Introduction and purpose of this letter
The human appendix has been at the center of a
debate that has raged for over a century between those who adhere to
mainstream scientific thinking about the origins of the diversity of
life on this planet and those who adhere to a Biblical
interpretation which differs from that of mainstream science. As the
senior investigator on a recent scientific publication describing
the apparent function of the human appendix (1), and as a very
active member of an evangelical church since childhood, I find
myself in a unique position to comment on certain issues relating to
the intersection between faith and science.
To date, I have published almost 100 scientific works, the majority
of those being peer-reviewed articles. These works are based on my
formal training and my professional experience, and are freely
available to other scientists who wish to use my work and ideas to
help them advance their own work, and also for those scientists who
wish to question the validity of my work and ideas. These uses of my
published work are a necessary part of the scientific process. The
scientific community has an abundance of truly brilliant people, all
devoting much of their life to science, and all trying to come to
the truth about the universe, using peer reviewed publications and
scientific meetings as the tool to achieve the goal. The pursuit of
science is intellectual, and the evaluation of science takes place
in the intellectual domain. This is the nature of science.
It will be obvious to the reader that the
following letter is not about science. What will perhaps be less
obvious is that this letter is not an academic article. What will
even be counter-intuitive to some is that this letter is not being
made available for the purpose of intellectual analysis. Certainly
it can be analyzed intellectually, but intellectual analysis is not
the way to handle the sort of information presented in this article.
It is a mistake to handle information that deals with the Kingdom of
Heaven using the human intellect. This letter did not, I perceive,
originate from my intellect, and it is written for the spiritual
being, not the intellectual being. The letter was not written
because I have impeccable theological credentials from a wonderful
school of theology, and because I used that impeccable training to
conduct what I think is a proper analysis of some important data.
The fact is that I have no formal credentials in theology. However,
I have been walking with Jesus for a while now, and like the
fishermen of the New Testament who also walked with Jesus, I often
find God moving in wonderful ways as I speak on matters in which I
have no formal training. Like those fishermen, I know that whatever
good there is in my words is from Jesus, not me.
To be clear and plain, my claim is that this letter presents
information that is inspired by the Holy Spirit of God. I believe
this claim, and there is only one way to judge such a claim.
Praying, not thinking, is needed. If the reader wants to know if
this letter might be helpful, the reader must take this letter to
God, and ask God if He has a message in the letter for him or her. I
know that this letter is not for everybody, and that the entire
letter may not be for most people. However, if the reader approaches
God with this letter and an open heart, God may speak to the reader
about some truth in this letter that will be helpful. That is my
hope and prayer as I write this. If you are unsure of the
Shepherd’s voice in your daily life, you may need to take a step
back from apologetics and draw closer to the Shepherd before praying
about this letter. I would suggest some of the books cited in Note #
8 at the bottom of this letter. Each of those books is written from
a different perspective, so you may need to try a few before you
find one that is written in a way that ministers to you. My personal
favorite is Joy Dawson’s book.
If you are willing to take a huge leap of faith (more or less
jumping off into the deep end of the pool with God), then I would
suggest the book “Want More?”, by Tim Enloe. That information will
help you receive a good dunking in the Spirit of God to get you
started on the path of walking daily in the Spirit of God. I know
that a “good dunking” doesn’t agree with the thinking of some people
in the church. I don’t understand this viewpoint, I must admit. For
the people who have visited a certain place, the existence of that
place is no longer a matter of intellectual debate. It is a fact of
experience. Debate is irrelevant. There is no point in telling me
that there should be no deep end to the pool, because I have been in
the deep end of the pool. For those who have never heard a mostly
valid theological explanation of the “dunking” in the Spirit of God
and desire to receive an explanation, check out either “The
Spirit-Filled Believer’s Handbook” by Derek Prince, or “The Holy
Spirit, A Pentecostal Interpretation”, by L. Thomas Holdcroft. Try
the dunking if you are ready for anything God has. It was helpful
almost 2000 years ago in a certain upper room, it has been helpful
between then and now, and it is still helpful today. If you’ve
received that dunking, and if you avoid the temptation to get dried
off, searching through this letter to find whatever message God has
for you will be easy, and you won’t be caught up in the type of
intellectual analysis that is useful for the kingdoms of this world,
but not for the Kingdom of Heaven.
The human appendix and where it fits in the creation/evolution
debate.
To begin this perspective, it is necessary to describe very briefly
the nature of the aforementioned debate surrounding the appendix.
The number of individuals who discount the mainstream scientific
views regarding evolution are not few in number: A recent (May,
2007) Gallup Poll showed that more than 40 % of the population in
the United States believes in an “anti-evolutionism” that does not
acknowledge the idea accepted by mainstream science that life on
planet Earth has evolved from less complex life forms. For the
purpose of this letter, I will simply refer to those individuals as
“anti-evolutionists”, although I realize this term is not precise if
taken out of context. On the other side of the debate, the same poll
showed that more than 50 % of the same population accepts a role of
evolution in the origin of species as described by modern science,
with almost three-quarters of those believing that God was involved
in the process.
