A
Aloysium
Guest
Looking back, there are sweet memories filled with the sadness of loss. More than half a century ago, it was a different world. I recall one day, my mother anxiously sitting next to me and having something very important to say. It was an awkward moment in which we both felt trapped: the dreaded birds and bees talk. Not sure what was happening but eager to allay her embarassment, I assumed an affected disinterest. She responded by leaving quickly, most assuredly relieved that at least she had tried and fulfilled her parental duty. I myself, filled with a sense of wonder concerning powerful mysteries that evoke awe and horror, wanted to call her back. Somehow I knew that my questions would be answered by information that I had already picked up from more worldly friends.
Genesis provides us with a solid foundation on which we can formulate a true understanding of who it is that we are and how we got here. Telling us about ourselves our world and our relationship to each other and to God, it speaks to mankind in all ages. Transcending whatever the particular scientific or philosophical system that is in place at the time, it reveals eternal truths.
With regards to monogenesis:
The alternative view is illustrated in Kubrick’s Space Odyssey: a group of hominids undergo an evolutionary spurt in intellect growth, enabling them to conquer their adversaries and flourish in the natural world. There is no explanation as to how this would have happened. The movie seems to imply that something external having a physical presence and metaphysical power caused this metamorphisis. Science would say that it is random, there being no other empirical answer. To me, this is seriously insufficient, if not completely invalid.
What can we get from scripture?
Life is rooted in the divine. There is no other purpose or meaning more fundemental than our loving each other and God. There is sin, through which we have driven ourselves from the place where we should be. That sin began with the first parents, and spread through the generations. The first parents were one, but torn by that sin from their unity.
But how does one integrate that knowledge into today’s understanding of the cosmos? Certainly in physics, it has been proven that the universe began in a manner that clearly to the vast majority of people, suggests creation. Addressing our origins as human beings, it is more difficult. This is because with the physical universe we are talking about physics. When it comes to us, we require understandings of the world of the spirit. Talk of angels and demons, can evoke ridicule and perhaps a referral for psychiatric help.
I think that in physical terms, we can place the origin of man to somewhere in the middle east in the range of 120,000 years ago. How that relates to what happened in the garden in the east, in the land of the rising sun, at the beginning of time, I can speculate only.
We have to go beyond science to capture the truth and the beauty of human nature and its origins.
Genesis provides us with a solid foundation on which we can formulate a true understanding of who it is that we are and how we got here. Telling us about ourselves our world and our relationship to each other and to God, it speaks to mankind in all ages. Transcending whatever the particular scientific or philosophical system that is in place at the time, it reveals eternal truths.
With regards to monogenesis:
The alternative view is illustrated in Kubrick’s Space Odyssey: a group of hominids undergo an evolutionary spurt in intellect growth, enabling them to conquer their adversaries and flourish in the natural world. There is no explanation as to how this would have happened. The movie seems to imply that something external having a physical presence and metaphysical power caused this metamorphisis. Science would say that it is random, there being no other empirical answer. To me, this is seriously insufficient, if not completely invalid.
What can we get from scripture?
Life is rooted in the divine. There is no other purpose or meaning more fundemental than our loving each other and God. There is sin, through which we have driven ourselves from the place where we should be. That sin began with the first parents, and spread through the generations. The first parents were one, but torn by that sin from their unity.
But how does one integrate that knowledge into today’s understanding of the cosmos? Certainly in physics, it has been proven that the universe began in a manner that clearly to the vast majority of people, suggests creation. Addressing our origins as human beings, it is more difficult. This is because with the physical universe we are talking about physics. When it comes to us, we require understandings of the world of the spirit. Talk of angels and demons, can evoke ridicule and perhaps a referral for psychiatric help.
I think that in physical terms, we can place the origin of man to somewhere in the middle east in the range of 120,000 years ago. How that relates to what happened in the garden in the east, in the land of the rising sun, at the beginning of time, I can speculate only.
We have to go beyond science to capture the truth and the beauty of human nature and its origins.