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Evolutionary theologian thinks aliens would have more advanced religionBible college crisis: leading staff violate their own statements of faithThis article continues our series on the crisis in ostensibly evangelical Bible colleges. That is, many of their lecturers have evolutionary worldviews, which have baneful repercussions on their entire theology, not just about origins. Previous articles include Crisis in the colleges: A call for reformation. Of course, in these articles, it will be necessary to provide specifics; otherwise, the claims would be merely hearsay and anecdotal. The aim is not to single out the named colleges, nor to imply that they are the worst colleges around. These articles also show that one cannot totally rely on any particular College’s Statement of Faith without, for example, written assurance that all teaching staff abide by it. Obviously, if not all do, such a Statement is not meaningful, even though it still serves to ‘reassure’ (anaesthetize?) an institution’s evangelical donors, as well as parents and churches likely to assist students financially. Mark Worthing, Dean of Ministry & Theology, Tabor College, AdelaideRev. Dr Mark Worthing has long been an opponent of biblical creation. For example, he is a member of ISCAST, an organization devoted to defending theistic evolution, including leaders who claim that Jesus made mistakes in his teaching (see documentation in The Skeptics and their ‘Churchian’ Allies and ISCAST responds; reply by CMI). In 2005, he taught a Tabor course Christian Ministry in a Scientific Age, where, according to detailed notes a student gave to us, he made almost no use of the Bible; instead, fallible long-age evolutionary ‘science’ was clearly his authority. This directly conflicts with Tabor Adelaide’s philosophy of ministry (according to Google cache at 25 January 2005; this page has been removed for some reason): ‘Tabor Adelaide ’s philosophy of ministry is that all teaching should be: 1. Scripture-based (2 Timothy 3:16, 17); … ‘Tabor aims to meet the following objectives: … 4. to ensure that all courses are Christ-centred, biblically based, … [emphasis added]’ In another course, he used the thoroughly scientifically and ethically discredited book Telling Lies… by the antitheist Ian Plimer to attack biblical creation. None of this seemed to concern the Tabor administrators, who responded with the very sort of obfuscatory politicese that we warn about. However, maybe the evidence below will concern them: a program on the ABC where Worthing was billed as from Tabor, and said many things that would alarm Tabor’s donors. Worthing meets ETIn 2005, Worthing appeared on an ABC program ‘Café Scientific—Is there room for God in space?’, broadcast on Christmas Day. Its own summary states: ‘Explore the possibilities of life on other planets and what it could mean to religion and beliefs here on Planet Earth. Did Christ die for the Martians too? Which life-forms have a spiritual dimension? Has our new knowledge of space meant a convergence of science and religion? ‘This Café Scientific forum was held in Grafton, NSW in June this year. It was hosted by Dr Rachael Kohn, from ABC Radio National's Spirit of Things and The Ark. The guest speakers were Dr Mark Worthing, Tabor College , Adelaide and Dr Matthew Colless, Director Anglo Australian Telescope, Sydney.’ We have documented the taxpayer-funded ABC’s anti-Christian bias before (e.g. Catalytic reporting: An Australian science show flags its bias and Atheists Blast Christianity). This program is no exception: the Canadian-born commère Rachael Kohn is ardently anti-Christian—her book The New Believers: Re-Imagining God includes chapters ‘Jesus was a Man’, ‘God was a Woman’, ‘The Soul is Clinical’ and ‘Morality is Dead’, and is praised by John Shelby Spong—‘nuff said! No wonder the ABC loves her. We also noted how atheists just love to parade compromising churchians who undermine their own professed faith, e.g. A Wolf Among the Sheep , where ‘Judas II’ is at it again. The following posts the most heterodox comments with my response.
And indeed, God has spoken in Scripture, and makes it clear that He is to be referred to in the masculine pronoun, as well as comprising the Father, Son and Holy Spirit (not mother and daughter). Tabor’s donors and prospective students should be concerned if this politically correct feminist theology is part of Worthing’s courses.
Galileo has long been an excuse to compromise Scripture, but we have thoroughly addressed this canard.
Here, Worthing misses an opportunity to dispel the interviewer’s inference that the Bible is merely a human work. (If so, then it would be ‘convenient’ to rewrite it.) Perhaps that is because his own line of thinking matches the interviewer’s, as shown below. He never points out to Kohn that the Bible was ‘God breathed’—Tabor’s own Statement of Faith says (and we wholeheartedly agree):
MW: but in reality, when you think about it, the Christian Scriptures and the major teachings of other world faiths have never talked about there not being life on any other planet. Here the Bible is put on par with the writings of other faiths. The sacred books of other faiths are of little consequence, since they are not God-breathed. However, that there is no intelligent life on another planet is a logical deduction from Scripture, as we have shown in The Creation Answers Book, ch. 9 and in the comprehensive treatment given in the best-selling Alien Intrusion by Gary Bates—where he demonstrates, incidentally, that even Mormon theology has it roots in ‘way out’ extraterrestrial beliefs. For a summary, readers may also be interested in a recent debate in Science and Theology News, which seems to have liberal leanings (Templeton-supported). I took the negative side; while the affirmative was supported by Guy Consolmagno, ‘a Jesuit brother and astronomer at the Vatican Observatory’ (neither of us saw each other’s article before publication). It is instructive that Consolmagno admits that even the most compelling biblical evidence he can find for ETs most likely means something completely unconnected.
