released 6/13/2025

In God’s Good World: Reclaiming the Doctrine of Creation (Baker Academic, 2013), Jonathan Wilson distinguishes between two fundamental ways of viewing Creation. This distinction illuminates the irreconcilable chasm between a true Christian account of the world and a “survival of the fittest” one. Wilson calls the first view the “wisdom” view. Under this perspective, Creation is a result of God’s infinite wisdom. He describes the second as the techné view. This perspective is informed by a scientistic lens on the world. Even professing Christians can succumb to this second view. In doing so, however, we deny the superabundance of life that God has given us. Death becomes the ultimate driving force in the universe. We take upon ourselves the full responsibility of sustaining our own lives and the resultant anxiety. When we adopt the wisdom view, we recognize God’s providence. We stop constantly trying to avoid death. Instead, we acknowledge the giving and receiving of the Trinity and its life-giving power. Wilson calls on us to emulate this giving and receiving in our own lives. Instead of trying to combat the apparent scarcity of this life, we should instead recognize the superabundance of life that God has given us. But questions remain: Can we adopt this mentality in a world ravaged by sin? Or must we cede ground and acknowledge the apparent scarcity of the fallen world?

21 minutes

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