Can
You Believe Both the Bible and Evolution?
A number of the world’s
mainstream religions have come to accept Darwinian evolution as
the explanation for our existence. But does Darwinism really square
with the Scriptures?
by John Ross Schroeder
The Good News, July-August 2006, pp. 10-11
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Are
we the sons and daughters of Adam and Eve or did God guide our journey
into existence by the forces of evolution? The wisdom of this world, particularly
in Europe, is increasingly embracing the idea that we can accept both
the teachings of the Bible and the theory of evolution. But are they really
compatible?
Wrote Clive Cookson in the Financial Times, “The Vatican,
which often appeared ambivalent in the past, has recently gone out of
its way to affirm the compatibility of evolutionary science with the
Bible” (Dec. 23, 2005, emphasis added throughout).
Many clergymen believe in evolution
A movement known as the Clergy Letter Project, signed by 10,000 ordained
ministers and priests in America, stated: “We believe that the
theory of evolution is a foundational scientific truth, one that
has stood up to rigorous scrutiny and upon which much of human knowledge
and achievement rests. To reject this truth or to treat it as ‘one
theory among others’ is to deliberately embrace scientific ignorance
and transmit such ignorance to our children” (ibid.).
It is astonishing to fully realize the grip that the concept of evolution
has on increasing numbers who also profess to believe in God and presumably
His Word. And yet at the same time growing numbers of competent scientists
are becoming outspoken critics of Darwinism.
As the Australian molecular biologist and medical doctor Michael Denton,
himself an agnostic, has written, evolutionary theory “is still,
as it was in Darwin’s time, a highly speculative hypothesis entirely
without direct factual support and very far from that self-evident axiom
some of its more aggressive advocates would have us believe” ( Evolution:
A Theory in Crisis, 1986, p. 77).
Even some who support intelligent design (ID) somehow conceive of it as
also compatible with Darwinism. The Economist put it this way:
“But if God has a plan for the world and everyone in it . . . then
it is much easier to imagine evolution occurring under divine guidance
than as a result of random mutation and the survival of the fittest.”
Many believe that God has used the evolutionary process of natural selection
to accomplish His ultimate purpose for the human family.
Even the noted paleontologist and agnostic Stephen Jay Gould saw fit to
state, “Either half of my colleagues are enormously stupid or
else the science of Darwinism is fully compatible with religious beliefs
—and equally compatible with atheism” (“Impeaching
a Self-Appointed Judge,” quoted in Dawkins’ God,
2005, p. 80).
This approach—believing that a divine being guided the evolutionary
process—is called theistic evolution. But according to
what we find in the Bible, has God ever worked that way? The title of
this article is: “Can You Believe Both the Bible and Evolution?”
It could just as well have been titled “Can You Believe Both God
and Evolution?”
Who made a man from dust?
Since there is so little understanding about what Scripture actually says
on this subject, let’s make the consistent biblical position very
plain and clear. The human creation account begins in the first chapter
of the very first book of the Bible.
“Then God said, ‘Let Us make man in Our image, according
to Our likeness; let them have dominion over the fish of the sea,
over the birds of the air, and over the cattle, over all the earth’”
(Genesis 1:26).
Here Scripture draws a clear distinction between man and the animal world.
Previous passages plainly show that mammals, birds and fish were definitely
not created in the image of God (verses 20-25). Only man shares
that awesome distinction and for a grand purpose.
God first states His intention to create human beings and then He does
it. “So God created man in His own image; in the image of God He
created him; male and female He created them” (verse 27).
More details are revealed in the second chapter. “And the Lord God
formed man [Adam] of the dust of the ground, and breathed into his nostrils
the breath of life; and man became a living being” (Genesis 2:7).
The biblical narrative is in sharp contrast to those who believe that
evolution has shaped dust into humanity. In essence this belief amounts
to idolatry since evolution has been put in the place of God.
The narrative continues with the creation of Eve. “And the Lord
God caused a deep sleep to fall on Adam, and he slept; and He took one
of his ribs, and closed up the flesh in its place. Then the rib which
the Lord God had taken from the man He made into a woman, and He brought
her to the man. And Adam said: ‘This is now bone of my bones and
flesh of my flesh; she shall be called Woman, because she was taken out
of Man’” (Genesis 2:21-23).
The account shows that sex was created by God, not by evolution
as so many scientists seem to claim. “Therefore a man shall leave
his father and mother and be joined to his wife, and they shall become
one flesh” (verse 24).
The Psalms confirm creation
Other books in the Bible, like the Psalms, confirm the Genesis account
of the human creation. Consider the human eye. We may ask, who designed
the first eye? How could the eye possibly be the product of an accidental
mutation? How could aeons of gradual change produce an eye—an astoundingly
complex organ that needs all of its highly integrated parts to function?
The psalmist gives the credit to God. “He who planted the ear, shall
He not hear? He who formed the eye, shall He not see?”
(Psalm 94:9).
What did King David say about his own origins? “I will praise You,
for I am fearfully and wonderfully made” (Psalm 139:14). He attributed
his existence directly to God and went on to describe how the Creator
knew all of his parts even while he was in his mother’s womb (verses
15-16).
David asked the crucial question: “What is man that You
are mindful of Him . . . ? You made him a little lower than the angels
. . .” (Psalm 8:4-5). He goes on to tell us how man has been given
rule over the earth, including the flora and the fauna (verses 6-8).
Columnist Mark Steyn, writing in the British Spectator, said
this pivotal passage “accurately conveys the central feature of
our world—our dominion over pretty much everything else out there.”
He adds that the writer of this psalm “captured the essence of our
reality better than your average geneticist” (“O Come, All
Ye Faithless,” Dec. 17, 2005).
Jesus Christ and Paul believed in man’s creation
Notice what Jesus Christ Himself said: “But from the beginning of
the creation, God ‘made them male and female’” (Mark
10:6). Then in Matthew’s parallel account Christ asks the question:
“Have you not read that He who made them at the beginning ‘made
them male and female’ . . . ?” (Matthew 19:4).
Christ’s question underscores the importance of reading and believing
the Bible—and in this case especially the creation accounts in the
early chapters of Genesis.
When the apostle Paul confronted the blatant idolatry of the philosophers
of Athens on the Areopagus, adjoining the Athenian Acropolis, he told
them that “the God who made the world and everything in it is the
Lord of heaven and earth . . . From one man He made every nation
of men, that they should inhabit the whole earth” (Acts 17:24, 26,
New International Version).
All generations of human beings came from one man—and that man was
named Adam. Paul adds, “And so it is written [in Genesis]: ‘The
first man Adam became a living being’” (1 Corinthians
15:45).
Paul also understood the order in which the first man and first woman
were created. “For Adam was formed first, then Eve” (1 Timothy
2:13). And as surprising as it may seem, He also wrote: “For man
[Adam] did not come from woman, but woman [Eve] from man; neither was
man created for woman, but woman for man” (1 Corinthians 11:8-9,
NIV).
Since all of their descendants were born of a woman (verse 12), Paul could
not have written this passage unless he implicitly believed in the Genesis
account.
Drawing the obvious conclusions
There is simply no way of reshaping the Bible into a book that also somehow
supports the theory of evolution. If we are brave enough to accept the
creation account at face value, then theistic evolution becomes impossible
to believe. We cannot believe both the Bible and evolution. Both Old and
New Testaments consistently support the account of the divine creation
of Adam and Eve.
Logically, what we are obliged to do now is to examine the evidence for
the authority and authenticity of the Bible, along with God’s existence,
and compare them with the viability of the theory of evolution.
See original
article.
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