My college education was long and chaotic. Some might call it eclectic but it would more accurately called undirected. For a good part of the time I was an anthropology major at Wayne State University studying under Dr. John Cole, a student of the famous social anthropologist Leslie White. One of the foundational principles in studying other cultures is never to bring your cultural biases into your field work. Most of the field work of the nineteenth century was terribly flawed in this regard. "Civilized" anthropologists went out to study "primitive" cultures, imposing their values on what they observed.
One of the most common errors was to treat oral traditions as "myths" in the sense of being fables or legends. They assumed that the indigenous people "believed" literally the stories they told. This was a bias made by members of a literate culture observing a non-literate (not illiterate) culture. The meaning of the concept of "belief" they held was much more concrete than the understanding of the speakers.
The role of story-telling in preliterate cultures has a distinct evolutionary advantage. Stories are the means by which the deepest truths of the culture are preserved intact even after many generations because stories contain a relatively small number of details which must be preserved if the story is to make sense. Let me illustrate
Have you
ever had the experience of hearing someone describe an event at which
you were also present? Did you notice that the other person always got
it "wrong" by leaving out facts, adding new ones or distorting some?
Personal memory is a very unreliable way to store information, so if we
are to transmit cultural wisdom we have to have some way to ensure that
information is preserved intact through countless generations.
If you
have children or grandchildren you must have told them some classic
bedtime stories which are pretty much known throughout our culture. And
did you notice that when someone else told them the details were pretty
much exactly intact? Why? Because unlike the memory of actual events,
they are not dependent on personal recollection but rather on the
fictional details, repeated time after time.
So in
preliterate societies, the story tellers were responsible for passing on
the culture And we call these stories"myths." Myths are not untrue in a modern Western sense, but
rather they contain essential truth wrapped in a fictional structure
that protects that truth from distortion. As a culture begins to develop
writing, these myths start to be written down, not so much as a
historical record as a modern person would define it, but as a memory
aid to ensure even more the accuracy of the story. When we approach
these texts as modern Westerners, we tend to bring our understanding of
textual criticism with us. And many people approach early texts
incorrectly with that bias.
Creation myths are cultural universals, that is they appear without exception in all cultures. I happen to believe that the creation myths of the Jews were in fact inspired by the Holy Spirit and provide infallible information about God and our relationship to Him. I don't think one needs to read them in a literal, Western sense to understand the truth contained within. For instance, I do not need to believe in a literal Garden of Eden with a literal serpent in order to accept as true the fact of Man's fallen nature. I also believe that God is revealed to us in two manners: via the direct evidence of His magnificent creation, and by direct revelation through the Holy Spirit. They are each true in their own way and cannot disagree. When science seems to conflict with Scripture, I think it is reasonable to assume that our reading is where the problem lay. Bear in mind that God can only reveal Himself in the language and the mental constructs of the men (and women) he inspires. The fantastic vision that Ezekiel saw, of wheels within wheels, would have been described entirely differently by a native of of a mesoamerican culture that did not yet have the technology of wheels. God's revelation is so immense and so entirely beyond our ability to express it in words that anything we say is in one sense "mythic," not that it speaks of the untrue but rather of the unknowable.
So to answer my question, it would be entirely correct to say that God "wrote" genesis since He was the only one around at the time. But I also believe it was the earliest writers of the Pentateuch who received the revelation of God and passed it faithfully to us. For me, the most important thing is that God the Holy Spirit can speak directly to us via the Scripture in order to know Him and, in so doing, begin to know ourselves.
An open forum where matters of faith are discussed among believers and non-believers, free from rancor and open to all points of view
Monday, April 27, 2015
Tuesday, April 21, 2015
I am not alone
I ran across this site in the christiannews.net comments threads and am happy to post a link.
http://truecreation.info
Not exactly what this site is about but close, and I recommend it as a well written and thoroughly researched defense of Christian faith and reason.
http://truecreation.info
Not exactly what this site is about but close, and I recommend it as a well written and thoroughly researched defense of Christian faith and reason.
Sunday, April 12, 2015
Off the rails
I just came out of an experience in the comments section of christiannews.net where, rather than defending the Catholic faith against uninformed attacks, I found myself sucked into contentious arguments with some thoroughly hostile people. And, being the pillar of spiritual perfection that I am, I was in there scratching and biting with them over such things as the supposed foolishness of "theists" or whether the Masoretic or Alexandrine texts were more reliable. So much for reasoned and dispassionate discussion.
I can only comfort myself in knowing that this is a really human tendency. But I tend to define all human tendencies as sin unless they are informed by the Holy Spirit. I would really prefer that people who disagree with me could come here for a little more civilized debate but that's apparently not exciting enough.
So I shall blog on. Whether or not anyone ever finds this site, I can at the very least use it as a journal and derive the benefit that always comes from committing one's thoughts to written form.
I can only comfort myself in knowing that this is a really human tendency. But I tend to define all human tendencies as sin unless they are informed by the Holy Spirit. I would really prefer that people who disagree with me could come here for a little more civilized debate but that's apparently not exciting enough.
So I shall blog on. Whether or not anyone ever finds this site, I can at the very least use it as a journal and derive the benefit that always comes from committing one's thoughts to written form.
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