Beware the God of the Gaps
The question that
modern science raises for people of faith is a difficult one to answer. Whereas once many diseases or psychological
conditions had spiritual explanations (divine punishment or demon possession),
now we can explain them in medical terms and find solutions devised by
science. Where we once believed that the
earth stood at the center of the universe, with the sun, the planets, and the
stars rotating around us, we now know we’re nothing but the third rock rotating
around a rather small and insignificant star.
So, is there a place
for God in this new age of science?
There are some who answer the question by giving priority to religious
explanations and downplaying science, but is this wise?
Consider
for a moment the debate about climate change.
Why are so many people resistant to the idea that not only are humans
contributing to global warming, but that there is consensus within the
scientific community concerning this theory.
Why do so many people treat scientific “theories” as if they are mere
conjecture or opinion? Is there a fear
that if we give room to science, we might lose God? Have we bought into the premise offered by
folks such as Richard Dawkins that theology is nothing more than “fairiology?” In other words, theology isn’t a real
intellectual pursuit – it’s simply superstition.
As
we approach the birthday of Charles Darwin (February 12) I believe it is
important that people of faith address the question of whether we can continue
believing in God in an age of science.
If Darwin is correct, and I believe he is, that we have evolved from a
common ancestor over a period of billions of years, then where does God
fit? Some will answer that we must
adhere to the biblical story, but is the biblical story designed to tell us
scientific truth? Is that its
purpose? Some will say that evolution
has dangerous consequences, so it needs to be resisted. After all, didn’t Hitler believe in
evolution? That people have twisted
theories for their own benefit doesn’t mean that they’re not true.
If
science is correct on matters such as evolution, the question facing us is this
– where does God fit? In answer the
question I’ve posed a warning: “Beware
the God of the Gaps.” While I will
affirm the premise that God is the Creator of the Heavens and the Earth, I am
concerned about the tendency among some of my co-religionists to use God as an
explanation for the unexplainable. We
call this the “God of the Gaps,” using God as a stopgap measure to explain the
unexplainable. So, because we don’t know
exactly how things began, except that it seems to have started with a “Big
Bang,” then surely we can say that God is the “First Cause.” Once things got started, a further issue
arises – how did life forms develop?
Proponents of Intelligent Design suggest that God is responsible for the
design of the forms that life takes, using the idea of “irreducible complexity”
as proof that a designer is needed. As William
Paley, an 18th century Anglican priest suggested, if you find a
watch lying alongside the road, you must assume it had a creator – a
watchmaker. Since nature seems to
express an intelligent design, then we can assume it has a designer – a divine
watchmaker. And with this assumption, we
have proof for the existence of God.
The
problem with Paley’s argument is that the realm of God’s activity shrinks with
every scientific discovery. What we can’t
explain today, could receive an explanation tomorrow. Theologian Dietrich Bonhoeffer worried about
this tendency, and in a letter written from prison to his friend and Eberhard
Bethge, Bonhoeffer writes that we shouldn’t use God as a
“stopgap for the incompleteness of our knowledge, because then, as is objectively inevitable—when the boundaries of knowledge are pushed ever further, God too is pushed further away and thus is ever on the retreat.” [Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Letters and Papers from Prison. Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works, (Fortress Press, 2009), pp. 405-406].
Bonhoeffer wisely recommends that we seek to find
God present in what we know, rather than what we don’t know. Rather than thinking of God as the divine
watchmaker, we must assume that God is present in and with the development of
this universe.
I’m
not a scientist; I’m trained as a historian and a theologian. As a Christian who is by profession a pastor
of a church, I believe in God. By faith
I affirm that God is the Creator of the Heavens and the Earth. Having said this, I don’t expect the Bible,
to which I turn for my spiritual sustenance, to offer a scientific account of
reality. That’s not the purpose of the
Bible. To ask it to offer such
explanations is to force it to do something it’s not “designed” to do. For such explanations, I turn to
science. I don’t need to force scripture
and science to say the same thing. By
faith, I can, however, affirm the premise that the heavens and earth, whatever
the scientific explanations might be, do declare the Glory of God.
Because
I am increasingly concerned about the implications for both the faith community
and the world at large, I have invested myself in building bridges between the
scientific and the religious. I believe
there needs to be conversation, with both realms of thought learning from the
other. With this in mind I have been a
participant in the Evolution Weekend project from its very beginning. This weekend congregations from a variety of
faith traditions from across the nation and beyond will observe this event as a
way of saying no to those who would appeal to a stopgap God and to those who
reject outright any place for God in the conversation. Our future as a planet depends in large part
in the success of this conversation. So,
won’t you join me in this observance?
Let us a put an end to the “war” between religion and science so that we
can live together in a more peaceful, just, and fruitful world. For me, that means that God is ever present
in this process, not sitting back finished on the sixth day!
Also posted at the Troy Patch
Comments
I'm so sick of little people, with no imagination, proclaiming they know the truth. Go make some more bright green posters advertising you and your brother's hate. It actually helps differentiate you from wise people.
God wants us to find ways to get along, That, I'm sure of.
There is no way to reconcile evolution with the Bible. The only thing you evolutionists can do, if you want to pretend to be Christians, is pretend the Bible does not mean what it says. You should just be honest and admit that you don't believe any of the Bible is true. Honesty is always best. God already knows you don't believe the Bible, so you can't fool Him.
36 “Teacher, which is the greatest commandment in the Law?”
37 Jesus replied: “‘Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’[a] 38 This is the first and greatest commandment. 39 And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.’[b] 40 All the Law and the Prophets hang on these two commandments.”