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My premise is that Genesis 2.4b -3:24 offers a new vision of hope that begins with a repristination of the message of Gen 2-3, a message that may actually have been resident in the hermeneutical experience of the very earliest listeners to and readers of this narrative text, post-exile from the Babylon captivity. Instead of a message of alienation and lost hope for an Edenic paradise, a state of perfect happiness or bliss, my premise is that the J writer may have had in mind the celebration of a God who sacrifices his desire in a dramatic kenotic act to give hope to humankind and all creation. This rhetorical-ethical interpretation of Gen 2-3 imagines the expulsion from the Garden as a saving act of a God that accepts his self-limitation: an act that sets in motion a desire for communion with the divine on the part of humanity and of all creation. This expulsion from the Garden may have been the only way for humanity to understand the limiting and limited nature of human action.
Citation preview
THE GOD WHO SACRIFICES HIS
DESIRE AND GIVES HOPE TO ALL CRE ATION: AN EXEGESIS
OF GENESIS 2 :4b – 3 :24
Lyle A. Brecht March 2008
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“Houston, we have a problem”1
Who is this God, YHWH, anyway? How can God allow “a world fascinated with
idolatry, drunk with power, bloated with arrogance” that produces such profound
suffering?2 Has God hidden his face as punishment to humanity? Do we suffer because of
our sins of apostasy, hubris, pride, disobedience and transgression in the Garden? 3 “Lord,
you who are everywhere, have you been in Villa Grimalde too?”4 Or has God voluntarily
removed himself/herself from the universe that humankind inhabits, becoming a God
who runs away (deus absconditus)?5 Christians believe that Jesus became incarnate to
reveal truth about the anthropology of God: For this I was born and for this I came into
1 The tagline for the 1995 film - Apollo 13 that portrayed the life threatening situation that developed on the U.S.’s Apollo 13 moon flight, the third manned lunar landing mission that lifted off from earth on April 11, 1970. The film portrayed how the crew of John Swigert, Jr., James Lovell and Fred Haise Jr., fought for their lives when a faulty oxygen tank left the life-support on their spacecraft non-functional. The origin was this bland exchange by Lovell: 'Houston, we've had a problem. We've had a main B bus undervolt.' 2 Abraham Heschel, The Prophets (New York: Harper Torchbooks, 1962), 183. 3 “Mipnei khata’einu – ‘because of our sins’ became the general explanation for all disasters of Jewish history” as revealed by the prophets of the Hebrew Bible who gave the Israelites hope by declaring that this was, after all, God’s will for their sins and all the Israelites needed to do to reclaim their land was to repent and follow God’s torah (teachings). “God has hidden his face (hester panim) as punishment” for the sins of the Jews. See Mark S. Smith, The Memoirs of God: History, Memory, and Experience of the Divine in Ancient Israel (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2004), 36; Yehuda Bauer, Rethinking the Holocaust (New Haven: Yale University Press, 2001), 192. 4 Villa Grimalde was the most notorious of Chile’s clandestine torture centers under Pinochet. Quoted in William T. Cavanaugh, Torture and Eucharist (Challenges in Contemporary Theology; Oxford: Blackwell, 1998), 1. Today, we could ask the same question about Abu Garib, Guantanamo, and the CIA’s gulag archipelago of unnamed ‘black-sites’ and clandestine prisons. 5 Tzimtzum posits that God removed himself from History to permit the world to exist: “God withdrew himself so that human free will could exert itself, for good or evil” (Bauer, 189). However, “By choosing to be absent, he may be held responsible for the evil he permits, and we can call it evil by setting it against the moral standards” set in Scripture (Bauer, 190-1).
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the world, to testify to the truth (John 18:37).6 Could truth be that instead of The Fall
from relationality with God, with self, the other, and with creation that Paul exegetes (or
more accurately, exegetes of Paul) in Romans (Rom. 1:18-32; 5:12-21; 7:7-13) from his
reading of Gen. 2:4b-3:24,7 instead, maybe the J writer of Genesis 2-3 had something else
in mind, something that anticipates a Messianic hope for humankind?
Could it be that for today’s world, we might best take into consideration Krister
Stendahl’s caution to assess the “public health aspect of interpretation.”8 Could it be that,
as Wittgenstein so aptly describes, the purpose of the text of Scripture is to frame reality
beyond what one might normally imagine; to provide training (Abrichtung) for what we
can understand.9
Can we imagine a God of Gen 2-3 that is not engaged in retributive justice, but instead is
a God who “enters into the depths of human life, shares human suffering, and redeems
evil by personally suffering?”10 Might this be a God who models kenosis, a kenosis his
6 Stephen Finlan, Problems with Atonement: The Origins of, and Controversy about, the Atonement Doctrine (Collegeville, MN: Liturgical Press, 2005), 124. 7 By relationality we mean I/Thou rather than I/It encounter with the other that begins with an ethical address to God, an address where this encounter with God establishes the self as ‘other’ as God remains ‘subject’ (‘the eternal Thou’) and never is treated as ‘object.’ See Martin Buber, I and Thou, new trans. by Walter Kaufman (New York: Scribner, 1970), 53, 54, 67, 69 in Anthony C. Thiselton, The Hermeneutics of Doctrine (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2007), 199, 234. 8 Krister Stendahl, “Ancient Scripture in the Modern World,” in Scripture in the Jewish and Christian Traditions: Authority, Interpretation, Relevance, ed. Frederick E. Greenspahn (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 1982), 205 quoted in Elizabeth Schussler Fiorenza, “Paul and the Politics of Interpretation,” in Richard A. Horsley, ed., Paul and Politics: Essays in Honor of Krister Stendahl (Harrisburg, PA: Trinity Press, 2000), 43, 50. 9 Thiselton, 83.
