The Privation of Good and The Neverending Story

March 29, 2007

Yesterday in my theology class, my professor expressed his disagreement with Augustine’s conception of the nature of evil. Augustine essentially argued three things:

  1. God created all things, so that nothing exists that God did not create.
  2. God created all things to be Good.
  3. Therefore, from (1) and (2), evil cannot be a creation of God, and therefore evil cannot exist in the way that Good exists. Therefore, evil is not the presence of something in its own right, but the lack of the Good that God originally instilled in his creation.

When we examined this argument in a class I took in my undergraduate years, I found it very persuasive. My professor, however, argued that it would be silly to say that evil doesn’t exist since the Bible affirms evil as a terrible reality. He likened Augustine’s thought with the Christian Scientist understanding of sickness, where they say that, in reality, there is no such thing as sickness, so that we are all healthy–we simply have to believe in the reality of our health through faith. With respect, I don’t think that’s what Augustine was getting at.

It seems unfair to say that Augustine was denying that evil exists (rightly understood) in the world, since he spends an entire book, his Confessions, talking about how he and the rest of humanity are sinful wretches. So, he wasn’t saying that there is no such thing as evil in the world, but he is merely saying that what we call evil is actually a condition where some Good that should be there is not.

This is vastly different from the Christian Scientist understanding of sickness, because, to extend the metaphor, Augustine wouldn’t deny that people are “sick” spiritually. This is important, because many liberals today argue that everyone in the world is, in reality, saved (so that no damnation “exists”), and that we merely need to accept the reality of the salvation that we already have. Augustine, in stark contrast, would say that we have a very real problem, but the problem is not the existence of “sickness”–our problem is the lack of “health.” That doesn’t mean that we don’t need to be “cured,” but it does mean that we are trying not so much to get rid of our “sickness” as we are trying to re-establish our “health,” even if getting rid of the “sickness” is a necessary first step in restoring the “health.”

Augustine was trying to avoid the dualism that asserts that both Good and evil have existed from all eternity, a dualism where believers are encouraged to support the “good” god against the “evil” god. C. S. Lewis rightly points out in Mere Christianity (and other places) that, if such a theology were correct, there would be no real reason for us to see good as having primacy or superiority over evil, since both sides have equal claims on our lives. Evil cannot exist in the same way that Good exists, since that puts evil on equal footing with Good. Thus, Lewis talked about evil as “twisted” (i.e., corrupted) Good, and I think that he is closely following Augustine on this subject.

So, as I pondered this issue, I thought of a great illustration from the movie The Neverending Story. In the movie, the conflict is that a world called Fantasia is slowly being consumed by something called the “Nothing.” I recall the book saying something to the effect of “If you looked at the Nothing, you felt as if you had gone blind.” This wasn’t blackness or space, since both of those are something–the Nothing was nothing at all, and that was the problem in the story.

In one sense, the Nothing was a very real problem (i.e., it “existed”) because it was destroying all of Fantasia; however, in another sense, the problem with the Nothing was that it didn’t exist, and that it was causing more things not to exist. Accordingly, in Augustine’s thought, evil is a very real problem (i.e., it “exists”) that has destroyed everything, to some extent, that God created to be Good; however, in another sense, the problem with evil is that it doesn’t exist (since God only made Good things to exist), and it is causing more of the Good in the world not to exist.

In The Neverending Story, the solution could never have been simply to get rid of the Nothing–or, at least, this would never have been a satisfactory solution since too much had already been destroyed. Instead, the solution could only come about through a restoration of the Good. In our world, God could never have saved us simply by getting rid of evil as though removing our evil would leave us with Good–our incompleteness demanded that salvation could only come through New Creation, where God would recreate humanity and all the rest of creation to be perfectly Good. Put another way, it was never enough for Jesus simply to die on the cross as a punishment for our evil–the resurrection to new life was necessary in order to restore to us the Good we had lost at the Fall.


The Philosophy of LOST

March 28, 2007

For those of you who watch LOST, you might be interested in the article published in today’s USA Today about how the series uses the names of philosophers from history as their characters. (Thanks to Grant for finding this and telling me about it.)

Unfortunately, I thought that the article was terribly misguided, so I wrote a rather long comment in response. My contention (one that I have had from Season One) is that LOST uses the names of philosophers by giving them to characters who represent the exact opposite of the philosophy espoused by their historical counterpart. I imagine that when we one day meet a character who says and does the same things as their namesake, we should either distrust that person as a fraud, or we should be tipped off that this particular character is the most important in the entire series. Right now, I am wondering if that messianic character would be Desmond.

You can read the article and my comment (at the bottom) here. Note especially my argument about LOST’s use of John Calvin in an early portion of my comment.


Edit 8:54 p.m., 3/28/07: One of the experts that the article cited (whom I contradicted) wrote back and kindly clobbered me. Oh, and I was completely wrong about John Calvin. I guess I’ve just learned over the years to enjoy the taste of my foot in my mouth. :)


Florence’s Angry Skies

March 28, 2007

Florence’s Angry Skies
Originally uploaded by ahansen54.


New Pictures

March 26, 2007

Corniglia
Originally uploaded by ahansen54.

