Why Are There Still Creationists?. Jonathan Marks

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the scholar of 1845 had two unsatisfactory theories to explain the origin of species – biblical creation, or evolution via a Great Escalator. But there was a transient third theory, which recognized the age of the earth and the succession of life, yet tried to remain pious by imagining the origin of species at different times in the deep history of life on earth to be miraculous, not naturalistic. This “non-biblical creationism” was in fact a theory of choice for many of the leading biologists of the age. Indeed, although we tend to see Victorian creationism through the lens of modern creationism, it was principally not biblical literalist creationism that pushed back initially against Darwinism, but non-biblical creationism. The leading anti-Darwinians – Richard Owen in England and Louis Agassiz in America – were committed to the age of the earth and the succession of life, but they clung to the origin of species as a series of miracles.3 They certainly didn’t believe in a six-day creation a few thousand years ago as a viable alternative to Darwin’s proposal.

      Yet non-biblical creationism had its own baggage. In the first place, it was pious but un-biblical, so what really was the point of the piety? And second, where biblical creationism invoked one great miracle as the source of all species, this set of theories invoked lots of little miracles throughout earth history. Yet favoring a theory that invokes many miracles over just one is a hard sell, for miracles are supposed to be rare. That’s why we call them miracles.

      Both the natural theology and the natural history questions were ultimately resolved in the same year, 1859, with Charles Lyell’s address to the British Association for the Advancement of Science in September, which publicly acknowledged the coexistence of stone tools and archaic animals, and with the release of Charles Darwin’s On the Origin of Species in November, which theorized the beginnings of species. The following year, a group of liberal theologians published a runaway bestseller called Essays and Reviews, which brought modern critical biblical scholarship to the reading public, and passingly referenced Darwin.

      The Bible itself could then be understood as a set of sacred stories, part of a larger group of such stories, but requiring contextualization among the myths and legends of the world, and accessible through the study of ancient histories, languages, and lifeways.

      In addition to the development of biblical studies, natural history studies, and prehistoric archaeology, yet another strand of uncertainty was entwined in mid-nineteenth century Euro-American intellectual life – namely, the relationships among living groups of people, particularly slaves and slavers. Were they all of one flesh, and presumably therefore of one origin, as the Bible had it – but which in turn implied considerable mutability of appearance in human face and form since the Garden of Eden? Or might they have been the products of separate creations at different times, distinct since their beginnings – which seemed more harmonious with the new geology, and was also distinctly un-biblical? This debate also encoded a moral argument: if humans were the products of separate creations, then owning a slave might be no different in kind from owning a horse. But if they were the products of a single creation, and we are all ultimately brothers and sisters, then some people regarding other people as property may not seem quite right. And if the ancient earth seemed to lend scientific credence to the possibility of archaic, pre-Adamic racial origins, nevertheless the interfertility of human populations seemed to lend scientific credence to the biblical position.

      By the mid-nineteenth century, exotic peoples were known who did not even practice agriculture but subsisted on wild foods alone. Moreover, they lacked the art of metallurgy, and used only tools made of stone. Archaeologists were also identifying an ancient past when the only tools Europeans themselves used were sharpened rocks – a “Stone Age.”

      And yet, even this simple cultural history was difficult to reconcile with the Bible. Some patriarchs may have lived before Tubal-cain invented metallurgy in Genesis 4:22, but none was a hunter-gatherer; Adam and Eve had been horticulturalists from the very beginning, as Genesis 3:15 specifies that Eden was there to be tilled. Its authors could not even conceptualize a pre-agricultural human existence.

      This, in turn, raised the question about the origin of hunter-gatherers. Were they indeed the most primitive form of humanity – savages, not even having discovered plant and animal domestication (a discovery which would make them barbarians, a step up)? Or were they degenerate descendants of a primordial Edenic horticultural society? Both alternatives are non-biblical, since the Bible doesn’t say anything at all about hunter-gatherers, but the degeneration theory was the one that seemed a bit more pious in the mid-nineteenth century. It was at least consistent with the Adamic narrative, as with the “fallen state of Man” theological doctrine.

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