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Son will later exhibit during his incarnate stay on earth and participation in the human
condition, to the point of death. In the endeiktikos of his letter to the Romans, Paul
attempts to convince his listeners of the truth that Christian hope lifts-up humanity and
the gifts of creation to endure such miseries. This is accomplished through the
‘awakening power’ of the Spirit, an unearned gift of God’s saving justice and gracious
care to the body of Christ, the ekklesia. Essentially, the Spirit offers the possibility of
moving beyond the past as the determining boundaries of one’s life, letting oneself be
determined by the future. So Spirit may be called the power of futurity.”11
Paul’s vision of Spirit is one that awakens the ekklesia to an alternative relationship from
the polity of empire: to love God as God.12 Could J’s message be so dramatically
10 Finlan, 106. 11 Rudolf Bultmann, Theology of the New Testament, vol. 1, 335 in Thiselton, 260. 12 The empire that Paul formed ekklesia as a counter to was the Roman Empire: Pax Romana (“peace and security”) was the official theology and propaganda “motto of the Roman world after the establishment of the Principate, that is, after Augustus’ miraculous termination of the civil war and his establishment of ‘universal peace’” and economy supported, to a large extent, by the slave labor of conquered peoples. The Principate was a political theology that assumed that the Roman empire contained “the chosen people of God” and was the divine vehicle to defeat the forces of chaos in the world and to restore heavenly order in the form of a return to the “garden” [see Carolyn Merchant, Reinventing Eden (New York & London: Routledge, 2004)] of the former Republic. In this theopolitical realm, the emperor was the paterfamilias of all the people (called “Father”), deified and became the sole ruler of a universe where taxis (order) was the primary aim of social and political structures achieved through a culture of meritocracy based on paideia (concept of heroic engagement and sacrifice for the good of the state), competition, and nomos (the law) imposed through coercion and force. All this is documented in the Acts of Augustus written in Greek on the walls of the numerous temples to Augustus, recounting the salvific power of the gospel of Caesar. This was a gospel that singled out the elite individual set apart by success--allegedly for the benefit of the whole society. For example, “Following the violent death of Claudius, the senate decreed his consecratio i.e. not only his life after death but also his assumption and apotheosis” (the elevation or exaltation of a person to the rank of a god). The most penetrating political commentary on this system of empire occurs in the letters of Saint Paul contained in the Bible’s New Testament. Paul challenges the soteria (salvation from the forces of chaos) represented by Caesar and his empire by claiming that pistis (God’s loyalty/faithfulness) is universal and democratic, that it applies to all people regardless of their class, race, gender,
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different, presenting such a foreign and unforgiving God in Gen 2-3, or might Paul’s use
of Gen 2-3 to make his point about Christ’s incarnate presence as the saving second
Adam have sent some early Christians off on the wrong path, a path that if we continue
down may only bring collapse to human civilization? For instead of a fallen humanity,
one drenched with the original sin of alienation from God, today, given the calamities we
face (the present critical Time; Rom. 8:18, Jewett), we need to resurrect a new humanity,
one capable of becoming an object for hope and renewed relationality.
My premise is that this new vision of hope can begin with a repristination of the message
of Gen 2-3, a message that may actually have been resident in the hermeneutical
experience of some of the very earliest listeners to and readers of this narrative text, post-
exile from the Babylon captivity.13 Instead of purely a message of alienation and lost
hope for an Edenic paradise, a state of perfect happiness or bliss, my premise is that the J
writer may have had something very different in mind and that the narrative of Gen 2-3
wealth or accomplishments and status in the world and this is expressed in God’s dikaiosyne (solidarity and justice) with the entire human race, not just the elite. Paul describes how those who claim to be superior or privileged, instead of making the world better, just cause more chaos and bring on catastrophe {echoes of the snake in Gen 2-3 that offers ‘superior wisdom’ that leads only to disaster]. Instead, Paul offers Jesus as the exemplar of an archetypal human/divine being who, through his faith of God, signifies what real peace and security looks like - not a hegemony or authority of domination and oppression, but the prototype of a community pledged to life. Paul goes on to describe this community pledged to life, the ekklesia, an exemplary community of those who are set free from the false precepts of empiric power where, instead, identity is shaped by a radical democracy of justice, difference, freedom, equality, and solidarity that set the ethical conditions; where the critical events “for the fate of the universe does not come to pass in heaven with God or among the gods. It does not involve force or violence or even the Law. It takes place within and through a community held together by faith, love, and hope.” See Dieter Georgi, Theocracy: In Paul’s Praxis and Theology, trans., David E. Green (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1991), 28, 34, 45, 59, 66, 67, 68, 71, 76, 86, 97, 99. 13 Around 500 BCE or after the Deuteronomistic History was written and the Succession History of 2 Sam 11-20; I Kings 1-2). See Tryggve N. D. Mettinger, The Eden Narrative: A Literary and Religio-Historical Study of Genesis 2-3 (Winona Lake, IN: Eisenbrauns, 2007), 11.
