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by Matt Kaufman
I once wrote a column pointing out that
intelligent atheists had often converted to
Christianity, and cited the case of C.S. Lewis.
At least one of my readers wasn't impressed.
Noting that Lewis had been fond of mythology
since childhood, the reader dismissed the
century's most prominent Christian apologist
on the grounds that Lewis "was never a
convinced and committed
atheist."
I've always remembered that letter because it
so perfectly illustrates the mentality of a
certain type of nonbeliever. His unbelief
doesn't stem from science or reason, as he'd
like you (and himself) to think. At bottom, he
simply refuses to believe. He's close-minded
and proud of it.
You can find a similar attitude among
evolutionists. Theirs is, as biochemist Michael
Denton has called it, a theory in crisis, running
into more problems all the time. Others have
laid out the many scientific flaws of evolution.
(See "Crumbling Icons" and
"Was Darwin Right After
All?"). What interests me at the moment is
the reaction of evolutionists themselves.
If they were simply humble, open-minded
inquirers as they claim, you'd think at some
point they'd admit that their previous
explanation might not hold water after all.
Instead they've clung to it all the more
determinedly. They've taken to insisting that
we no longer speak of the "theory of evolution"
but rather the "fact of evolution." They say
decidedly unscientific and irrational things like
"even if it has problems it's the best
explanation we've got" — as if admission of
their own ignorance, much less God's
guidance in creation, were out of the question.
You'd think evolution was a religion itself.
And so it has always been, argues
biophysicist Cornelius G. Hunter in his
fascinating new book, Darwin's God:
Evolution and the Problem of Evil. Backed
by extensive quotation, Hunter contends that
Charles Darwin and his heirs, far from being
disinterested scientific observers, came to
their views based on their assumptions about
God. They looked at the world, decided it
should have been designed better, and
concluded that God simply wouldn't have
done it that way. Hunter writes:
Darwin was concerned, for
example, that tons of pollen go to waste every
year, that some species are ill-adapted for
their environments, that ants make slaves of
other ants, and that parasites feed off their
victims. He tried to make sense of what
seemed to be the evil side of nature. "What a
book a devil's chaplain might write on the
clumsy, wasteful blundering, low and horribly
cruel works of nature," he concluded a letter to
a friend.
How could divine creation be reconciled with
such evils? It was questions like these that,
for Darwin, seemed to confirm that life is
formed by blind natural forces. He was
motivated toward evolution not by direct
evidence in favor of his new theory but by
problems with the common notion of divine
creation. Creation, it seemed, does not always
reflect the goodness of God, so Darwin
advocated a naturalistic explanation to
describe how creation came
about.
That naturalism colored all his perspectives.
Take homologies, common traits
between different species; e.g., lizards, bats,
and humans all have five digits. "Before
Darwin," Hunter writes, "homologies were
interpreted as a sort of divine template
revealing the Creator's unity of design." (I think
of God as an artist Who has certain stylistic
signatures He's pleased to imprint on His
work.) But "according to Darwin, homologies
are leftovers of descent with modification."
There's nothing logically inferior about the
former view, given a God who can do what He
wills; it just didn't fit Darwin's worldview. So he
needed to find an alternative — descent from
a common ancestor — that rendered God
unnecessary.
Not that Darwin was precisely an atheist. One
of the most interesting aspects of Hunter's
book is his exploration of Darwin's concept of
God — a concept shared by many people of
his time and in the centuries leading up to it.
By Darwin's time influential people (including
leading Victorian thinkers dominant in his
native England) thought God was supposed to
be utterly comprehensible to human reason,
and invariably benevolent in His dealings with
man. "God's goodness and wisdom were
thought to be manifest in creation," Hunter
summarizes, "but not his providence,
judgment, or use of evil."
This was not even remotely like the God
revealed in the Bible. Indeed, all of Scripture
shows God actively guiding history, in ways
often mysterious to men, especially in their
own lifetimes. Scripture also tells of how all
creation, not just mankind, has been
corrupted, leading to the world Darwin found
so inefficient and cruel. Had Darwin been
steeped in a biblical worldview, maybe he
would have found these realities easier to
accept. But the God he'd heard about would
never have created the world he saw in nature;
this God had to be distant from it all. No
wonder so many of Darwin's successors have
stepped into outright atheism; if God hasn't
done anything since the dawn of time, why
believe in Him at all?
Yet as Hunter notes, "It is perhaps one of the
great ironies in modern religious thought that
one can profess to be an agnostic, skeptic or
even atheist regarding belief in God yet
still hold strong opinions about God. Evolution
may breed skepticism, but its adherents have
continued to make religious proclamations.
And those proclamations are really no
different from those made by Darwin and his
fellow Victorians." For example,
for [science philosopher]
Michael Ruse God cannot be reconciled with
the facts of biogeography, so we must turn to
evolution. He argues, "Given an all-wise God,
just why is it that different [life] forms appear in
similar climate, whereas the same forms
appear in different climates? It is all pointless
without evolution." According to [geneticist]
Edward Dodson and [geologist] Peter
Dodson, if God had created the species, then
they should be distributed evenly about the
globe. They write, "Had all species been
created in the places where they now exist,
then amphibian and terrestrial mammals
should be as frequent on oceanic islands as
on comparable continental areas. Certainly
terrestrial mammals should have been
created on these islands as frequently as
were bats." It is remarkable how often
evolutionists feel free to dictate what God
should and shouldn't do.
The sheer arrogance of it all may be striking to
the Christian reader — or for that matter to
anyone who, in the words of a priest in the
movie Rudy, knows at least two things: "There
is a God, and I'm not Him." But we shouldn't
find such arrogance completely surprising.
Adam and Eve, after all, thought Satan's
promise of godlike knowledge — and hence
godlike stature — to be an irresistible
temptation. In this sense, all of us really do
reflect the traits passed on by common
ancestors, pride foremost among them.
Evolutionists just dress theirs up in scientific
garb.
But in the end evolution is not pure science,
and Hunter's purpose is less to argue against
evolution (though he does do so) than to show
that evolution rests on metaphysical
assumptions. "An unspoken, unscientific
position underlies evolution, and until this is
understood public debate will continue to be
more confusing than enlightening," Hunter
concludes. "We need to understand these
things because, ultimately, evolution is not
about the scientific details. Ultimately,
evolution is about God."
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