Origins 101: Worldviews Begin With Beginnings
Rusty Benson
AgapePress
(AgapePress) - Nearly a
century-and-a-half after Darwin's Origins of the Species was published, and 75
years after the Scopes trial, the argument over life's origins still inflames
contentious debate.
Today three distinct
theories of origins compete for public affirmation. Darwinian Evolution remains
entrenched as the orthodox position of the cultural ruling class. Once
challenged by Creationism, Evolution's latest contender is a theory known as
Intelligent Design (ID).
As in the past, the debate
regularly surfaces in the context of which theory or theories should be taught
in public schools.
In El Tejon, California,
Americans United for Separation of Church and State bullied a school district
into promising that it would never again offer a "course that promoted or
endorses creationism, creation science or intelligent design." However, in
Kansas the State Board of Education recently approved a set of science standards
that question evolution.
Even President Bush has
weighed in on the issue saying, "Both sides should be properly taught so
people can understand what the debate is about."
So far that hasn't happened.
The result is a largely confused public.
The following is offered as
a synopsis of Creationism, Darwinian Evolution and Intelligent Design. For a
more in-depth study of these theories and the implications of each, see the
suggested resources listed at the conclusion of this article.
Creationism
Also called Creation Science, this theory attempts to defend the biblical
account of the origins of the universe. Creationists freely admit that their
presuppositions are different than evolutionists', and thus, their
interpretation of the archeological evidence is often different.
In addition, creationists
frequently use independent data from the fossil record and from radiometric and
carbon-14 dating to make their case.
Variations of Creationism
include the Young Earth Theory (closest to the literal Genesis account), the Gap
Theory and the Day-age Theory.
Darwinian Evolution
Charles Darwin was a 19th century British naturalist who first offered a
plausible naturalistic theory for the origin of life in his book On the
Origin of the Species by Means of Natural Selection, or the Preservation of
Favoured Races in the Struggle for Life.
According to Darwin's
theory, the universe is without a beginning and life on earth evolved over a
span of three to four billion years by the process of natural selection. Natural
selection, according to Understanding the Times by David Noebel, is "the
process that through competition and other factors such as mutations, predators,
geography, and time naturally and randomly allows only those life forms best
suited to survive to live and reproduce."
Concerning the status of man
in the evolutionary process, George Gaylord Simpson, paleontologist and
evolutionist, bluntly stated: "Man is the result of a purposeless and
natural process that did not have him in mind. He was not planned. He is a state
of matter, a form of life, a sort of animal and a species of the Order Primates,
akin nearly or remotely to all of life and indeed to all that is material."
Intelligent Design
(ID)
The heart of the theory of ID, according to Nancy Pearcey, author of the
landmark book Total Truth, is that design in nature can be empirically
detected.
She writes that ID
"formalizes ordinary intuition." For example, we instantly recognize
the difference in a landscape formed by wind, rain and erosion and one that
includes Mt. Rushmore. That difference is the clear evidence of a designer. It's
the same kind of observable science that enables an archeologist to distinguish
between a rock and an arrowhead.
In presenting their case,
proponents of ID often point to recent scientific research in three areas:
Winner Take All
What's at stake in
the debate? In short, everything. "Whatever a culture adopts as its
creation story shapes everything else," Pearcey writes.
If evolution continues as
our culture's official orthodoxy, Christians can only expect the complete
secularization in all areas from education to entertainment, from philosophy to
politics. And with the natural implications that human beings are neither
accountable nor responsible, the future is likely to be one in which raw power
rules.
But don't give up too
quickly. Although it faces an uphill battle, acceptance of ID as a viable theory
of origins is growing. At a minimum that could result in the re-establishment of
the discarded idea that human life has inherent meaning and purpose. And that
could change everything.
© 2006 AgapePress all
rights reserved