For the purpose of this letter, the many subtleties and details
surrounding the debate about how the human appendix fits into the
evolution/anti-evolution debate are not important. However, a brief
and thus very simplified description of the debate is helpful and
can be described as follows: Removal of the appendix from the human
body appears to have no adverse consequences, and no apparent
function of the human appendix had been identified by main-stream
science prior to 2007. However, the appendix appears to be similar
in many regards to a part of the anatomy (the cecum), which has a
known digestive function in many non-human mammals. Thus, mainstream
science concluded that the appendix is apparently a “leftover” from
the evolutionary process, having been used in our evolutionary past
but no longer needed at the present time. Whether or not the human
appendix was actually a leftover remained a matter of uncertainty
among scientists, since the scientific community considered evidence
from several fields of study that did not conclusively point toward
the appendix as being a leftover. However, because no known
function for the appendix had been identified, and because it was
conceivable to main-stream science that the human appendix was the
evolutionary remnant of a cecum, the idea persisted that the
appendix was a leftover from evolution. On the other hand,
anti-evolutionists countered with the idea that the human appendix
has some function because God created humans independent of any
evolutionary process, and God would not have included an appendix in
the body if it had no purpose.
The apparent function of the appendix.
New insights into the field of gut immunology (2) in conjunction
with a technical advance in microscopic examination of the microbial
flora of the intact gut (3) brought to light the apparent function
of the appendix, as well as the reason that removal of the structure
has no apparent ill effects. That function, ideally suited for the
worm-like shape and the location of the human appendix, apparently
involves maintenance of a reserve supply of beneficial bacteria to
aid the human body in recovery from bouts with severe diarrhea (1),
which are not only rare but are easily treated by medical
intervention in countries where modern sanitation and hygienic
practices are the rule. In contrast, diarrheal illness is one of the
leading killers of children in developing countries (4), indicating
that the presence of an appendix probably has a survival advantage
in those situations. Further, work published in the 1980’s indicates
that modern sanitation and other hygienic practices lead to changes
in the immune system, which in turn probably cause appendicitis (5).
Thus, we now apparently understand that most humans prior to the
industrial revolution probably needed their appendix to aid in
recovery from common illnesses, and we understand why humans living
in societies with modern sanitation and hygienic practices do not
need their appendix, and, in fact, why those appendixes must
actually be removed in a significant percentage of the population.
Religious belief and science in collision?
I intend to write this next section without providing any scientific
information that could be used in a debate regarding the origins of
species. Such information would be counterproductive in this letter,
since a significant fraction of the readers may be interested in the
anti-evolution/evolution debate, and thus any mention of scientific
information will set off a flurry of intellectual activity that is
aside from the point I desire to make. The issue I’m driving at here
is, how and why are the minds of young people and even some older
people being turned away from God by scientific theories. To address
this issue, I first need to explain why main-stream scientific
theories keep advancing and overtaking anti-evolution views in the
minds of many young students (and even some older people as well)
who have been well indoctrinated in an anti-evolution point of view.
Let us suppose, for the sake of argument, that a student in my
laboratory or in my classroom asks me about evolutionary vestiges
from my perspective as a scientist. The student is asking if I have
any insight as a professional scientist which extends beyond
text-book information. In addressing this student’s question, first
I would point out to the student that I am not an evolutionary
biologist. That is not my training, and I have no expertise in that
field. Rather, I have a PhD in chemistry, and have gained expertise
(evidenced by substantial numbers of peer-reviewed publications) in
the fields of biochemistry and immunology. My laboratory discovered
the apparent function of the human appendix as a result of work in
immunology, not by trying to test any premise put forth by
evolutionary biologists about the human appendix. Thus, I would
point out to this student that I am not at all qualified to say
anything original with scientific authority regarding organs or
other tissues that do or do not appear to be “left over” from
evolution. I can quote from a textbook, and I can summarize some
information that I have obtained from my collaborators (colleagues
working with me in scientific ventures) with expertise in
evolutionary biology, but that sort of information is second hand
and is not the most authoritative. If I perceived that the student
was genuinely curious and wanted to know everything I could possibly
tell them, then I could still authoritatively address the issue
beyond what is found in a standard textbook. To provide the most
authoritative answer humanly possible, I could describe one
particular area of research that has garnered much of my scientific
interest over the past 15 years. This particular area of my
professional interest is related to a type of genetic information
considered by main-stream science to be a vestige of evolution. I
will not provide any details about that genetic information here,
because a debate over that topic would be counterproductive to the
purpose of this letter. I realize that many anti-evolutionists do
not accept any genetic evidence for evolution, and detailed
discussions over this and many related scientific topics are readily
available in a variety of resources discussing the
evolution/anti-evolution controversy. Such discussion is not the
purpose of this letter. The point here is, if the student was really
interested in a truly detailed answer that was based on years of
work, I could tell him or her about that genetic evidence that I
have worked on personally. That would be a nice way for me to
explain to the student about vestiges of evolution, if I wanted to
provide that student with an expert perspective beyond the
scientific textbooks and other second hand information.