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may actually celebrate a God who sacrifices his desire in a dramatic kenotic act to give
hope to humankind and all creation.
This rhetorical-ethical interpretation of Gen 2-3 imagines the expulsion from the Garden
as a saving act of a God that accepts his self-limitation: an act that sets in motion a desire
for communion with the divine on the part of humanity and of all creation. This expulsion
from the Garden may have been the only way for humanity to understand the limiting and
limited nature of human action: “All that we can choose is the way in which we will be
ourselves, at least within limits.”14 And, from the J writer’s perspective, given that this
narrative was added, most likely, after the people of God’s return from exile, to remind
the listener that human weakness is to participate in, with acquiescence, corporate sin that
promises a better world;15 “but in the end brings nothing but death (the message of the
entire Deuteronomistic History; also Rom 7:11; cf. Rom 3:23).16
Isn’t building better worlds the excuse of all empiric pretensions and excuses to oppress,
to subjugate, to exclude, to create ‘states of exception’ from normal moral order (e.g. the
Patriot Act that suspends habeas corpus), to condone violence, and to make war? Isn’t
this a more salient lesson to learn from J’s Gen 2-3 than humanity is fatally flawed
because we carry the genetic legacy of original sin? There is nothing in Gen 2-3 that
14 Wolfhart Pannenburg, Systematic Theology, vol. 2, trans. G. W. Bromiley (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans and Edinburgh: T&T Clark, 1995), 260 quoted in Thiselton, 308. 15 One of the better illustrations of this understanding of corporate sin in postmodern media parlance is the recent Joss Whedon movie, Serenity. 16 Panneberg, 266 in Thiselton, 308.
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suggests that humanity’s basic nature was altered by God’s expulsion of humanity from
the Garden. P’s revelation in Gen. 1:27 that God created [humankind] in His image, in
the image of God He created him; male and female He created them (JPS) still stands.
Might the narration of Gen 2-3 by the J writer be revealing something about God in how
the earthlings are portrayed? For example, could a rhetorical-ethical understanding of
Jesus’ kenosis (self-limiting; emptying) be seen “not just as the blueprint for a perfect
human moral purpose, but as revelatory of the ‘humility’ of the divine nature…. Jesus
displayed the self-giving humility which is the essence of divinity.”17 What if God’s
command (waysaw, Gen 2:17; rather than speaks wayomer) to not eat of the tree of good
and bad (Gen 2:16-17), a hendadys meaning ‘everything,’ that results in the eyes of the
two of them were opened (Gen. 3:7), but of the tree of knowledge of good and evil you
shall not eat, for if you eat of it you shall certainly die (Gen 2:17; trans. Mettinger)
portend a consequence of humanity’s desire for building better worlds, a world that only
recently used this “knowledge of everything” to construct nuclear weapons, sufficient to
destroy all of God’s very good creation, the entire ba ̄ra ̄ ’ of Genesis 1 (Gen, 1:1; 1:21;
1:27; 2:3). Although the number of nuclear weapons today is down from the 70,000
nuclear devices during the Cold War, we still possess 31,732 nuclear devices controlled
by nine nuclear states18 and more than 40 states19 retain 3,755 tons of weapons-usable
17 Sarah Coakley, Powers and Submissions: Spirituality, Philosophy and Gender (Challenges in Contemporary Theology; Oxford: Blackwell, 2002), 10. 18 This estimate includes all known tactical (battlefield – suitcase and backpack weapons, atomic land mines, air-defense warheads, atomic artillery shells, etc.) and strategic (sitting atop missiles aimed at military installations and cites) nuclear (fission) and thermonuclear (hydrogen fusion) devices in the inventories of nuclear states: Russia (20,000), U.S. (10,600), China (400), France (350), United Kingdom (200), Israel (100), India (40), Pakistan (40), North Korea (2). Iran is
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fissile materials, enough to construct another 240,000 nuclear weapons.20 What if God
banished humanity from the Garden to wake-up his earthlings to what suffering might
really entail if we do not use God’s gift of the tree of knowledge for wise, creative
purposes that serve God, but for ill? For without the corporate memory of suffering that
humankind has endured throughout the ages since human history began, a history by the
way that begins only after the expulsion from the Garden,21 is there anyone among you
who can rightly claim that the powers and principalities of empire would not have already
used the hydrogen bomb to accomplish some inhumane purpose.22 Hasn’t our expulsion
from the Garden, in some way, contributed to our compassion, to our love and to our
presently engaged in a nuclear weapons program and Saudi Arabia and other non-nuclear states are presently debating the option to acquire a nuclear deterrent, but these states do not yet possess them. See Nuclear Threat Initiative (NTI) nation reports available at http://www.nti.org/e_research/ profiles/index.html (accessed 9/09/04). 19 Mohamed ElBaradei, director general of the International Atomic Energy Agency (IAEA) speech to the IAEA general conference in Vienna, Austria, September 20, 2004 as reported by the Chicago Sun-Times, September 21, 2004 available at www.suntimes.com/ output/news/cst-nws-nuke21.html (accessed 9/21/04). 20 The Institute for Science and International Security (ISIS), run by former U.N. weapons inspector David Albright, estimates that at the end of 2003 there was a total of 1,855 metric tons of plutonium and 1,900 metric tons of highly-enriched uranium (HEU) globally. It takes ~10 kg. of plutonium-239 or 16-25 kg. of HEU enriched to ~90 percent uranium-235 (U-235) to fuel a weapon. See ISIS, “Global Plutonium and Highly Enriched Uranium HEU) Stocks: Summary Tables and Charts (June 30, 2004)” available at http://www.isis-online.org/global_stocks/summary_tables.html#chart1 (accessed 10/05/04). 21 “Human existence in history begins with this, that the person is where God is not.” All of human history is outside the Garden. There is no prelapsarian state from which to Fall. See Claus Westermann, Genesis 1-11: A Commentary, trans. John J. Scullion (Minneapolis: Augsburg Publishing House, 1984), 270. 22 The atomic (fission) bomb dropped on Hiroshima August 6, 1945 that killed 140,000 human beings and on Nagasaki August 15, 1945 that killed 80,000 human beings are approximately 100X to 1000X less powerful than a hydrogen (fusion) bomb that, so far, has never been used in complete war, because, as Ronald Regan said once: “nuclear war cannot be won and must never
