My abstract from Reclaiming Wisdom
I thought some of you might like to read my abstract from the conference last weekend. So here you go.
After Adam: Thoughts
on the Integration of Biblical and Human History
Todd Charles Wood
During his lifetime, Leonardo da Vinci witnessed the
beginning of a remarkable and ongoing expansion of knowledge about human
history. As Leonardo entered middle age,
Christopher Columbus brought the “New World” of the American continents to the
permanent attention of western Europe, sparking the Age of Exploration. These explorations disrupted the European
view of the world, as exemplified by the medieval Mappa Mundi (map of the
world). The typical medieval map
integrated geography with biblical history, showing the continents of Asia,
Africa, and Europe corresponding to the lands settled by Shem, Ham, and Japheth
respectively. Leonardo produced his own
Mappa Mundi in 1514, which included representations of the Americas. The discovery of whole continents inhabited
with unique animals, plants, and human beings disrupted the simpler picture of
the three sons of Noah peopling three continents. Early reactions mostly focused on reconciling
the more complex world with a historical understanding of Genesis 1-11. These disruptions of our previous
understandings continue to this day. As
researchers regularly uncover evidence of previously unimagined peoples, Christians
continue to revise our previous understanding of the history of humanity. More recently, some evangelical Christians
have begun advocating a different approach of abandoning the long-standing
quest for integration of biblical and human history in favor of a higher
critical approach to the text. This
movement represents a retreat from Christian scholarship, as advocates champion
a theology that has nothing to say about science and therefore nothing to say
about the reality in which we live. A
theology that is impervious to scientific discovery is a theology that is
irrelevant to our lives. In contrast,
those of us who continue to seek integration and a truer understanding of human
history consistent with both scientific and biblical evidence realize that our
work will never be finished this side of the Kingdom of God. Instead, we may take stock of the present
(provisional) status of our understanding with an eye toward future
discoveries. First, we recognize that
the entirety of the human fossil record is very likely post-Flood in origin,
representing the resettlement of the devastated wreckage of the world as Adam
knew it. Second, we find that despite
many spectacular fossil discoveries, we can still distinguish human from
nonhuman. There is not an unbroken line
of fossils connecting humans with animals.
Third, the fossil remains of these early, post-Flood humans present
morphologies and genomes well outside of the range of modern people. This ancient diversity raises the question of
where and how this diversity arose.
Fourth, the genetics of ancient humans reveals a complex history that
resists easy reconciliation with the biblical record of Shem, Ham, and
Japheth. Finally, we recognize that our
theories are severely underdetermined by a paucity of data, as illustrated by
regular discoveries of previously unknown human forms (like Homo luzonensis) and emerging evidence
that theories of hominin evolution are heavily biased by fossil discovery. The future of discovery is largely impossible
to predict, but we can look forward to additional hominin diversity being
uncovered in the fossil record, along with further expansion of our
understanding of ancient genetics. How
creationists will respond to these discoveries will depend on ongoing and
concentrated studies of geology, radiometric dating, the biblical record,
paleontology, baraminology, and genetics.
We ought to be encouraged by the present status and rededicate ourselves
to further study.
Feedback? Email me at toddcharleswood [at] gmail [dot] com. If you enjoyed this article, please consider a contribution to Core Academy of Science. Thank you.
Have you read my book? You should check that out too!