They were neighbors. In fact, they had lived next door to each other
for over forty years.
It could in truth be said that they got along quite well, even during
those years when the children did the usual damage to lawns and gardens
- and to an occasional window. They settled the quarrels of their children
without becoming personally involved. Their respective pets, a dog and
a cat, had various exciting confrontations; yet this did not spill over
to build a barrier between them. In fact, neither one of them at any
time even thought of building some kind of fence between their yards.
They did, however, carry on for many years a verbal battle - let us
call it a controversy - in which neither one would budge an inch, and
in which neither one could be said to have bested the other and to have
run away with the victory.
You see, Mr. Noel was a science teacher in the local high school. He
had a keen mind, was well educated, and was wholly dedicated to his
work. He lived in the fifteen-room house which his father had built;
he was living there as a college student when Mr. Adams bought the smaller
house next door and moved in with his blushing bride. This being a university
city, Mr. Noel was at home all through his years of education, and though
his father died the year before Mr. Adams moved in next door, there
was plenty of money for the full education of this only child. Upon
finishing his education and upon his obtaining a teaching position,
Mr. Noel's attractive bride moved into the home where he had been living
all these years with his mother. After all, a fifteen-room house of
this type could accommodate three conveniently and give privacy. Mrs.
Noel, Sr. died shortly after the second birthday of the first grandchild.
Now Noel and Adams were family men living next door to each other.
Mr. Adams was a certified public accountant, a man quick with numbers,
and in other matters, possessing a clear and logical mind. He had always
wanted to go to law school; his ambition had been to be a trial lawyer.
But there never were funds to make this possible. He settled for his
present position. He did delight in debate and did not hesitate to vie
with his educated neighbor in verbal battle or contest, whatever you
want to call it. In fact, they both seemed to enjoy these sessions of
controversy, which they kept on a high level, never parting with any
harsh words or ridicule of each other.
We must point out, however, that there was a tremendously important
difference between these two men. Mr. Adams was a believer, and for
years he served in an office in the church across the street and half
way up the block on the corner. He was not just a member. He was a very
active and zealous member, never ashamed of defending the position of
his church. Mr. Noel was an unbeliever and had never in his life entered
a church to hear as much a Sunday School lesson. His god was science;
and he worshipped his god with a fervent devotion. His Sundays were
spent out in the field on some scientific research or in sports. He
was not a lazy man who would use that day to lie around and waste time.
He was far too energetic for that.
Their verbal battlefield almost always was Darwinism, evolution, the
origin of this world and its development. But there was no victor in
this "battle", and really could not be because they could not agree
on a common set of rules. Mr. Noel would not accept the Word of God;
and Mr. Adams would not put stock in the "findings" of men who contradicted
anything in Scripture. Mr. Adams often would appeal to the flood for
his proof, but Mr. Noel would remind him that the Bible was nothing
more than a beautiful piece of human literature. His "proof" was the
words of men whose breath was in their nostrils, and who so often contradicted
each other.
Mr. Adams, wishing to continue the debate that carried on through all
these years, sought to undermine Mr. Noel's claims by scientific reasoning.
He did much research also to find scientists whose "findings" varied
with those which Mr. Noel held to and defended with all his ability.
He tried in every way apart from quoting the Scriptures to show the
impossibility of Mr. Noel's position and theories about the universe
and the origin of the creatures.
When Mr. Noel spoke so freely of the billions of years it took for
this to form and that to happen, Mr. Adams would insist that a half-billion-year
period of darkness would with its freezing, sub-zero cold kill off all
life that had begun to form in the half-billion-year period of the lighted
part of that day. But Mr. Noel would remind him that He was going back
to Scripture which spoke of six days, and of an evening and a morning
for each of these days. He (Mr. Noel) claimed no such one-day and one-evening
period in that billion-year stretch of time when things began to evolve.
He preferred a gradual warming up or cooling off through all the billions
of years.
One argument that Mr. Adams kept bringing up did irk Mr. Noel and gave
him trouble, even though he did not want to admit it. It was the question
as to where that first cell, or that first gaseous vapor came from.
From what did it evolve? Mr. Adams did note, though, a bit of hesitation,
no matter how slight it was, in Mr. Noel's defense and counter-question
as to where his, Mr. Adams', God came from.
Mr. Adams pressed his point at a later friendly session on the edge
of their lawns and asked Mr. Noel whether it was really scientific to
maintain that dead matter can produce life. Living matter dies. But
what has science to show that dead matter can produce life? And that
first cell or gaseous vapor that was there, how could it change without
something else being there to feed it or to exert influence upon it!
