As a Christian, I believe that the universe and its living creatures are the products of intelligent design. This belief is not merely derived from theology but is also supported by rational considerations. There is enormous intelligence embedded in the laws of nature. The greatest scientists over the past few centuries have worked to decode the intelligence mysteriously imprinted in the workings of nature. Scientific laws, as spelled out by Keppler, Newton, Einstein and others, reveal nature as exquisitely orderly. So who encoded this intelligence in nature?
Since the universe had a beginning, how did it get here? There is no natural explanation, since the universe includes all of nature. It is more than absurd to posit that the universe caused itself. The most reasonable explanation is that our rational universe is the product of some super-rational or omniscient intelligence. An intelligent designer is not the only explanation, but it certainly is the best explanation.
How the creator went about His business of making the universe and its life forms is another question, and this is a question for science to answer to the degree that it can be answered. Darwin's theory of evolution posits that chance, mutation and natural selection largely account for the transitions between one life form and another. Man, as an animal, is also the product of evolution, having descended from the same evolutionary "tree" that produced gorillas and chimpanzees.
Did God order things this way? Certainly if you read the Bible you would never predict Darwin's theory of evolution. But neither from the Scriptural accounts could one predict that the earth goes around the sun. The Bible is not and does not purport to be a science textbook. It takes no position, for example, on the heliocentric theory. Unfortunately, in past centuries, many Christians interpreted a few casual references to the sun "rising" to mean that the earth must be stationary and the sun must revolve around the earth. These interpretations were hasty, to say the least: the Bible is describing sunrise from a human or experiential perspective. Still, these narrow-minded Christians opposed Copernicus and Galileo until they were forced to admit that they were wrong. It wasn't the Bible that was mistaken; it was the foolish certainty of its interpreters that was exposed and discredited.
Today some Christians may be heading down the same path with their embrace of "intelligent design" or ID. This movement is based on the idea that Darwinian evolution is not only flawed but basically fraudulent. ID should not, however, be confused with bible-thumping six-day creationism. It does not regard the earth as 6,000 years old. Its leading advocates are legal scholar Phillip Johnson, biochemist Michael Behe, mathematician David Berlinski, and science journalist Jonathan Wells. Berlinski has a new book out The Devil's Advocate that makes the remarkable claim that "Darwin's theory of evolution has little to contribute to the content of the sciences." Ben Stein's movie "Expelled" provides horror stories to show that the case for ID as well as critiques of evolution from an ID perspective are routinely excluded or censored in the halls of academe.
ID advocates have sought to convince courts to require that their work be taught alongside Darwinian evolution, yet such efforts have been resoundingly defeated. Why has the ID legal strategy proven to be such a failure, even at the hands of conservative judges? Imagine that a group of advocates challenged Einstein's theories of general and special relativity. Let's say that this group, made up of a law professor, a couple of physicists, several journalists, as well as some divinity school graduates, flatly denies Einstein's proposition that e=mc2.
How would a judge, who is not a physicist, resolve the group's demand for inclusion in the physics classroom? He would summon a wide cross-section of leading physicists. They would inform him that despite unresolved debates about relativity--for example, its unexplained relationship to quantum theory--Einstein's theories are supported by a wide body of data. They enjoy near-unanimous support in the physics community worldwide. There is no alternative scientific theory that comes close to explaining the facts at hand. In such a situation any judge would promptly show the dissenters the door and deny their demand for equal time in the classroom. This is precisely the predicament of the ID movement.
The problem with evolution is not that it is unscientific but that it is routinely taught in textbooks and in the classroom in an atheist way. Textbooks frequently go beyond the scientific evidence to make metaphysical claims about how evolution renders the idea of a Creator superfluous. If I wanted to promote my book What's So Great About Christianity I'd direct you there to find examples. (But I don't, so I won't.)
Most Christians don't care whether the eye evolved by natural selection or whether Darwin's theories can account for macroevolution or only microevolution. What they care about is that evolution is being used to deny God as the creator. For those who are concerned about this atheism masquerading as science, there is a better way. Instead of trying to get unscientific ID theories included in the classroom, a better strategy would be to get the unscientific atheist propaganda out. In future blogs I'll show such a strategy can be successfully implemented.



Reader Comments ( Page 7 of 63)
91. ((I am a born-again Christian.And i find evolution interesting.))
