#2 History of the Idea of Evolution

Charles Darwin presented his theory of evolution through natural selection in 1859 here in Britain.  It was a controversial theory because it challenged the view that God had created all the species on earth exactly as we see them today.  This led to debate within the Anglican Church and in universities that were essentially run by the church.  The debate spread to the Catholic Church on the continent.

My first point is that debate is good and new ideas are good – if we all agreed on everything, we could not debate anything. Church parishes are a good place for debate since Christians are encouraged to think about things.

By the end of the 1860s, Thomas Huxley – sometimes called Darwin’s bulldog – was succeeding in separating the church from universities and making science into a secular occupation.

During the 19th century what was called the Materialist Philosophy was gaining support in some quarters.  It was the belief that matter had always existed and was eternal, and so it was not necessary to believe in God as the originator of matter and the universe.  This led to modern Atheism.

Through the 20th century the big idea of evolution started to replace God as the ultimate explanation for all things.  To the question where do things come from?  The answer was no longer that God created them, but that they had evolved.

The rise of Communism and the Soviet Union brought a new idea – that life had evolved from non-life in some kind of primeval ocean full of organic molecules.  (This idea was brought to Britain by Marxist biologists).  This idea was not the idea of Charles Darwin who believed in the original creation by God of multicellular life as a few or one basic type.

How was the church going to survive what appeared to be an onslaught on one of its core beliefs?  Namely that God had created life?

Anglican theologians in Britain and Catholic theologians in Europe were quick to get to work to sort out the church’s response to the new scientific theory.

They adopted a new theology: that God is still the Creator, but he had created life through the processes of evolution.  Christians who believe this are called Theistic Evolutionists.  Historically there have been two types of Theistic Evolutionists:

  • By the 1950s Theistic Evolutionists were claiming that God guided evolution according to his own purposes.  Thus, God caused evolution to lead to the evolution of human beings from apes. Many Christians who held this view worked in biology. 
  • More recently Theistic Evolutionists inspired by observations of constraints on the natural world and on evolution, changed their belief to state that natural processes are constrained such that humans would evolve anyway whatever happened.  So God had to just wait for it to happen, and it was not necessary for him to intervene at all.

This is where we’re at now.  Most Christians see no conflict between their Christian faith and the theories of modern science. They believe that God metaphorically created the universe with its galaxies and stars, and life on earth.  However, the real active principle was the natural processes of evolution as described by science.

Why do we Christians still need a God if everything was going to happen under its own impetus anyway?

Possible answers are:

  • God is present in people’s personal lives
  • God lends meaning to the whole in a theological way

Theology has embraced modern secular science almost without question. Science is equated with truth, and theologians tag along behind. This certainly makes life easy and comfortable.  It allows us to avoid conflict with the secular world around us. But do we now worship a pocket-sized God? A little God who we don’t need often?

#1 Genetics And The Incarnation

Did life come into being through evolution?

My answer is categorically no, it did not. Evolution does not create DNA, it only modifies what is already there.

So what evidence is there that God created DNA and by this means created life?

Understanding genomes and how mutation modifies them give the main clues to answering this question. But in addition to this, for the Christian, there is proof in the fact of a male Messiah. This article gives the details of genetics that throw light on what is clearly evident: God can and did create at least one gene, a genetic code made of DNA.

This article, written in 2018, was the text I used for a talk given in a church parish on this subject.

The Incarnation of our Lord Jesus Christ was a unique event in history and nothing was the same again.

Creation of At Least One Gene

Haven’t we all met someone who has said, ‘I can’t believe in Christianity or go to church because I believe in science’?

And what do we say?  We fumble about for some kind of answer – that we also believe in science – but then we appear to abandon our faith to some obscure private domain of irrationality.  Do we really sell the Good News to anybody with regards to science and faith?

I want to use these few words to present to you a new view of creation and a new understanding of evolution.  Genetics is the key to this new idea and Incarnation is the sign.

Science today tells us that everything has simply evolved.  No need of a Creator God.  No need of purpose, no meaning and no message.

Over the past 150 years the church has, by and large attenuated this stark conclusion by claiming that evolution was God’s method of creation.  Each Sunday we proclaim God as maker of heaven and earth, but it is unclear to most people what this means.

I had been studying science, genetics and biological evolution, and reflecting upon creation for 14 years when the Lord showed me the implications of the Incarnation: 

At the overshadowing of Mary by the Holy Spirit, God performed a miracle that allowed Jesus to be fully human and yet be born from a virgin.  Mary provided an egg that started to develop without fertilization from a human father.  This means that Mary provided all of Jesus’ DNA and all of his genes.  But there was one gene that no female can provide.  It is a gene on the Y chromosome called TDF.  If God had not directly created this one gene, TDF, as a minimum requirement, the Messiah would have been female, not male.

This shows – at least to us Christians – that God is able to create genetic codes – genes made of DNA.  I am not a six literal days Creationist, but I know this great truth: God created life. 

I propose that God created life by creating the genetic code at the microscopic, nanoscale level of cells.  This new way of seeing creation opens the way to a new understanding of evolution.  The science of genetics is now revealing – and this was not known before – that modification of traits through the processes of evolution is almost always based on mutations that switch off genes.  Mutation is error in the replication of DNA.  However, and this is the very big however – switched-off genes can sometimes bring about useful traits in the physical bodies of plants and animals.  When these new traits are useful, they are selected by natural selection.  The natural processes of evolution allow plants and animals to adapt, be modified and diversify into many different species. 

God does not create through error.  Mutation which is error simply modifies what God has created in perfection.

A new understanding of evolution shows that its source is in creation, and a new view of creation shows that life was created to adapt and evolve.  The genetics of the Incarnation shows that the genetic code within cells is the message, the message that carries life and the message that proclaims God as Creator. 

October 2018

Read more in the article ‘Genetics and the Incarnation’ on the Incarnation page of this website.