I’m starting to get some pictures from Bethany’s and my “Eurotrip” SpringBreakEscape 2007 in Europe!!! uploaded on Flickr.
(Better Gray?)


Coffee and Cigarettes, Approximately

March 26, 2007


Bethany’s train left for the Frankfurt airport at 3:15 AM this morning. (What all did we see and do in Europe? You’ll just have to wait for that post.) I took a bit too long helping her get her bags on the train and was suddenly a captive passenger of ICE 5 headed toward Frankfurt. After explaining the situation to an understanding train conductor, who seemed to enjoy the opportunity to practice his English, I got off at the next stop around 4:45 and waited for the next train back to Göttingen.

During the wait I bought the latest copy of The Economist and holed up in an American-style diner reading it while enjoying a cup of hot chocolate. (I still don’t drink coffee.) I haven’t read The Economist since a brief period of addiction while leasing apartments last summer, when each week I’d eagerly await buying up the glossy-paged British periodical at Barnes and Noble and reading the articles between my apartment showings. As I was paging through the magazine, I was thinking how it is sort of my pack of cigarettes, my guilty pleasure that I treat myself to now and then. What’s so great about it? Despite it’s weight toward economic analyses of topics (accompanied by a strong free-trade bias), each issue has articles on a host of political, social, and (of course) economic issues, all areas in which my understanding is admittedly very weak. All of the articles are anonymously written by the editorial staff and each article presents an opinion in addition to presenting its analysis. It therefore doesn’t fain a completely objective approach like most journalism, which is biased but pretends to not to be, and which has an opinion on the given subject but pretends not to. The Economist’s articles are thorough, well-written, straight-forward, and often a little witty – like a thinking-man’s Newsweek.

I’ve never been one for newspapers, feeling that most journalism lacks analysis and historical perspective that really allows people to understand the issues, but I also realize that there’s a large void in my knowledge of what’s going on in the contemporary world. Since I don’t think I could ever commit the time to reading a daily newspaper, I hope that The Economist might help fill that void a bit.

Yes, I am a nerd.


Spring Break!

March 17, 2007

I just had a dream that someone hacked into this blog and posted something to the effect of, “I’m appalled that Jacob hasn’t written anything since Monday, especially since he has told us that he really wants to keep this thing updated. I’m not sure we can trust him any more.” If the Lord has skilled any of you in dream interpretations–for do not interpretations belong to God?–I would be interested in what that means. Personally, I think that it had something to do with the 4-Alarm Spicy Chicken Sandwich that I had from Wendy’s at 10:00 last night.

In other news, I am currently back in Nebraska for my Spring Break. I had an incredible flying experience on Delta through Cincinnati (both completely on time; good in-flight snacks; no layover to speak of; my luggage got in), and my parents and brother picked me up in Omaha to drive me back to Hastings. Yesterday was a long day (two tests and a paper due), so I am excited for a little R&R.

Although I have a 700-page book on the Reformation that I need to read in order to write a paper that is due next Thursday, I’m really wanting to read two books for fun. The one I haven’t started yet is called Virtue and the Voice of God: Toward Theology as Wisdom, by Daniel Treier. I’ve continued to ponder the concept of wisdom in the Bible, and this looked like a great book to provide fodder for my thinking.

The second book is Progressive Dispensationalism by Craig Blaising and Darrell Bock. I’m reading this for two reasons: (1) I don’t have a very good idea of how Progressive Dispensationalism differs from the type of Dispensationalism that I know (I read Charles Ryrie’s Dispensationalism Today, now called Dispensationalism, when I was trying to decide between Dispensationalism and Covenant Theology); and (2) Beeson will be hosting Darrell Bock in April for our Biblical Studies Lectures, and I want to read something by him in order to get more out of the conference. I read about 130 of the 300 pages on the plane last night, and I was actually very pleased with how “progressive” Dispensationalism is becoming. I’ll write more about it later.


Weekend Update

March 12, 2007

Well, I did get to go see Nebraska play Alabama, but I use the word “play” there loosely. Nebraska got dominated, losing 8-0, marking Nebraska’s first shutout in 201 games. I did have a good time, though, especially because I got to meet a handful of people from Nebraska who were down at the game for all sorts of different reasons. Also, there’s just nothing like seeing my team down where I live. It’s as though they made a special trip just for me!

Before you despair of our team’s ability to play baseball, I should mention that Nebraska ended up winning the games on Saturday and Sunday, so Nebraska was the victor in the series 2-1. I listened to both on the (internet) radio, and they sounded like great games. I wished that I could have gone to one of those instead!Domination


This weekend, I downloaded the computer-game classic of my childhood, “Oregon Trail,” and I spent a significant amount of time playing it. I had forgotten how much that game rules. If you want to relive your own second grade, you can download the game here. (I’m not sure if this will work on Macs or not.) Ignore the “Install” file; if you just open “Oregon.exe” you will be able to play immediately.

I had forgotten how frustrating it was to get to the end of the trail, float down the river, almost get to the landing spot, but then lose virtually everything by crashing your wagon on the rocks. Stupid rivers.