Thankfully I was born only once and I was too young to remember the experience - what the body goes through just to squeeze itself out, - oh but wait - I was one of two or in my specific case - the second of two.
She, I'll admit, is firmly entrenched in the fantasy side of the BIG CONSCIENCE.
The exact mirror of myself as I live on the logic side of the BIG CONSCIENCE.
Back to being born-again, is it painful??/
I think I was born the way I was suppose to be, and the BIG CONSCIENCE likes me that way.
TJ at 3:53PM on Mar 31st 2008
92. @ Moke
ding,ding, ding, dada ding, ding
mac at 3:55PM on Mar 31st 2008
93. BIG CONSCIENCE yea you got that right
BIG CON: SCIENCE
Jesus=Logic at 3:58PM on Mar 31st 2008
94. Mokele... I still live in the Nintendo era... loved mario bros and zelda... got a wii and starting to play zelda... never heard of bible adventures though.
Shannie at 4:03PM on Mar 31st 2008
95. Noon,
It would appear that you have the inside track on what the bible actually means. Answer me one question, How did Noah fit all the animals on such a tiny boat(ark)?
Descriptions of the ark show it to be a large boat, but a very small ship, not at all capable of carrying two of all creatures inhabbiting the earth.
mac at 4:06PM on Mar 31st 2008
96. GHB's concept makes more sense than the concept of an all powerful being that *poof* created the world and everything in it, then decided he screwed it all up, destroyed it and started all over again. It makes more sense, unless of course you prefer to be a follower and find comfort in being told what to think and have your "plan" laid out for you.
tay at 4:16PM on Mar 31st 2008
97. Only AOL news would host some clown like this.
I'll start worrying when he's on a credible news site.
Ed at 5:04PM on Mar 31st 2008
98. J=L
Clever, but anagrams are MY thing.
mac,
It was 2 of every species that existed at that time, the rest just evolved from them. Is that better? You could play Wisdom Tree's 3D Noah's Ark on the SNES for the answers to all your nagging questions!
Mokele-Mobembe at 4:17PM on Mar 31st 2008
99. Mokele... you get the award for best response of the day. I like it.... everyone should get that game to see what really happened :p
Shannie at 4:20PM on Mar 31st 2008
100. AND if god was the creator, why worry about saving all the animals? Why not just make new ones? Make new humans as well?
Same for Adam and Eve, why not realize the mistake and start over? Cain and Able were the best children on earth at that point, more reason to start over.
mac at 4:35PM on Mar 31st 2008
101. Wisdom Tree:
Deism Tower
Deist Mower
Deism We Rot
Drowse Time
Worst Dime
Mo Weirdest
Met Weirdos
Rowdiest Me
Driest Meow
Ride West, Mo
We Sired Tom
Mo Wet Dries
Wet Demo, Sir
I Deem Worst
Swim To Deer
I Mow Desert
It Worm Seed
I, Stormweed
Mokele-Mobembe at 4:35PM on Mar 31st 2008
102. D'Souza goes on, "The greatest scientists over the past few centuries have worked to decode the intelligence mysteriously imprinted in the workings of nature. Scientific laws, as spelled out by Keppler, Newton, Einstein and others, reveal nature as exquisitely orderly. So who encoded this intelligence in nature?"
There isn't intelligence 'encoded' in anything, mysteriously or otherwise. Intelligence is the ability to comprehend, and cannot be imprinted, embedded nor encoded. These scientists described how they understood nature, inductively, empirically.
not-pboyfloyd at 4:38PM on Mar 31st 2008
103. Moke
I got gamecast.
mac at 4:39PM on Mar 31st 2008
104. "Who encoded this intelligence in nature?" is a highly presumptive question, don'tcha think?
Gamecast:
Scam Gate
Get A Scam
MegaCats
Stag Came
Acme Tags
Mokele-Mobembe at 4:48PM on Mar 31st 2008
105. If we are to teach one religion in schools, why not teach all religions in school?
Allah created everything.
Zeus created everything.
Odin created everything.....
Wait, there's not enough time for everyone, let's just teach the silly ones...sorry again there all silly. Let's not teach any religion in schools, let's leave religion to parents and churches were it belongs.
mac at 4:52PM on Mar 31st 2008