University-Trained Mole Rats

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Scripture teaches us that the creation is articulate.

“The heavens declare his righteousness, And all the people see his glory. Confounded be all they that serve graven images, That boast themselves of idols: Worship him, all ye gods” (Ps. 97:6–7).

The created order pours forth speech. Nature is not a dumb mute, vaguely gesturing in the direction of some nameless god, who must have made “all this.”

It is far more than that. The creation pours forth moral speech. In the text cited above we should note that the heavens declare God’s righteousness, and does so in a way that makes it unmistakeable that this righteousness is glorious, and that it humiliates those who pray to their statues. An honest look at the night sky, in other words, not only blows away the pretended rationality of idolatry, but also the pretended morality of it. The heavens declare God’s righteousness, and shames the unrighteousness of every alternative pretense.

When we kick against such heavenly declarations, we do it by demanding to see the argument laid out cold on the table and neatly dissected. But who said it was merely an argument? There are arguments that can be extracted from the experience, and if the experience has touched you, the arguments do make good sense.  But if you expect etiolated scholastic argumentation to do the same thing to your head and heart that a harvest moon rising over a spinney of pine can do then you are pursuing the epistemology of a colony of university-trained mole rats.

Looking to the argument alone is the same thing as not following it.

Scripture testifies to the glory of God everywhere, which is not the same thing as saying that the glory of God is locked up in the sealed container of special revelation. The Bible tells us that God is speaking to us all the time, in all things, in every event. Scripture tells us also that this speech is content rich, full of wisdom, power, goodness, and righteousness.

Pretending that this isn’t so is just that — pretending. To be created is to be in a place where God is never silent, anywhere, or in any blessed thing.

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Rob Steele
Rob Steele
9 years ago

Yea verily. There is no such thing as chance, only God and his good and sovereign will. All our complaints are ultimately against him, as if he didn’t know what he’s doing.

Eric Stampher
Eric Stampher
9 years ago

So you’re with me that the WCF padres could have improved 1:1?

Eric Stampher
Eric Stampher
9 years ago

Word and world
From Him become
Witness to
His kingdom come

Eric Stampher
Eric Stampher
9 years ago

Spirit’s breath
On both awaken
Life anew
Death forsaken

Eric Stampher
Eric Stampher
9 years ago

Except the fathers found nature’s recorded speech wanting.

James Bradshaw
James Bradshaw
9 years ago

“The creation pours forth moral speech”

How so?

Millions die every year from nature’s various furies: tsunamis, floods, earthquakes, volcanoes, hurricanes and tornadoes.

This doesn’t even touch the millions ravaged by various diseases and microorganisms. Ebola, anyone?

This all somehow points to a “moral” Creator who somehow decreed all of this but is responsible for none of it?

I understand the convoluted theology that gets one to that conclusion, but I’d hardly call that a “reasonable” conclusion (as if it’s the only conclusion a thinking person could come to).

Eric Stampher
Eric Stampher
9 years ago

James — Could you say who made (what formed) the standard of morality & reasonableness you’re using to make your observation?

bethyada
9 years ago

James Bradshaw, I realise your comment raises many issues. To part of it my question would be: if we grant that man is fallen, and that he put himself it that position; is it better that God curse the natural world filled with fallen men, or leave it uncursed?