In other news, Alabama is heading into its Spring. Being from Nebraska it’s really strange to see trees blossom in early March, but I’m definitely enjoying the 70 degree weather. I can’t really say that I missed having snow, though.

(Yes, I am trying to rub this in to those of you still in Nebraska.)


Destination Tuscaloosa

March 9, 2007

This evening, the Nebraska Cornhusker baseball team will travel today to Tuscaloosa, AL to play the Alabama Crimson Tide, and I’m going to be there. I talked some seminary friends into making the hour-long drive from Birmingham to see the game–some are Alabama fans, and some are just along for the ride.

One of the Alabama fans I’m going down with passed me this little poem, and I wanted to print it here in order to give you a taste of life down here in Alabama:

If you wanna know the password for where
     the streets are paved of gold
It ain’t but one little phrase and that’s
     ”Roll tide, roll.”

I could be in for a long drive.


Jonathan Edwards: A Life

March 8, 2007

I just completed George Marsden’s Jonathan Edwards: A Life. I’m not sure how to begin summarizing such a comprehensive work of incredible breadth and depth, so instead I’ll just provide a few historiographical thoughts. In describing his goal for the book, he writes

As a biographer attempting to understand Edwards first as an eighteenth-century figure, I have been working most directly as a cultural historian. Yet I have been doing this always with an eye on the theological question, taking his thought seriously as part of the larger Christian tradition.

I think Marsden succeeds marvelously at this, balancing cultural with intellectual and theological history, understanding Edwards not simply as the result of historical forces of the times, nor as a disembodied theological mind working apart from the influence of the times and culture, but rather as an (albeit exceptional) eighteenth-century clergyman, writer, husband, and father whose theological framework greatly shaped his life and work. By viewing him in this way, he finds an extraordinary, but also humanly-flawed, Jonathan Edwards.

In addition to being inspired and overwhelmed by the amount of research, thinking, and writing involved in crafting this 600-page work, as an aspiring historian I also found insight in Marsden’s perspective on the value of biography for Christians:

If one has, as I do, theological mentors from across the ages, then it is valuable to realize that their insights on spiritual matters come framed by their particular personal and cultural circumstances. My belief is that one of the uses of being an historian, particularly if one is part of a community of faith, is to help persons of such communities better understand what they and their community might appropriate from the great mentors of the past and what is extraneous and nonessential…to employ historical consciousness for developing more discriminating assessements of the wisdom of the past…We need to use history for the guidance it offers, learning from the great figures of the past – both in their brilliance and their shortcomings. Otherwise we are stuck with only the wisdom of the present.


What We Have Been Given

March 8, 2007

For my theology class, I just finished reading C. S. Lewis’s Mere Christianity. I know that I had already read the book twice, but I may also have read it a third time before this reading. Reading it again, though, showed me just how much Lewis has influenced my thinking on a number of topics. I have believed certain things for such a long time that I came to believe that my own theology was largely the result of my own thinking and Bible study, as though I have been a pioneer in Christian thought.

Rereading this book, though, shattered those thoughts: much of what I thought was mine was really something I picked up from Lewis. I imagine that if I were able to survey, in a moment, all that I have ever read or heard over the course of my life, I would realize that I have had very few original thoughts at all (if any). What a humbling thought!

So, I have been reflecting more on this verse: “What do you have that you did not receive? If then you received it, why do you boast as if you did not receive it?” (1 Cor. 4:7b). Ideally, my learning, and then (from what I learn) my teaching and my writing, should all happen because of a desire to build up the church in Christ. I should confess, though, that I am a sinner, and much of what I do in the way of studying theology and of relating it to others comes as a result of a desire to be “important” in the Christian world.

So, to the extent that what I have written or said comes from an arrogance that exalts me rather than Jesus, I truly apologize. This would, by definition, be a public sin, so I want to apologize publicly. I suppose this will probably be something I struggle against all my life, but, by the grace of God, I will one day be free from all this pride, content to gaze into the face of Jesus and discerning to realize that looking at myself instead would be foolishness. Praise God for that!

Also, I have been gaining a fresh appreciation for all the people from whom I learned Christianity during the course of my life. I remember talking about Jesus with my Grandpa as we went on long walks together. I remember learning wonderful Bible stories at my small, Mennonite church in Julesburg, Colorado from Sunday School teachers who were committed to telling us children about Jesus. I appreciate the fact that I have heard at least one sermon a week for virtually all my life. What a staggering thought, to realize that what I now know about Jesus is the fruit of so many people, who knew what they knew from so many people, and on and on! What do we have that we have not received?

Perhaps it would be helpful for those of us called to teaching to have constantly in mind our own mortality. For example, my Grandpa who taught me so much is right now losing much of his mental capacity. This is terribly difficult for me to watch, but it also reminds me that I must take advantage of the time I have to pass along what he and others have passed along to me, all the time concerned about seeing the next generation come to a knowledge of the Savior. I will one day die, even if Grandpa goes a bit sooner, and then both I and he will be forgotten in this world. But, Jesus will never be forgotten, and so, if my reputation and my name are tied up in him, why should this bother me?

Let us thank God for what we have been given.