Barefoot in the wilderness
in search of understanding

Are Neanderthals saved?

Our friend Ruth (not daughter Ruth!) asked a good question today, in the comments to a previous post, and I thought it deserved its own post. Her question was this:

Went to a dinosaur park today and saw models of neaderthal man. They got me thinking. They made tools and fires and things. But was God their God? I know that we didn’t evolve from them. But at what point in evolution did God become the God that he is for human-kind?

Good question! The first thing to say is that we don’t know the answer, and can’t this side of heaven. But I do have a few thoughts.

It’s usually been held by the Church that the thing setting humanity apart from the animals is the possession of a rational soul. That is, the power to think, speak and reason is what makes us human. If so, we would have to suggest that Neanderthals were also human in this sense. And so, yes, God would be their God, too. Of course, God is the God of the animals and the rocks and the stars, too, so in that sense it’s trivial. But, if the Neanderthals sought any God then the triune God would the One to whom they would be reaching. And I believe that God would reach back to them.

If the Neanderthals had no soul then, we’d have to suggest, they would have no desire for God, no experience of the numinous. And that problem would solve itself. It raises issues, though, of what then really distinguishes us from animals – if Neanderthals thought and spoke and reasoned and crafted and created, why are we any different?

However, there’s one final thought that makes sense to me and might help. If Neanderthals and other hominins were en-souled (had the divine spark that makes us different) then their story and salvation is the same as ours. Just as, we are told in the Bible, salvation was available to those to died before Christ was born, so these others would partake in that salvation. And if they weren’t en-souled, there’s nothing to worry about.

To answer your question, then, I personally suspect that we aren’t the only species to have had souls. I’ve no evidence for this, but there’s no evidence against it either. Insofar as we have any idea of what the soul is, we relate it to ideas of self-awareness, of rationality, of awareness of personal death, of creativity. All of these things appear to have been present in Neanderthals and possibly other hominin species. So, either souls were given once, a long time ago and shared among many species, or they were given several times, as a few species came into the place in God’s plan where they needed one.

Perhaps not very satisfactory, but an answer, at least!

pax et bonum