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desire for one another in our loneliness and in our desire for perichoresis
(interpenetration and indwelling) with the divine?23 Might the expulsion from the Garden
been a consequential gift rather than retributive punishment? Might this gift be the
forcing of theological discourse24 on humanity, a discourse that would never have arisen
if the adam (.אָדָם earthling/ earth person) and Eve (חַוָּה, ‘Life-Giver’), as universal
representatives of humanity, had stayed ensconced in the Garden? And, might God have
anticipated that this theological discourse could evolve towards a future economy of
grace:25 a spatially defined eschaton ‘outside the Garden’ of unmediated discourse with
be fought.” Quoted in Jonathan Schell, The Unconquerable World: Power, Nonviolence, and the Will of the People (New York: Henry Holt & Co, Metropolitan Books, 2003), 334. 23 John Zizioulas describes the fall toward sin as a “rupture between truth and communion.” For Zizioulas, communion is an ontological state of both God and humans. That is, both God and humans are dependent on communion for being. This relationality is essential to what defines them as either God or human. Thus, “living in truth” requires that humans first open themselves up to communion – with self, God, the other, and with creation. I have just added an emphasis to this relationality by bringing in the idea of perichoresis to describe the depth of humankind’s desire of relationality with the divine, especially as recounted in Gen 2-3. See John D. Zizioulas, Being as Communion: Studies in Personhood and the Church (Crestwood, NY: Vladimir’s Seminary Press, 1985), 102 in Thiselton, 306. 24 The underlying assumption is that a theological discourse is even reasonable in that “in the totality of our being on earth, in time, and with others we are encountering the ineffable God whose being and goodness cannot be inscribed with the human project. In all our interactions, there we are also interacting with the divine.” See William Schweiker, “Imagination, Violence, and Hope: A Theological Response to Ricoeur’s Moral Philosophy,” in David Klemm and William Schweiker, Meaning in Texts and Actions: Questioning Paul Ricoeur (Charlottesville: University Press of Virginia, 1993), 221. 25 Augustine’s definition of grace (gratia) was the gift of “God’s operation in the world…through which thy [angels and humans] are moved to know and love God” “not as a created disposition or accident but rather as the operation and dwelling of the divine being within the created spirit…. This gift moves the Christian to appreciate and desire God above all else and to love self, neighbor, and all lower goods for the sake of God’s goodness.” See J. Patout Burns, “Grace” in Allan D. Fitzgerald, O.S.A., gen. ed., Augustine Through the Ages: An Encyclopedia (Grand Rapids: Eerdmans, 1999), 391, 393. Kathryn Tanner defines grace as “God’s favor and all the ways God’s favor is expressed – in creating the world, forgiving and redeeming son, offering
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the divine, that challenges the very foundations of an autonomous, interiorly directed
self.26 Could it be, as Kathryn Tanner recommends, that “Just as the creation in its
essential meaning does not refer to what happens in the beginning (in contradistinction to
what happens after), so the central claim of eschatology must not refer to what happens at
the end (in contradistinction to what happens before).”27 The eschaton refers primarily to
“a new level of relationship with God” where ‘life’ “refers to fruitfulness and abundance,
longevity, communal flourishing and individual wellbeing.”28 Although “death enters the
course of life as the threat of such things as sickness, suffering, poverty, barrenness,
oppression, social divisiveness, and isolation”29 isn’t “Death [also] a sphere within God’s
power, God’s reach and therefore (one presumes) the dead are not lost to God.”30
For a Christian reading Gen 2-3, can we imagine that “death makes no difference to that
life in God in the sense that, despite our deaths, God maintains a relationship with us that
continues to be the source of all life-giving benefit? Even when we are alive we are
therefore dead in so far we are dead to Christ. Separation from Christ (and from our
fellows in Christ) is a kind of death despite the apparent gains that might accrue to one in
spiritual and moral sanctification, and so on.” See Kathryn Tanner, Economy of Grace (Minneapolis, MN: Fortress, 2005), 5. 26 For example, the “self that is the object of interpretation is one interacting with and responding to other powers and their claim to goodness.” “The self that is the object of [this] interpretation would then be the one known in response to the divine. Self knowledge would entail understanding one-self as one is known….the self is known as it exists in relation to the divine and to others” (Schweiker, 218, 220). 27 Kathryn Tanner, Jesus, Humanity and the Trinity: A Brief Systematic Theology (Minneapolis: Fortress, 2001), 104. 28 Tanner 2001, 104-5. 29 Tanner 2001, 104-5. 30 Tanner 2001, 107.
