Research Blog

Evolution and the Bible

There is an increasing desire by a number of Christadelphians (and indeed other Christians) to accept evolution and harmonise it with their beliefs.   They believe as a theory it is validated by science.  In some cases proponents have been disfellowshipped.   Historically the belief is not part of the defined statements of faith, although a few congregations have unilaterally added it to their “doctrines to be rejected” without first getting the support of the whole community.

A valid point made by one Christadelphian in his website is that God speaks through the natural world.  This makes sense if God created all the natural world. This means that if the laws of nature prove evolution true they would have to correlate with the Bible if it is equally true.  In practice it seems to lead to a changing view of inspiration where Genesis in particular has to be read metaphorically.   Although the idea of “two words of God” are promoted in reality it means the Bible is reinterpreted with contemporary scientific thoughts about evolution in mind.

It plays on a problem which runs deep.  To what degree should the Bible be understood literally?  In the website we linked to there are lots of examples from the Bible where we would take what is written as metaphor.  Some in fact I believe were originally understood more literally because the worldviews of many parts of the Bible are ancient.  There is reason to believe for instance many held the view the earth was flat and heaven was a place not that far above the earth.

I believe the origins of Christadelphian beliefs owe a lot to a period known as The Age of Enlightenment.  This was a period of time when one particular type of thinking, rationalism (often decribed by its proponents as reason) gained strength.   Some such as Thomas Paine were theists and held that the natural world was the ONLY word of God.  Interestingly an introduction to his book “The Age of Reason” makes a connection between that and the Quaker idea of placing being led by the Spirit over the Bible as sole authority.  Consciosuness is of course the basis of more esoteric ideas of learning from within, but for some that leads to an exoteric approach that physical reality is the only reality.

Many thinkers of The Age of Enlightenment downplayed supernatural worldviews and it undoubtedly was instrumental in developing more secular approaches and scientific approaches.  In practice it often holds its own assumptions about the nature of reality, in particular that matter is the basis of reality and material things are separate from each other.   These are increasingly likely to be questioned as complete worldviews in view of the need for more holistic outlooks.

The historical view of the Bible by Christadelphians was taken unquestioned from mainstream Protestant Christianity.  This places the Bible as the authority, but in fact is a primarily intellectual approach that has its own difficulties.  These are addressed in some detail elsewhere on this site.  This is unlikely to have been the approach or belief of early Christians with church authority and experience playing greater roles.   In practice it hasn’t been adequate for Christadelphians either who have formulated their own statements of faith, formed boundaries to fellowship, and in practice leaders have emerged throughout their history to form such things and take actons.

The assumption and promoted view however is that each person is able to “search the Truth out for themsleves” by personal reading of the Bible.  If we ignore the scholarly task involved (which itself is a lifetimes work) of reading the whole, correctly understanding context, checking root meanings, ensuring correct translations etc  we also have to understand cognitive bias.  The reality is anyone seeking to do this comes to the task with subconscious worldviews.

That I believe is likely to have been the case with the founder of the Christadelphians, John Thomas.  One consequence of believing the Bible alone and each man his own interpreter can be a denial of history.  The collective experiences and prior understanding of verses do not matter when you have an authoritative basis in the Bible.  This is one of the reasons why the idea of the Bible alone has led to lots of denominations claiming the Bible alone as their basis but differing in interpretation.   We don’t come to the Bible alone without something of ourselves and the forces which have influenced us.   This is also why many denominations ultimately go back to founders with forceful personalities who question existing status quos and who claim a rediscovery of apostolic truth.

Contemporary critics described him as a materialist.  His theology removed a contemporary spirit level of belief.  The idea of the Holy Spirit indwelling was reduced to the Bible alone, contemporary ideas of angels being spirits were reduced to being invisible messengers, the devil and demons as spirits were reduced to mental illness and sin in the flesh.  This in fact has some precedence in the difference between Old and New Testaments.   The Old Testament focuses on the physical nation of Israel, the Law of Moses they were given, a physical kingdom in Israel.   In fact it lacks much detail on any afterlife which is why in the time of the Jesus there was debate between two principal groups, the Pharisees and Saducees.  The New Testament by contrast often spiritualises stuff and in its references reinterprets passages it quotes from.

Embracing evolution therefore fits well with the influences that lie beneath Christadelphia.   Rationalising scripture to fit materialistic thought has precedence even though it fails to usually be recognised.

The problem is the same problem that liberal Christianity has.   It is essentially an altered approach to inspiration.   Christadelphians claim to accept the Bible as literal within context, but in practicalise heavily rationalise the text to suit their doctrines.  Liberal Christians accept it as inspired within its historical context and accept progression of understanding.  As a meaningful basis of authority at some point it loses all relevance entirely when this happens.

Theologically a literal view of Old Testament events was held by most early Christians except Gnostics (and all religions have their esoteric branches).   The need for a literal death and salvation depends on  the Fall in Genesis.   If we make the events of Adam and Eve, the temptation and curses non literal we don’t need a literal salvation either.   Very liberal Christians like Bishop Spong acknowledge this.   Our problem becomes a lack of having developed enough, not sin.

