I fail to see why we continue to believe that if we don't discuss it, nor are aware of it, be that evolution or the prevalent homosexuality and presence of AIDS in our own churches, that it just doesn't exist. I am with George, how are we to refute evolution if we don't know what it is about. What do we counter and with what?
Personally, for me evolution has a huge problem in that in recent history, let's say since the first man walked out of the woods....LOL!!!.......no one else has made that transition. Somebody's million years should be up by now. CNN, ABC, CBS, NBC, Faux...Ooops! Fox, etc. should be covering "new" men every so often.................Why did the cycle stop?
Also, I can see why folks would want another alternative than that which spawn Christianity as we know it. On a whole, we have not behaved well. Not that long after the first church, were the Crusades, and multiple popes, schicsms, selling of indulgences to serfs, etc.Then there is the modern, most visible right wing christian, that touts that God doesn't not love you and in fact at the ready with the fire button to destroy you.........unless you look, do walk talk, and live just like us..............If I didn't know God for myself, i might have to go with evolution as an explanation for the mess made of Christianity by man.
We need to see these conflicts in the light of
The Great Controversy theme. That book points out the fallacies that have hindered the work of God on earth and what remedies God has provided. I find it useful to place the conflicts and dangers in the frame of an outline of church history where we see developments in the Christian world, also after that book was written. But back to basics in general terms and round numbers:
Europe is the World of Christianity developing onto a Catholic Church, divided into the Roman and Eastern Churches. The time frame is about AD 400 to 1600 when the writings of Augustine of Hippo gradually became more important than Scripture. Even Martin Luther was an Augustinian monk.
Luther, Calvin, Zwingli and other reformers rediscovered the Bible and their reformation became important in Germany, Switzerland, the Netherlands, England, Scotland, Denmark, Sweden, Norway, Finland, and Iceland. The Bible was translated into the languages of these countries. (Even today some people pride themselves with a theory that their translation is better than all the others - another battle with evolution!)
About this time America was rediscovered and populated by people dominated by European Protestants. Today there are probably more people from these European countries in North America than in the old countries. Around 1840 the American people "gathered at the river" and revivals took place. Influenced by great revivalists the Christan people in America were more influenced by conversion than what was taking place in Europe. Thus the influx of liberal theology came much later to America than Europe.
When European scholars "discovered" errors in the Bible and new scientific knowledge seemed to oppose certain things in the Bible this influenced a number of theologians and undermined confidence in the Bible. The new discoveries of Darvin also influenced their thinking. This started in Europe.
The first World War which started in Europe in 1914 influence the thinking of theologians like Karl Barth in Switzerland. Something seemed to be lacking in the Christianity of people when they could kill each other by the thousands. Why not get back to the Bible and the teachings of the Reformers? This might save the world.
It has been said that Barth's theology was stated in the words of the hymn, "Yes, Jesus loves me. The Bible tells me so." Thus started what some term Neo-Orthodoxy. And here I feel we are getting to understand what is happening at La Sierra University. More on that below.
There are so many unexplained facts whose study is unfortunately discouraged or forbidden outside the context of pre-determined conclusions, by both evolutionists and creationists. This is true of many things, not just the question of origins.
There might be even more to it than that. As we are facing the climax of history we need to go back to basics. In the Western World and within General Christianity we are working with two sources, with two concepts of understanding life and religion: The Hebrew and the Greek. (This has nothing to do with the two languages the Bible is written in, Hebrew and Greek languages.)
The Hebrew concept - as we find in Scripture and in Creation - God blew his spirit/air into man and he became a living soul. From then on the soul is all that man is, his thoughts, his acts, his being. His body is the temple of the Holy Spirit. When the heart stops beating his spirit returns to God but becomes a soul again at the resurrection.
According to the Greek concept the soul has alway been and will always exist. The soul enters a frail human body on earth where there is a continual conflict between the evil body and the divine soul. So there is no connection as such between the body and the spiritual. The daily life and work has nothing to do with his religion.
I think the greatest problems in the world of religion lies between these two concepts. Some Christians read the Bible with the eyes of the Greek, others with the eyes of the Hebrew, and then there might be some who make a futile attempt at combining the two.
Neo-Orthodoxy has driven many people in the direction of Greek thought, although they emphasize a return to the Bible, conversion, justification. I have heard them stating that from the pulpit the preacher must preach the words of Scripture, also the stories found in the Bible, and tell them as if they really happened, because they create faith. But in the scientific lab the scientist is no longer dealing with religion, and evolution has nothing to do with faith - that is science. So in church these people might have a lot in common with us. Their sermons might contain the same message in words. The difference lies in the definition of soul and the dualistic view of man.
I have been to the home of a professor of biology at La Sierra. Lovely people who believe in Bible Creation. That was many years ago.
Reading what the present staff at La Sierra is writing I gather that they might be influenced by Neo-Orthodoxy. In their church services, Bible classes and devotions they might well be using the same spiritual material as the rest of us, be richly blessed by it, emphasize the importance of conversion and justification by faith, and yet teach that conclusions you make in the science department has nothing to do with their faith or religious beliefs. In fact I saw a statement in a syllabus of theirs indicating that what is taught might be in conflict with your belief, and that seemed all right.
Is there something we can learn from this? Are we also in a similar danger? I know that some Noe-Orthodox call us "Biblicists" - people who worship the Bible as an idol. Is there a danger on both sides if we go to extremes?
This is not a scholarly writing, only notes from my own memory and experiences. So I am stating this in general terms, like round numbers. If you want to ask questions or discuss certain items, that is OK with me.