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virtue of an isolated simply self-concerned existence.”31 In choosing life (as opposed to
death), “God’s attributes become in some sense our own; they are to shine through our
lives in acts that exceed human powers and in that way become established as part of a
reborn sense of self.”32 This new self, an esse qua esse bonum est (being as being is
good) is a spatially conceived self, a self outside the Garden that is defined by its
relationality with God, with neighbor (the ‘Other’), and with creation.33 God’s barring of
the way back to the Garden by placing a cherubim holding a flaming sword to guard the
way to the tree of life (Gen 3:24) in the middle of the garden (Gen 2:9), paradoxically,
may have been just the means for God to gift immortality to humankind in the only
manner available to biological creatures.
That is, as Second Isaiah so eloquently puts it in his post exilic response to suffering (Isa.
40-55) that Israel, the servant of YHWH, has a mission to reach out to all the world and
become a light to the nations (Isa. 42:6; 49:6) so that all people can see what work God is
doing through his chosen people.34 The J writer confronts us with a radical choice: to
listen to God’s voice in our lives or to follow our own self-interested way. But, as Gen 2-
3 illustrates, even when we disobey, does not mean that God, through his freely given
grace and his refusal to abandon us, this does not continue to provide for us what we truly
need (Gen. 1:1-2:3; 2:6-9; 2:18-22). So let us listen:
31 Tanner 2001, 108. 32 Tanner 2001, 111. 33 “In theological terms, grace, not violence, is the primordial origin of our sense of ourselves as responsible beings; Creation and not the Fall is the fundamental backing of our moral claims. Ethical norms are not generated simply in reaction to violence; they are to formulate our response to the goodness of beings” (Schweiker, 222).
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It is to the silence you should listen The silence behind invocation, allusions The silence of rhetoric…. What I have written I have written between the lines35
For God is still talking to us, still revealing his purposes to us. He did not stop once the
Scriptures were finally written. “[N]o one meaning or organization exhausts the
discursive field.”36 That is because the Spirit is still at work, so “meaning and
organization are [never] already established once and for all” time.37 This may be where
our immortality resides.
Has the rain a father; or who has begotten the drops of dew? (Job 38:28, NAB)
Is this God, YHWH, the source of the present planetary emergency, and the treat of
ecological collapse of this home, the earth that he originally created for us in Genesis
1?38
34 See Anchor Bible Dictionary entry on sin and suffering. 35 Gunner Ekelof, “Poetics” in Opus Intertum 1959, trans Lars-Hakan Svensson in Mettinger, 135. 36 Kathryn Tanner, “Social Theory Concerning the ‘New Social Movements’ and the Practice of Feminist Theology in Rebecca S. Chopp and Shelia Greeve Davaney, eds., Horizons in Feminist Theology and Identity, Tradition, and Norms (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1997), 186. 37 Tanner 1997, 186. 38 “We, the human species, are confronting a planetary emergency--a threat to the survival of our civilization that is gathering ominous and destructive potential even as we gather here. But there is hopeful news as well: we have the ability to solve this crisis and avoid the worst--though not all--of its consequences, if we act boldly, decisively and quickly. However, despite a growing number of honorable exceptions, too many of the world's leaders are still best described in the words Winston Churchill applied to those who ignored Adolf Hitler's threat: "They go on in strange paradox, decided only to be undecided, resolved to be irresolute, adamant for drift, solid for fluidity, all powerful to be impotent." So today, we dumped another 70 million tons of global-warming pollution into the thin shell of atmosphere surrounding our planet, as if it were an open sewer.” See Al Gore, “A Precious and Painful Vision of the Future,” Nobel acceptance speech,
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Cursed be the soil for your sake, With pangs you shall eat from it all the days of your life. Thorn and thistle shall it sprout for you (Gen 3:17b-18a, Robert Alter)39
The impression one gets from Paul’s exegesis in Romans 8:18-30 is that God cursed
creation, on account of Adam’s apostasy. One wonders at the public health consequence
of this interpretation at a time when all of the earth’s systems are moving rapidly toward
collapse. Somehow, Paul’s replacement of this curse with the hope engendered through
the incarnation, death, and resurrection/ascension of Jesus seems a little thin compared to
reality on the ground. Running out of fresh water on the earth is pretty tangible. God’s
curse of the earth, if that is how we interpret this text, can be seen, felt, and touched –
every day.