And of course, we haven’t found the slightest evidence for habitable planets around any other stars either. Indeed, extrasolar planets suggest our solar system is unique and young, and provide many problems for the very evolutionary faith Worthing teaches.
Of course, as we have documented, the claims are spurious, but even if there were living organisms from Mars, they likely came from Earth anyway! But the belief of life on Mars is still inspiring missions at huge taxpayer expense.
Dr Worthing does not seem to be confident that Christian doctrine is actually objectively true. Jesus is ‘the way the truth and the life’ (John 14:6). There is nothing cheeky (arrogant) about proclaiming what God has revealed to us, because it is the truth. The authority of what God said does not depend on our believing it.
Of course not, because Worthing has apparently accepted the fact-value distinction , just like the atheist Stephen Jay Gould (who now believes there is a God—because he’s dead (cf. James 2:19)) and Don Batten in his younger days, a position he now emphatically rejects. That is, of course it doesn’t bother Worthing, because to him, faith is merely personal rather than objectively true, so it can’t be falsified by real-world events. Certainly, Worthing is not the only one who feels the need to reinterpret (a euphemism for disbelieve) Scripture ‘just in case ETs land’. However, this is no different in principle from the liberals like Marcus Borg who try to butcher the account of the bodily Resurrection so much that it would not be disproven if Jesus’ bones were found. But denying that the resurrection was truly physical, the Resurrection becomes meaningless, entailing that Jesus really had no power over death or sin, and Christian faith is futile (1 Cor. 15:17). Worthing does much the same to Genesis and the rest of the Bible that depends on its historical reality.
How could this be, if Worthing really held to Tabor’s statement of faith, which states that Scripture is not only authoritative and thus inerrant, but also sufficient (as we totally agree):
So if aliens have more advanced theology, it entails either
Indeed, the Scriptures state, ‘but in these last days he has spoken to us by his Son’ (Heb. 1:2). This entails a finality of God’s revelation in Christ, and by implication, the Apostles He commissioned to write the New Testament. There is no room for aliens bringing in advanced revelation that supersedes the Son’s. The very idea that aliens could have a religion ‘more advanced than our kind of thinking’ rests on the evolutionary notion of the development of religious ideas as man’s (or the alien’s) intelligence supposedly evolved. Again, this undermines the concept of truth being revealed by God to us in Scripture.
It is no accident that most science fiction writers have an anti-Christian bias, and this motivates them to belittle the uniqueness of Earth as the centre of God’s activity. A notable example is H.G. Wells, who supported not only evolution but eugenics. Star Trek is another notable example, reflecting the humanist and relativist philosophy of Gene Roddenberry (see Strange New Worlds: The Humanist Philosophy of Star Trek; note I write as an ardent Trekkie).
Of course, this relies on evolutionary assumptions. By contrast, the Bible states that God created the earth on Day 1, and heavenly bodies on Day 4, and humans on Day 6, so any supposed aliens could not have been around any longer than people to have developed to this much higher plain of intelligence.
It’s a shame that Worthing doesn’t follow Tabor’s professed policy of basing every theological discussion on Scripture.
This ignores the strong evidence against the big bang adduced even by secular astronomers, as well as its gross incompatibility with Scripture (see Secular scientists blast the big bang: What now for naïve apologetics?).
It’s certainly true that the big bang doesn’t answer these questions. Nor does it explain specifics like galaxies and stars, without which there is hardly anything left of the universe (see Dismantling the Big Bang).
Spoken as a true postmodernist. Of course, the Scripture is God’s Word to man, designed to teach us ( 2 Timothy 3:15–17), so He wants us to understand what He actually means, not what we would like it to mean, as also explained in 2 Corinthians 4:2 and Proverbs 8:8–9, as I’ve explained to another post-modernist. This includes a reductio ad absurdum to Worthing ’s approach.
Right, so these hypothetical chimps could read the passages on the uniqueness of man as teaching the uniqueness of chimps? No, they would presumably propose that they are false, which is far more honest than claiming that they say something they don’t! Of course, we know that chimps will not be reading Genesis or anything else, which reinforces the distinction between humans and animals.
No, it’s because humans are made in God’s image, unlike animals, and God gave mankind dominion over the rest of Creation (Gen. 1:26–28).
Only in the sense of does one believe God’s word or not!
A bizarre statement from a Dean at an ostensibly evangelical college. Again, the idea of revelation does not seem to be entertained. Is the Christian faith just something we have dreamed up, or is it the result of God’s revelation? An informed evangelical would have pointed out that without the God of the Bible, the questioner has no objective basis for trusting his own reasoning, let alone science or morality, therefore no basis for reasoning as he has.
