Edwards, Denis. Original Sin and Saving Grace in Evolutionary Context."
Denis Edwards is concerned
with rethinking the doctrine of sin and grace in light of biological evolution.
He begins with the insights of Gerd Theissen, Sallie McFague and Philip Hefner.
According to Edwards, Theissen argues that the common features of science and
theology can be articulated through evolutionary categories. Religion manifests
the central reality, God. Christianity offers the principle of radical
solidarity which runs counter to natural selection. The pull in us towards
anti-social behavior has a biological foundation, while the work of the Holy Spirit
is in the direction of pro-social behavior, helping us see strangers as kin.
Theissen supports these points by referring to the three great mutations of
Christian faith: biblical monotheism, New Testament Christology, and the
experience of the Holy Spirit. Edwards then criticizes Theissens work in terms
of both biology and theology: for example, are natural selection and culture,
and natural selection and the way of Christ, each so sharply opposed?
Sallie McFague finds the
pattern for divine immanence in creation in the story of Jesus: the universe is
directed toward inclusive love for all, particularly the oppressed. As Edwards
sees it, her Christic paradigm extends Gods liberating, healing, and
inclusive love to non-human creatures. McFague understands nature as the new
poor. She finds consonance between natural selection and Christianity, since
evolution is not only biological but cultural, and since it is essential that
human culture contributes to the welfare of all life on earth. But she finds
dissonance between natural selection and Christianity, because neither cultural
nor biological evolution includes solidarity with the oppressed. Instead, God
suffers with suffering creation, since the world is Gods body. But, Edwards
asks, is McFague too negative, even moralistic, about natural selection? Is the
Christic paradigm opposed to natural selection or does it define Gods creative
action in and through evolution?
According to Edwards, Philip
Hefner sees the human being as a symbiosis of genes and culture. Religion is
the central dimension of culture. In view of the ecological crisis we have
brought about we need a theology of the human as created co-creator. Hefner
views original sin in terms of the discrepancy in the information coming from our
genes and our culture, including a clash in us between altruism and genetic
selfishness. He also suggests that original sin can be understood in terms of
the fallibility and limitation that are essential to human evolution and
freedom. Though these are good, they are always accompanied by failure. The
religious traditions carry altruistic values, particularly trans-kin altruism,
and the biblical commandments ground altruism ultimately in God.
Edwards believes that
Hefners evolutionary insights genuinely illuminate the human condition and the
Christian understanding of concupiscence. He argues, however, that discrepancy
and fallibility are not in themselves sin. Instead, following Rahner, he
distinguishes between the disorder of sin and the disorder that is intrinsic to
being human. The former comes from our rejecting God. The latter results from
our being both spiritually and bodily finite; it is a form of concupiscence
that is morally neutral and not in itself sinful. Our existential state is
constituted by both disorders. Edwards finds Hefners insight as bearing on our
natural, but not our sinful, disorder: the structure of the human, though a
fallible symbiosis of genes and culture, is not in itself sin. In addition,
Edwards suggests that our genetic inheritance can carry messages essential for
human life while culture and religion can carry messages of evil. This means
that selfishness and sin cannot be identified strictly with our biological
side, and unselfish behavior cannot be identified entirely with our cultural
side.
With regard to grace,
Edwards writes that, while altruism is a radical dimension of divine and human
love, it does not express the ultimate vision of that love. Indeed,
indiscriminate calls to altruism and self-sacrifice can function to maintain
oppression, as feminist theologians have stressed. Moreover, in a trinitarian
doctrine of God, love is revealed most radically in mutual, equal, and ecstatic
friendship. So, though Hefner sees altruistic love as holding the status of a
cosmological and ontological principle, Edwards sees
persons-in-mutual-relations as having this status. Drawing on the writings of
John Zizioulas, Walter Kasper, and Catherine Mowry LaCugna, Edwards suggests
that if the essence of God is relational and if everything that is springs from
persons-in-relation, then this points towards an ontology which he calls
being-in- relation. Moreover, such an ontology is partially congruent with
evolutionary biology, including its stress on cooperative, coadaptive,
symbiotic, and ecological relations. Contrary to Theissen and McFague who tend
to oppose natural selection and the Gospel, Edwards wants the Christic
paradigm to view God as continuously creating through the processes of
evolution.
Still the struggle and pain
of evolution leads Edwards to face the challenge of theodicy. Following Thomas
Tracy, he first suggests that natural selection needs to be considered in non-
anthropomorphic and non-moral terms as an objective process in nature, like
nucleosynthesis in stars. Theodicy is no more intense a problem for natural
selection than it is to all such processes, including death when understood as
essential to evolution and life. The trinitarian God who creates through
natural selection needs to be understood not only as relational but also as
freely accepting the limitations found in loving relationships with creatures.
The Incarnation and the Cross point to a conception of God related to natural
selection through unthinkable vulnerability and self-limitation. The God of natural
selection is thus the liberating, healing, and inclusive God of Jesus. This God
is engaged with and suffers with creation; at the same time, creatures
participate in Gods being and trinitarian relationships.
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