So, where is the Christian hope in this situation; incarnate in the resurrected/ascended
Christ? Is this the same God, YHWH, that has left humanity with a cursed earth? Where
is the hope in this? Or, is there an alternative way to read what God is up to in Gen 2-3, in
light of our new notion of a God who sacrifices his desire to bring hope to all creation? Is
there something about Christianity, or monotheism in general that renders us less than
good stewards of God’s creation? I am noticing that the European Union, a region of
vastly secular/scientific sentiment is presently light-years ahead of the U.S. that fashions
itself a nation of Christians, in environmental protection, management of scarce fresh
water supplies, and mechanisms to curb carbon emissions. Even in the U.S., the State of
December 11, 2007, printed by The Nation, available at http://www.thenation.com/doc/20071224/ gore (accessed 12/10/07). 39 Robert Alter, The Five Books of Moses: A Translation with Commentary (New York & London: W.W. Norton & Company, 2004), 27.
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California, in its secularity, is decades ahead of states like Tennessee, which considers
itself a ‘Christian’ state, in sound environmental management practices and movements
to correct market practices that discount the value of natural resources.
Paul places much hope in ‘the children of God,’ redeemed by the gospel, taking their
rightful place in rescuing creation from its ‘suffering’ (Rom 8:18) brought about by
God’s curse on the ecosystems of the earth (Gen 3:17-19) due to Adam’s ‘sin’ (Rom 5-
7).40 To deny that God cursed the earth’s ecosystems hardly washes as only shortly past
Eden; God brings the flood to destroy all life on this planet (Gen 7:7-17). Only after the
fact, having taken care to save Noah and his seed bank on the ark, does God decide to:
remember my covenant between me and you and all living creatures of every kind. Never
again will the waters become a flood to destroy all life (Gen. 9:15, JPS). Paraphrasing
Paul, “humans trying to play God ended up ruining not only their relations with each
other but also their relation to the natural world” (Rom 8:20).41 But, do we need to
explain the advent of “ruined cities, depleted fields, deforested mountains, and polluted
streams” either in the Mediterranean world of Paul or in the ancient Palestine of the J
writer?42 After all, Gen 2-3 was probably written after Jeremiah’s detailed account of the
collapse of agricultural production in Judah ~600 BCE as primeval forests were cleared,
plowed hillsides eroded. Fewer trees produced fewer clouds so the rains failed and
drought ensued. If there was rain, then there were flash floods due to runoff from barren
40 Robert Jewett, Romans: A Commentary (Hermeneia; Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2007), 512. 41 Jewett, 513. 42 Jewett, 513.
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hillsides.43 It appears that Jeremiah has it right; it is not God’s curse that is causing
ecological collapse. The natural world is suffering from the pathology of humans going
about their business, but failing to remember they are created creatures, not gods, and
failing to notice humanity’s embeddedness in the networks of life that enable their
sustenance in this created, natural world.44 The notion that God made me do it, or that
God somehow wills humanity to trash the natural world, or provides the warrant to
proceed in this fashion not only is not scripturally supported, it has absolutely no public
health value in this interpretation. So what might have been going on in Gen. 2-3 to lead
Paul to imagine that creation is suffering from God’s curse on account of Adam’s sin?
Was this merely a rhetorical flourish, bad exegesis, or is Paul not saying what we imagine
he is saying in Rom. 8:18-19, because Gen 2-3 means something different than what it
seems to say on the surface? What if the J writer was making a more subtle point that it is
not what we see, but how we see the reality we face that enables “real dialogue and
mutual understanding”?45 Might the ‘thorns and thistles’ serve as a reminder to humanity,
not that God’s good earth is cursed, but that humanity is now accountable for its actions
and activities not only to each other, but also to the natural world?46 Again, may we being
shown consequential blessing and not retributive justice? As Karl Barth reminds us: “The
time in which we live and suffer is the present time, the time when glory is made
43 For example in Jer. 5:22-28, he links this state of ecological disaster and exile with Israel’s unfaithfulness to following the moral laws of God, set forth in the Torah. See Michael S. Northcott, A Moral Climate: The Ethics of Global Warming (London: Darton, Longman and Todd, 2007), 13. 44 Northcott, 16. 45 Margaret McKee, “Excavating Our Frames of Mind: The Key to Dialogue and Collaboration,” Social Work, Vol. 48, No. 3 (July, 2003), 402.
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manifest in suffering.”47 Isn’t that exactly what both the J writer and Paul are getting at?
The J writer is telling a story about the start of human time that begins upon the expulsion
of the primeval seed of humanity, the adam and Eve, the Life-Giver, from the Garden.
What this humanity needs most of all is right relationship with each other, with God and
with the creation. To evolve in this relationality will require mutual inquiry and “the
possibility of real dialogue and mutual understanding.”48 The absence of this ‘real
dialogue and mutual understanding’ is exactly what results in a land of ‘thorn and thistle’
beyond the Garden, meaning an infertile land without plentiful water (the counterpoint to
the garden-state). But this is entirely the result of human choice, not divine action. God
did not will humanity from the garden, but blessed humanity in its consequential choice
to leave the garden. There is nothing in Judaism or Christianity (or Islam for that matter)
that enables humanity to escape its responsibility or complacency in bringing the natural
world near collapse by projecting that God wills it. Neither does the J writer nor Paul in
Romans narrate a story that gets humanity off the hook for today’s planetary emergency
of ecological collapse. Neither God’s curse, nor humanity’s sinfulness provides an excuse
to not engage in the ‘real dialogue and mutual understanding’ necessary to address the
stewardship that the children of God must bring to bear on the sufferings of the present
critical time (Rom. 8:18a, Jewett). The God, YHWH, of Gen. 2-3 is a god, who, given
today’s massive assault on the ecosystems of the world, would be weeping and suffering
along with those creatures, us, who are awake enough to notice what we are doing to
46 McKee, 404. 47 Karl Barth, The Epistle to the Romans, 6th ed. (Edwyn C. Hoskyns, trans; (London: Oxford University Press, 1933), 305. 48 McKee, 402.
