So it's been a couple weeks. But I have been busy, I swear.
Instead of going back and doing the weeks I've missed in our 30 week experiment, I have just finished my colloquium on Darwin and culture and I thought I'd let you know some of my thoughts. For my faithful readers, I think I'll attempt to get back on the 30 week train over Thanksgiving break, never fear.
But I have come to realize this weekend that perhaps Darwin has been unfairly vilified, at least in this part of the country. After all, as a person, and especially as a scientist, he really was a remarkable man. Further, I've heard some say that Darwin didn't really purport macro evolution, only micro. But that's not really accurate either.
What frustrates me is the line drawn in the sand that some would say separates creationists and evolutionists. When in actuality, creation speaks to the "who" of the origin of matter and evolution speaks to the "how." To say that you are uncomfortable with the idea that apes and man have a common ancestor, then I might just say, "Shame on you for letting your comfort dictate scientific discoveries." Because, of course, evolution is not a fact. It is a theory. But, before you say that as a reason it should not be taught-- it is a very very good theory. And Darwin did a lot of very good science before he came to the conclusions that he did. After all, gravity is also just a theory but we don't have anyone rioting about that... except for maybe the flat earth people. (Oh yeah, those people are real.)
All of that to say, perhaps because of Darwin the world-- the west in particular-- is less religious. But I do not think that the Darwinian idea of evolution is an immediate threat to faith. Darwin did not negate God, but the idea of God which was at that time popular in the Church of England. Because, unfortunately, with Paley's watchmaker God argument, we began to decide that if there was something we couldn't understand then it must have been created by the hand of God. However, just because I don't understand something is not proof for God's existence. More importantly, just because I do understand something does not mean that it is not directly caused by God. After all, I understand that when I breathe in my diaphragm moves down so that my lungs will be filled with air that is then used by the alveoli to exchange oxygen and carbon dioxide in my blood. But that does not mean that I do not draw every breath by the grace and hand of God. In the same way that the fact I get paid for working a job does not mean that God has not provided every penny which I call "mine."
Some might say (and I might be one of these) that Darwin did the church a favor by introducing into 19th century England a viable explanation for existence that did not necessarily depend on God. Before you stone me, I only mean to posit that if you have never chosen between God and anything else you have never chosen him at all. Faith that is held only because there is no other option is not real faith. Further, Darwin allowed us to see that perhaps our perceptions of God are not the same thing as God himself. Just because the God of the gaps was torn down does not mean that God does not exist-- instead, our understanding of him has been refined.
All this to say, is that Creation is something of a sign for those who have ears to hear and eyes to see. I learn about evolution and how things came to be the way they are and think, "Wow, isn't God so marvelous." At the same time, Richard Dawkins may take the same facts and say, "See, we have no need of Him." Is that Darwin's fault. Oh, I don't think so. And if we teach our children good science about evolution are we trying to turn them all into Atheists? Probably not. And further, is the secular classroom the proper arena to talk about the Creator? I don't really think so. After all, if we have ears to hear, then creation itself will point to God-- regardless of how he did it.
Ha. Things you can come to think at a Baptist school in Oklahoma.
Oh God of truth, save us from the fear that will keep us from finding You. Amen.
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