,p. 90.
[FONT="][5][/FONT] Moreland and Reynolds, ed.,
Three Views on Creation and Evolution, p. 97.
Some, like the Theokritoffs, admit that their evolutionary view is inconsistent with the Fathers, while others insist that the Fathers did not believe in the historicity of Genesis and that therefore their views can be harmonized with evolution."
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and:
"as [Fr. Seraphim] also notes, the
first and foremost purpose of Genesis is to inform and foster the spiritual life,
[FONT="][1][/FONT] which largely sets him apart from Fundamentalist Young-Earth Creationists, and so he gives a broad presentation of Patristic commentaries, not only touching upon those issues directly involved in the Creation/evolution question. Here, the Theokritoffs misrepresent Fr. Seraphim’s work by claiming that “in Fr. Seraphim’s commentary, the literal interpretation becomes the main point.”
[FONT="][2][/FONT] True, much of his commentary is focused on the literal interpretation, because that is the key difference between Creationist and evolutionist interpretations of Genesis, but he is clear that Genesis is about the spiritual life. They even earlier note that Fr. Damascene, as editor of Fr. Seraphim’s
Genesis, Creation, and Early Man, writes that Fr. Seraphim became bored in presenting Patristic commentaries solely as they relate to evolution,
[FONT="][3][/FONT] but as Fr. Seraphim’s life bears witness, he never became bored with the spiritual struggle that Genesis helps to guide Orthodox Christians through.
[FONT="][1][/FONT] Ibid.,pp. 107-8.
[FONT="][2][/FONT] “Genesis And Creation: Towards A Debate,” p. 366.
[FONT="][3][/FONT] Ibid.,p. 366.