The Progressive Nature of The Bible

One of the big challenges for former members of any highly exclusive group, whether it is the Christadelphians, the Jehovahs Witnesses, the Exclusive Brethren or one of the countless other similar groups is reorientating oneself to living outside them.   I understand this from personal experience.  This is particularly true for those brought up within such movements because they lack a prior form of reference.  It is why many people who leave often try and commit suicide, struggle to function in the wider world and have other difficulties, often social.   A general principle is the more exclusive and high demand a religion the more difficult it is to leave and reorientate.   It is a sociological and mental challenge, not one primarily due to any loss of faith as many who remain would believe.  This can be shown by the fact that it is common to a huge number of different high exclusive groups.   It is the religious equivalent of culture shock.

It is of course why many label all high demand and exclusive groups under the label “cult”.  The implication is that mainstream society or mainstream religion have it all right in science terms, in psychology, in worldview.  In practice life is not so simple and groups often exist because they answer the needs of their members to some degree and answer objections they have to the wider society.  Many start as protest movements – in the case of Christadelphians it was to mainstream Christian theology – with simplified solutions and views they institutionalise.   Eventually their own problems emerge, some cannot re invent themselves and diminish, others emerge in new forms.

When I first set up this site it was primarily to address stuff I had discovered during my time as a Christadelphian and which led to an altered understanding and disfellowship by them.   To say it has been a challenge is an understatement.   We are not naturally well equipped to lose all our social supports and reorientate our thinking whilst still trying to survive in the world.  That’s not to say Christadelphians are cruel.  They believe what they do is God’s will on earth, they have the truth that has to be protected and kept free from error, and will usually still talk.   The difficulty as a leaver is it is all designed to try and leverage pressure on those who leave to return.   Those who leave, though, rarely do so to offend, it is simply because they no long find certain aspects fit cohesively or work well in their situations.   It has some comparison to going through a divorce.

As I sought to clarify my thoughts I have become increasingly aware that many of the weaknesses in Christadelphian are actually relevant to wider Christianity.   Despite all their different theology Christadelphian beliefs are largely based on the idea of an infallible Bible.  Each verse is believed to be the very words of God and it is believed they perfectly harmonise in all parts.   My initial objection was their view of the Holy Spirit because from a reading of the New Testament it was clear that it was based on an experience that was taught about by word of mouth.   They didn’t teach the idea of an infallible Bible from which a person had to seek the truth for themselves even though to Jewish folk they used the Old Testament to make their case.   I also had the experience of which they spoke.

Most forms of Christianity would accept the idea of the Spirit as dwelling in us and being “Christ in us”.   Christadelphians are fairly unique in denying it.   In practice many/ most churches elevate the Bible as an authority above direct guidance or understanding.  The Quakers are an historical exception, although the consequence there has largely been a movement towards a greater sense of the working of the Spirit than is typical for Christian theology.  The elevation of “Biblical authority” as an overarching concept is true particularly for Protestant groups and their spinoffs and I believe really gained weight with the printing and translation of the Bible and the use of it in the Reformation.   It was used to counter the idea of church authority based on the concept of a direct progression from the first Christians.    

Several puzzles actually emerge from recognising that in the Bible references to the Holy Spirit in the believer do actually relate to an experience and not simply the degree to which the believer has the Bible in them.   It is clear from the New Testament for instance that there were those claiming experiences which were contrary to those of the writers, for instance.  Some such as certain Gnostic groups saw it all as metaphor and through history some esoteric groups have always existed.   Esoteric understanding (based on experience and understanding within) relies on metaphor because of the limitation of words.  It therefore is inherently less likely to gain popularity or be suitable for  mass teaching or institutionalisation.

The difficulty this presents to Christians is the whole question of authority.    Early Christianity was incredibly diverse and the dominant groupings eventually defined the New Testament canon that is widely used today.   That alternative groups existed at that time is evident because they are referred to in the Bible.  There were folk who were very Judaistic and who wanted to retain elements of the Law for instance.  Paul who is credited for writing much of the New Testament sees it as all about the Spirit.   He claims to have not been taught by any of the Christians then existing, but to have received his knowledge direct from God.   He radically opposed Judaisers, who no doubt also saw themselves as having the truth.  To him the Spirit was everything, God was directly leading those who were open to being led and there are huge discourses based on a dualistic concept of man being made up of flesh and spirit and how the spirit could strengthen a person to overcome the “thinking of the flesh” – our natural propensities.  In fact his whole emphasis on spirit and the sheer lack of references to the literal life of Jesus has led some to wonder whether he believed in the literal life of Christ.

It is clear too that when differences of opinions occurred there was an idea of authority existing in many New Testament books too.   Many books specifically write countering those seen as errorists and stating actions to be taken.   Much was written to deal with problems.  That no doubt continued as there are verses stating to teach others to lead and so there would have been both continuations from early forms of Christianity and offshoots. Eventually Catholicism gained dominance in the West and other orthodox churches elsewhere which all claim to be a continuation right from the start.