Re: Sin & Evolution

From: bivalve <bivalve@mail.davidson.alumlink.com>
Date: Fri Mar 19 2004 - 21:45:41 EST

>Thanks for the replies. I can understand and accept all the information about evolution. Bottom line is I want someone to tell me that I am forgiven, and saved. That I will have peace in this life and rest in the next. And that there is the hope of justice for everyone who's ever suffered at the hands of other people in this life. I've spent some time today looking on Google for articles to help me but there is virtually nothing - the combination "Evolution Redeemer" eventually turned up one article by George here on the ASA site. Everyone is busy defending the science of evolution, which is valid and valuable, but I think it would be helpful if someone could spend more time defending the gospel (not just theism) in the light of your scientific understanding. No wonder the Creationists are so influential.<
>Perhaps I shouldn't say that. I just want someone to tell me my faith in Christ is certain. Perhaps I should have known better than to watch your debates - I should know my limitations and keep away. Too late now. Sorry! S.<

Part of the difficulty is that scientific understanding does not tell us much about the gospel. Rather, the gospel provides a foundation for scientific understanding. Knowing that the creation is the product of an orderly God Who cares about us, we can have confidence that its study is a worthwhile and productive endeavor that will help us learn how to care for it.

Science can't tell us about being forgiven or saved. This cuts both ways-neither disproof nor proof. There is excellent historical evidence regarding the basic reliability of the New Testament (plenty of details are not too testable, but many are and hold up well, as do the main historic points). One might make some psychological arguments, using scientific evidence about normal human behavior, but these could only go so far as to support the idea that something rather unusual happened. The important implications are theological, understood by faith rather than trying to experiment on God.

Christianity makes better sense philosophically than anything else that I know of, but science can't measure that.

    Dr. David Campbell
    Old Seashells
    University of Alabama
    Biodiversity & Systematics
    Dept. Biological Sciences
    Box 870345
    Tuscaloosa, AL 35487-0345 USA
    bivalve@mail.davidson.alumlink.com

That is Uncle Joe, taken in the masonic regalia of a Grand Exalted Periwinkle of the Mystic Order of Whelks-P.G. Wodehouse, Romance at Droitgate Spa

                 
Received on Fri Mar 19 21:46:05 2004

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