Once again, Worthing sets forth God as his subjective belief rather than an objective reality. In reality, God exists whether Worthing believes it or not. A good antidote is Total Truth by Nancy Pearcey, which is excellent in showing how Christianity makes objective claims about the world, including its history, and about absolute right and wrong. This also shows how professing Christians have erred grievously about moral issues by swallowing the secular view that morals are merely a matter of personal belief. (Her main blind spot is overlooking how old-earth beliefs have been instrumental in creating the very divide between secular and sacred that she is trying to repair (and she never refuted her own arguments against mixing long ages and Christianity!))
Of course, evidentialist approaches fail, but presuppositional apologetics uses a reductio ad absurdum to show the inconsistency of all non-biblical belief systems. What a poor witness to the secular world this is, when a Dean at a leading ostensibly evangelical college gives such wishy-washy ‘answers’!
This is a classic example of how compromise shipwrecks people’s faith—see this testimony by ‘Joel Galvin’ and this account of a famous evangelist’s tragic slide into unbelief. The conference this gentleman refers to (which included this interview with MW) is hosted biennially by a large regional city church. The conference runs over several days and is billed as an ‘International Philosophy, Science and Theology Festival’.
Given such billing, churchgoers such as the gentleman asking the question from the floor could be forgiven for thinking that attending such a science/theology conference might clear up their doubts—especially those related to the core creation/evolution issue at the heart of modern unbelief. But, sadly, it seems that the creation/evolution issue was excluded from the conference—amongst the ‘speakers from all over the world’ there was not a single young-earth creationist invited (despite the fact that internationally renowned creationist scientists reside within just a few hours drive of the conference venue). An ABC interview with the minister of the church reveals why:
Obviously, they can’t be complementary if they have contradictory answers to the same questions, e.g. the age of the earth, the sequence of life upon it, the origin and purpose of man, the cause of death and suffering. The articles under Theistic Evolution Why is evolution so dangerous for Christians to believe? explain further. Worthing continues:
Luther said many things, including creation in six normal-length days less than 6,000 years before his time, not that this seems to matter to Worthing despite being in the Lutheran church. And the above has some merit (Jude 1:22), because doubt may lead to resolution, e.g. the firm confession of ‘doubting Thomas’ (John 20:24–29; note that neither this passage nor any other identify biblical faith with credulity, or disparage logic). However, this is different from doubt for its own sake (James 1:6). The Incarnation v ETIn Jesus Christ, the Second Person of the Trinity added human nature to His divine nature (Philippians 2:5–10). This is an insuperable problem for mixing ET ideas with true (biblical) Christianity. However, Worthing has tried, in ‘Did Christ die for ET’ (The Lutheran, April 2002). He begins by ludicrously citing as credible the discredited ‘life from the martian meteorite’ nonsense. But the following section shows him squirming to get around the problem:
This has the huge problem that these hypothetical unfallen beings were still affected by Adam’s sin, since the Fall resulted in the Curse on the whole creation (Romans 8:18–22)—see also The Fall: A cosmic catastrophe. Why would it be necessary for God to recreate a new heavens and Earth if the Fall was specific to the earth (Isaiah 65:17, 2 Peter 3:12)?
However, the basis of Christ’s atonement is that He came directly down from Heaven (John 6:38,41,42,50,51,58) to take on the nature of the one who sinned. This was so a sinless human was punished for the sin of humanity as a Substitute ( Isaiah 53:6,10 ; Matt. 20:28; 1 John 2:2,4:10. This involved explicitly taking on human nature, not taking on angelic nature ( Hebrews 2:11–18), or Vulcan, Klingon or Romulan nature for that matter! This is to fulfil Isaiah’s prophecy of the coming Messiah as literally the ‘Kinsman-Redeemer’, i.e. one who is related by blood to those he redeems (Isaiah 59:20, which uses the same Hebrew word גוֹאל (gôēl) as is used to describe Boaz in relation to Ruth). So only Adam’s descendants can be saved, because only thus can they be related by blood to the Last Adam. Also, in his great Resurrection Chapter of 1 Cor. 15, Paul explicitly linked the resurrection of the ‘Last Adam’ with the death brought by the ‘first man’, Adam—not the first Vulcan, Klingon etc.!
How would we explain the kinsman-redeemer idea? Actually, the huge distances between stars is an insuperable obstacle for any type of alien communication or transport—see God and the Extraterrestrials .
This is impossible for the reasons above. Also, Heb 10:12 says that after ‘Christ had offered for all time a single sacrifice for sins, he sat down at the right hand of God’ —not to return to make another sacrifice on Vulcan. Also, Jesus will have only one Bride, the church, for all eternity. Not an Earth church bride, a Vulcan church bride, and so on.
We hope it is clear that the issues here are not just some minor ‘differences of opinion’, but rather that the whole meaning of biblical Christianity is at stake. Published: 8 February 2006 (GMT+10) |

