- Joined
- Jun 19, 2023
- Messages
- 1,128
- Reaction score
- 2,300
- Points
- 133
- Age
- 46
- Location
- Canada
- Faith
- Reformed (URCNA)
- Country
- Canada
- Marital status
- Married
- Politics
- Kingdom of God
Okay, thanks for your cosmological summary. If you haven't read mine, let me know. There are procedural faults I identify that I think you may find quite interesting, if you haven't picked up on them already.
I have not read yours. I asked a couple of times for a link to what you wrote for CSR and ICC (whatever those acronyms stand for) but you still haven't provided one. When you do, I will be able to read what you wrote.
I would have to disagree on the line that "there is not a shred of conflict or even tension."
If you think some shred of conflict or tension still exists between redemptive history and natural history in my view, I invite you to demonstrate where.
When you say there was a major shift between this two-fold format and what you formerly believed, could you elaborate?
BEFORE:
As a brand new Christian who adopted young-earth creationism (2011–2015), I used to believe that redemptive history and natural history share the same starting point because Genesis was about material origins. That meant the garden of Eden was around 6,000 years ago and the origin of the universe was five days earlier.
I would eventually abandon young-earth creationism in favor of a Hugh Ross-type old-earth creationism (2015–2018), so I still believed Genesis was about material origins and, therefore, redemptive history and natural history still shared the same starting point—but much, much longer ago (though I didn't know when).
AFTER:
Then I started reading Kline, Beale, Walton, and others (e.g., Middleton on the imago Dei). I remained an old-earth creationist (2018–Present) but I no longer believed that redemptive history and natural history share the same starting point because it looked like Genesis wasn't about material origins. So, the garden of Eden was around 6,000 years ago (Ken Ham was right about that) and the origin of the universe was roughly 14 billion years earlier (Hugh Ross was right about that).
It also meant that (a) Adam and Eve lived in a world populated by millions of people, so they weren't the first humans, which meant (b) sin is not a matter of biological continuity but rather covenantal solidarity (i.e., in Adam)—which makes sense because that's true of our righteousness in Christ, too (i.e., likewise not a matter of biological continuity, for Jesus fathered no children).
And yet the furthest back that Ms. Johnson on Montana dinosaur collagen would go was 200K years, nowhere close to 65M. As I recall, she was giving the most extensive research on the subject, in her LA TIMES interview.
I have no idea who you're talking about. I am not aware of any "Ms. Johnson" with a connection to "dinosaur collagen."
I would suggest you look into two things theologically. First, that the covenant with humanity didn't start with Genesis 1. (You could say the "reporting" did.) The covenant was eternal, and the promise of eternal life (says Titus 1) was before creation. This is because there is pre-creation humanity to Christ (John 16, etc.) and the covenant was with him as a representative, so much so that one line of Isaiah has "I will make you [i.e., the Servant] a covenant for the nations."
I already have looked into these issues, and have arrived at a (somewhat) settled position on them. Early in my journey toward Reformed theology, while studying soteriology, covenant theology versus dispensationalism, and infralapsarianism versus supralapsarianism, I came to see the following: There is the covenant of redemption (Latin pactum salutis), established from all eternity among the persons of the Trinity, and there are the two covenants made with humanity in time, the covenant of works and the covenant of grace. The former was made with our federal head, the first Adam, whose fall ushered in the latter mediated by Christ, the last Adam (as appointed in the pactum salutis).
When I talk about redemptive history, I am referring to the human sphere (Greek kosmos), in which case redemptive history dawned in Eden roughly 6,000 years ago. To be sure, the covenants made with humanity in time are grounded in and flow from the eternal pactum salutis, but that covenant is intratrinitarian and thus distinct from redemptive history. (The very word "history" is a major tell, being temporal language.)
Second, if you look closely at the exchange Peter reports in 2 Peter 3, you will see that the issue with the stoicheans—not to be confused with classical Stoics—is an active, intervening God. This is true three times: creation, cataclysm, and the final judgment. The stoicheans did not want this said about the earth, harboring some sort of sacred earth belief. (I was published on the "stoicheia tou kosmou," regarding how it relates to Judaism, but not how this "sacred, uninterrupted earth" view factored outside that—except that tight parallel drawn by Paul in Galatians 4:8, the Galatian first stage as pagans.)
I think you may have failed to grasp the distinction I am making. My argument is not that God was uninvolved in the material origins of creation until Genesis. God's decree in the pactum salutis comprehends all things throughout time. The triune God is (and must be) actively involved in every stage of creation's history, from its first moment of material origin onward.
The point I am pressing is that scripture does not speak equally to both histories. Natural history, which includes the material origin and development of the cosmos, belongs to the sphere of general revelation. Redemptive history, which begins with God's covenantal dealings with Adam, belongs to special revelation. As scripture, Genesis is concerned with the latter, not the former. To conflate them is to ask Genesis to answer questions it was never given to answer.
So, when I say Genesis marks the dawn of redemptive history, I am not excluding God's sovereign involvement in natural history. I am only saying Genesis is not narrating that story.