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creation. Gen. 2-3 does not overturn the result of Gen. 1, where God bequeaths humanity
a very good creation, to start. It is the sin of all humanity, Christians included, to idly
standby and watch as this creation is placed in peril. It is up to all the children of God –
this is a universal appeal, not limited in any manner – to work towards a world of basic
freedom in relationship with our neighbors and healthy natural systems. This is the basis
of true sustainability. Brevard Childs reminds us that the nature of the God who we are
speaking about “is neither static being, nor eternal presence, nor simply dynamic activity.
Rather, the God of Israel makes known his being in specific historical moments, and
confirms in his works his ultimate being by redeeming a covenant people” (Exod. 3:14).49
If Scripture tends to exhibit the “particularity, contingency, and temporality” that we see
in Gen 2-350 then any truth claims from interpretation are neither fixed nor final, but are
only timeless in their respectful appropriation for a particular time and place and in the
understanding of their contingency of meaning. For example, I have no doubt should
God’s Son become incarnate today, instead of being a carpenter, his choice of work
might be as a global ecologist. Ricoeur supports this re-organization of the temporally
conditioned events of Scripture by reminding us that these narratives are “not a static,
closed system of propositions, but a system that is open to the future.”51 That openness to
the future is one of Paul’s contributions in Romans, to remind us that whatever miseries
that confront humanity in the “time that is Now” (ho nyn Kairos), without God’s
49 Brevard S. Childs, Exodus: A Commentary (London: SLM, 1974), 88 quoted in Thiselton, 63. 50 Thiselton, 63.
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unearned, merciful grace and justice we are doomed to not trust in God’s saving power,
just as the adam and Eve in Gen. 2-3.52 What Gen 2-3 narrates is a story about the
possibility for trusting in God’s saving power. By noticing what happens to the adam and
Eve, maybe the J writer is providing a means to shape the identities of the listeners to this
narrative “so decisively as to transform them.”53 Thus, the narrative is training (in the
Wittgenstein sense of deliberate formation and praxis) for how not to behave, not a
sentence that humanity has blown its one good chance for communion with God (and the
created order) or support for a Doctrine of the Fall (see Table 1 below) that sets God at
work cursing the created order and creatures he just finished making.54 Instead, as Badiou
might suggest, could Gen 2-3 be thought of as training in an ethics of the Real as
humanity begins to take responsibility for its actions and decisions that have absolute
consequences; consequences that are outside of previous experience, knowledge, or
accepted norms of behavior (everything in the Garden ‘before time’ and was too new to
have ‘norms’)?55 Bonhoeffer may have summarized the experience of the adam and Eve
51 Paul Ricoeur, Time and Narrative, trans. K. McLaughlin and D. Peliauer, 3 vols. (Chicago and London: University of Chicago Press, 1984-88), vol. 1, 35 in Thiselton, 65. 52 Giorgio Agamben, The Time That Remains: A Commentary on the Letter to the Romans (Patricia Daily, trans.; Stanford: Stanford University Press, 2005), 61, 67-8. 53 David Kelsey, The Uses of Scripture in Recent Theology (London: SCM, 1975), 91 in Thiselton, 81. 54 The essence of Formation (Bildung) is the cultivation of wisdom that is spoken/acted freely with courage (phronesis) yet, “‘keeping oneself open to what is other, namely truth [this is an ethical stance] rather than merely to ‘a procedure’” or to convention or the ‘safe’/convenient pre-determined view of reality promulgated by the powers and principalities [the royal consciousness that Brueggemann speaks of in his Prophetic Imagination (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1978)]. See Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and Method, trans. J. Weinsheimer and D. G. Marshall (London: Sheed & Ward, 2nd rev. Eng. edn. 1989), 17 in Thiselton, 82.
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in Gen 2-3 succinctly: “we experience and recognize ethical reality not by craftiness, not
by knowing all the tricks, but by standing straightforwardly in the truth of God and by
looking at that truth with eyes that makes simple… and wise.56 Thus, maybe the training
the listener of this story of the time it all began illustrates mourning for the human
condition as an ethical transformation of submitting to God’s will (the way things are in
the world), “the full result of which one cannot know in advance.”57 The faith in this
submission, this allowing God hegemony in our lives, is the trust that “God’s work in
redemption is to free” humanity to what is was “created to be… [that] God’s actions [in
History] in both redemption and in creation bring life, stability, and well-being for both
individuals and communities.”58 As Terrence Fretheim eloquently summarizes: the
“witness of the Old Testament is that sin and evil do not have their origin in God nor are
they written by God into the structure of the universe. Sin and evil have their origins in
the human will, not in God or in God’s plan. At the same time, when sin and evil do enter
the life of the world, they do not become constitutive of what it means to be human (or
any other creature).”59 Thus, if basic thrust of this narrative of Gen 2-3 is to answer the
55 Alain Badiou, Ethics on the Understanding of Evil (London: Verso, 2001), xxv, 52. 56 Dietrich Bonhoeffer, Ethics: Dietrich Bonhoeffer Works, Vol. 6, Ilse Todt, et. al., eds., Reinhard Kraus, Charles C. West and Douglas W. Stott, trans. (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 2005), 78. 57 Judith Butler, “Violence, Mourning, Politics,” in Judith Butler, Precarious Life: The Powers of Mourning and Violence (London and New York: Verso, 2004), 21. 58 Terrence E. Fretheim, God and the World in the Old Testament: A Relational Theology of Creation (Nashville: Abingdon Press, 2005), 10. 59 Fretheim, 13.