There must have been something more to feed that cell. There must have
been something more to cool off or heat up that gaseous vapor.
Mr. Noel boasted of the latest achievements of science to create life
in a test tube. But Mr. Adams pointed out that this was not a case of
dead matter bringing forth life and that he, Mr. Noel, was overlooking
the fact that living men were combining chemicals to produce
what seemed to have life. And so the controversy went on from year to
year, assuming different forms, but always about this difference of
beliefs of the two men.
Shortly after one of the most heated discussions on the subject of
dead matter moving toward life - and Mr. Noel did not like the way the
matter was going - the funeral of Mrs. Adams was held in the corner
church. Out of courtesy and sincere sympathy Mr. Noel went to the funeral
service. The text was the words of Jesus to Martha in John
11:25 and 26, "I am the resurrection and the life: He that believeth
in me, though He were dead, yet shall He live. And whosoever liveth
and believeth in me shall never die. Believest thou this?" The pastor
explained that the dead believer will rise again to glory. But he also
took time to emphasize that there is a worse death than this physical
death. He quoted Ephesians
2:1 to point out that there is also a spiritual death wherein people
who are physically alive may be. He pointed out that God told Adam that
the day He ate, He would die, and that this did happen. Adam died spiritually
that day. When Jesus says, "Whosoever liveth and believeth in me shall
never die," He is not giving a promise to the believer that he will
never die physically, but that the Spiritually alive will never experience
the eternal death of hell. The man who dies physically while spiritually
dead dies hopelessly. The man who is spiritually alive when he dies
physically shall never lose his spiritual life, nor enter the lake of
fire.
Seeing Mr. Noel in his audience the pastor 'pulled out a couple of
extra stops', and, looking right at him, stated, "'The spiritually dead
are not without hope as long as they still live physically. You still
have a chance. Let God have His way with you. Tell Him right now that
you want to become spiritually alive; and He will give that life to
you. He will make you spiritually alive. Just ask Him. He is waiting."
Even in the midst of his deep sorrow Mr. Adams was grateful for those
words of the pastor to his neighbor and hoped that they were well received.
Days later, knowing that Mr. Adams was lonely, Mr. Noel went one evening
to visit him, not intending to introduce their controversy. But Mr.
Adams brought up the matter without really intending to do so. He began
by thanking Mr. Noel for his presence and concern, for taking time off
from his teaching to attend the service. He added that He hoped that
the message was well received by Mr. Noel.
Mr. Noel's answer startled him so much that He jumped right out of
his chair. "Adams", He said, "I did not know that your pastor was an
evolutionist, or I might have visited him long ago." "He is not", almost
shouted the shocked Mr. Adams, "he and I both hold to the infallibility
of the Bible, and believe the first eleven chapters of Genesis to be
fact, undeniable fact. We both believe that God created all things in
six successive days of twenty-four hours each."
"Oh", replied, Mr. Noel, "I did not mean that He believes that the
earth and the universe came into being by the process of evolution.
I never heard him speak anything about that in the sermon. But I have
my answer now to your question about dead matter producing life; and
your pastor gave it to me. He told us that men are born spiritually
dead but that they can become spiritually alive by an act of their own.
He also spoke of a change of species: the sinner can change himself
into a saint by an act of his dead will. The dead have in themselves
the power to reach out for life."
"Adams", He said, "either admit that the Bible is fallible and that
the man who wrote Genesis chose the wrong word and should have said,
`God said, In the day thou eatest thereof thou shall become very weak
and sick', and that the man - I believe it was Paul - who wrote that
'man is dead in trespasses and sins' should have been more careful and
written that man is spiritually weak and sickly; therefore, he trespasses
and sins; or tell your pastor to preach that dead matter cannot desire
life and cannot make the movement unto life. Otherwise you are not consistent.
You speak of creation by an almighty God; but in the realm of salvation
you hold on to an evolutionistic process whereby the dead initiate the
act toward life. You speak of a sovereign creator, but you also hold
to a sovereign sinner who can hold off your sovereign saviour. You teach
that God calls all the creatures into being, but you also teach that
spiritually dead creatures call God into the act of saving. I find it
hard to follow, and very unscientific."
Indeed, we must be consistent in our defense of the truth of creation.
But consistency is also a precious jewel in our defense of the truth
of salvation by grace, as the work of a sovereign God Who creates us
in Christ Jesus as HIS workmanship (Ephesians
2:10), and does not wait for the spiritually dead sinner to step
forward to obtain life. There is no more evolution in salvation than
there is in creation.
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