I was out this morning and there was a Christian preaching in the street about how science is trying to take away religion. He was saying that Evolution is nonsense and the scientific facts were made up to try and stop people believing in God.
So, it got me thinking.
Do Christians here agree with that guy - that evolution is nonsense?
The Bible says that God created the world, and created the first humans, so where does that leave evolution in the eyes of Christians?
Can you believe in both? Can you really argue science?
I find it a really interesting subject.
Young Earth Creationism is in a sense a somewhat modern phenomenon, for example one can go back to Origen or St. Augustine of Hippo to see that Christians have interpreted Genesis 1 non-literally.
Some Christians, like Augustine, held that it should be read allegorically--Augustine believed in a young universe (6,000 years) on the basis of an allegorical reading, believing that God created everything instantaneously in the beginning and thus the six days represent six ages.
Other Christians, such as myself, adhere to what's known as the
Framework Hypothesis, where the point of Genesis 1 isn't as a literal-historic-scientific account of creation but is instead intended as a theological framework.
Young Earth Creationism requires a somewhat literal reading of the early chapters of Genesis usually following Ussher's chronology; there are also Old Earth Creationists who come in several kinds. And then there are Theistic Evolutionists (also known as Evolutionary Creationism) who do not believe there is any conflict between science and Christian faith; the purpose of the Creation narrative(s) aren't intended to be literal, historical or scientific but instead intended as theological and mythological.
Personally I read the pre-Abrahamic narratives in Genesis as forming a general pre-historic mythological prologue for establishing the setting for Abraham's call from Ur and all the events that lead up to what's more important, and that's the Israelites finding themselves in Egypt and God calling Moses to liberate them from Egypt in the Exodus.
The Exodus is the defining story for Israel's identity as the Covenant People with God, Genesis establishes a pre-historic mythological world setting followed by the Abrahamic narrative to establish Israel's rights to Canaan.
That I can accept life evolved on this planet over the course of a couple billion years doesn't contradict my belief in God as Creator, nor my believe in Christ, who is the only-begotten Son and Word of God becoming flesh being Savior of the world by His death, resurrection and coming again at the end of all things. It's no more hazardous to my trust in Scripture and faith in God than my acceptance of a heliocentric model of the solar system.
-CryptoLutheran