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question: “Who am I?” It answers: “I am God’s” and “this is my story!”60
TABLE 1: 61 THE DOCTRINE OF THE FALL EXEGETE
PERSPECTIVE
Old Testament (~500BCE) No mention of the Fall (Gen. 2:4b-3:24) 2 Esdras Adam is responsible for the sin that ravages humankind. “O Adam, what
have you done? Although it was you who sinned, the fall was not yours alone but ours also who are your descendents” (2 Esdr. 7:118-19)
Baruch Adam brought sin into the world, but neither this sin nor the guilt of this sin are passed down (2 Baruch 54:15)
Paul (~50CE) The universality of sin is used to make a case for Christ as the ‘second Adam’ but no mention of a Fall (Rom. 1:18-32; 5:12-21; 7:7-13)
The Apocalypse of Moses The disobedience of animals is the cause of Adam’s fall (Apocalypse of Moses 10-11)
Early Rabbinic literature Humankind posses both an impulse to sin and an impulse to do good. There is no fall.
Irenaeus (c. 130-c. 202) Adam before the Fall was like a child. Tertullian (c. 160-c. 220.240) The original sin of Adam may be transmitted to others as a part of his soul
is transmitted to the next generation. Clement of Alexandria (c. 150-215)
There is no connection between sin and death, between sin and its impact on human choice, or its universal prevalence in the human community.
Origen (185-254) The punishment for sin may be internal rather than external Athanasius (296-373) The Fall is a loss of privilege as Adam ‘falls’ into nature and decay begins Gregory of Nyssa (c. 330-c. 395) Sin is primarily envy and it is the sin of all humanity, not just Adam. Ambrose Adam was formed with ‘original righteousness.’ Augustine of Hippo (354-430) Sin is misdirected desire. Adam was in a state of ‘original righteousness’
from which he fell and passes this ‘original sin’ down to all his progeny. Pelagius Adam’s sin was his own. Nothing is passed down to his progeny. Chrysostum Adam lived in a paradisal state w/o pain and spectacular intellectual powers Gregory the Great (c. 540-604) Rejected Augustine’s notion of ‘irresistible grace’ Anselm (1033-1109) Sin is ‘not rendering to God what is his due.’ He mistranslated the Gk for
‘turning’ to mean ‘penance’ which is where ‘penitential works’ and the selling of indulgences by the Church originated.
Thomas Aquinas (1225-74) Sin originates from self-love, and includes ‘sin against God, against oneself, and sin against one’s neighbor.’ Sin is the rejection of the purpose for which humanity was created – to be in relation. Thus, sin proceeds from both human desire and will.
Martin Luther (1483-1546) Believed in Augustine’s notion of original sin John Calvin (1509-64) Strongly supported the idea of sin as a hereditary disease from Adam’s fall. Friedrich Schleiermacher (1768- Sin arises due to humanity’s lack of ‘god-consciousness’
60 “In scripting a life-story as one’s own, a self is born in possession of a refigured identity.” Paul Ricoeur, Figuring the Sacred: Religion, Narrative, and Imagination, trans. David Pellauer, ed. Mark I. Wallace (Minneapolis: Fortress Press, 1995), 13-4. 61 Anthony C. Thiselton, The Hermeneutics of Doctrine (Grand Rapids, MI: Eerdmans, 2007), 283-308.
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TABLE 1: 61 THE DOCTRINE
OF THE FALL EXEGETE PERSPECTIVE
1834) Albrecht Ritschl (1822-89) Original sin is corporate, structural, and communal sin, not personal sin Frederick R. Tennant (1866-1957)
Sin is moral imperfection of the individual
Karl Barth (1886-1968) Sin is pride in that it causes a fundamental breach in fellowship with God Emil Brunner (1889-1966) The origin of sin is the destruction of communion with God Reinhold Niebuhr (1992-1971) Sin and evil are not just due to individual inadequacies or mistakes but to
corporate dimensions of structural sin. Paul Tillich (1896-1965) The Fall is symbolic representation of an existential estrangement from God
that causes a separation of man’s will from God’s will. G.C. Bekouwer (1903-96) Sin results from a defect of human will. Karl Rahner (1904-84) Sin is the result of man freely rejecting God. Original sin does not constitute
a hereditary transmission of sin or guilt. Hans Kung (b. 1928) Sin is a fall from relationality with God John D. Zizioulas (b. 1931) The Fall did not bring about a new situation, a change from a prelapsarian
state, but merely recognizes the condition of creatureliness attempting to elevate one’s self to the position of God.
Wolfhart Pannenberg (b. 1928) We alone are responsible for the sin in the world. Sin is not merely missing the mark, but apostasy, and transgression. Sin has power over us because it falsely promises life, yet delivers only death.