In the hypothetical situation described above, the student is going
to make a determination in his or her mind about whether or not I
can be trusted. They are going to decide if I am pushing for some
hidden agenda, or if I am simply passionate about science. They are
going to decide whether or not I’m an elitist who refuses to listen
to opposing points of view that might undermine my work, or if I’m
objectively assessing the available information to the best of my
ability. They are going to decide if I’m not really sure about
things and have been railroaded into conformity by a sheep
mentality, or if I’m really excited by paradigm shifts based on
exciting new data. To a large extent, whether that student listens
to me or is even interested in my opinion is based on my
relationship with that student. The student will decide based on his
or her interactions with me whether or not I’m credible. It won’t
matter if the student has read dozens of articles authored by people
writing outside of main-stream science who oppose my point of view.
It won’t matter if the student has read dozens of articles authored
by scientists writing within the bounds of main-stream science that
agree with my point of view. Human learning is largely relationship
dependent, and respect is something that is earned during the course
of interpersonal interaction. If they respect me as a professional,
then they will listen to my point of view and take it seriously. It
won’t matter if anti-evolution movies are produced, anti-evolution
museums are built, and anti-evolution news programs are published. A
student will determine in their own mind whether or not I’m elitist
and narrow minded and driven by a sheep mentality, or whether I have
worked incredibly hard in the lab or in the field for many years and
I have a valid point of view based on that work. The education of
that student is built on trust, and trust is built on relationships.
I’ve known a number of evolutionary biologists over the years, and
if I were to sum up the character of them, I would say that they are
very sincere, personable, and friendly people. I think that applies
to every one of them I know. The first time that I ever got a
glimpse into the heart of an evolutionary biologist in relation to
the anti-evolution/evolution debate, it really surprised me. Here is
the story as I recall it: A well spoken professor with a grey beard
was standing by a very large rock formation, pointing at some layer
in the rock that was dark. This man seemed very likeable and
friendly, like the other evolutionary biologists I know. He was
talking about how this particular dark layer was found all over the
world and indicated a large meteor strike or maybe a volcanic
eruption or some such cataclysmic event. (The exact details are not
important. The point of this is not the science, rather it is the
heart of the scientist.) Then, something in this man’s eyes changed.
He became defiant...almost angry. He said bluntly that if anybody
could ever find such-and-such a fossil (The fossil he was talking
about is not important.) below this dark layer, then EVERYTHING (He
emphasized the word “everything”, as I recall.) would change in
terms of scientific thinking about evolution. I am no expert
concerning fossils and layers of dirt or rock. I don’t even know a
great deal about the debate surrounding fossils and dirt between
some religious people and scientists. However, I could tell that (a)
somebody had been picking on this man’s theory, (b) whoever was
picking on this man’s theory had not provided him with one shred of
evidence he felt was worth anything, and (c) this man perceived that
whoever was picking on his theory was not paying attention to
anything he was saying. These conclusions were evident to me as a
scientist. I recognize the mindset, even though I am not an expert
in the subject that this man is considered to be an expert in. This
man wasn’t running from anything. He put forth an open challenge
regarding something he has spent a lifetime studying. He was
confident. That was the man’s heart. He was not acting or hiding
behind a facade. Keep in mind that these are genuine people who care
about other people, especially including their students. Given the
level of commitment by most university professors, the lifetimes of
experience many of them have, and the relationship they build with
students that I discussed above, it is probably easy to see why most
university students immersed in the sciences at a secular university
rapidly lose any traces of anti-evolutionary thinking. Such changes
in thinking are virtually unavoidable, although there are
exceptions, of course. Increased levels of indoctrination will
generally not prevent these changes, especially when the student
gets to know the heart of the scientist.
Religion conflicts with
science: Tragedy part I.
When a college student (or anybody else) becomes convinced that
evolution is a fact or becomes convinced of some other scientific
matter that possibly contradicts their religious training, the
student’s faith in God is sometimes undermined. In these situations,
science and the Kingdom of Heaven have collided in a profoundly sad
way. Such tragedies should never occur, although they have been
occurring for centuries. Christians of the past got spiritually
tripped up when they learned that the Earth was not the center of
our solar system, because they thought that finding somehow
contradicted the Bible. Christians are still getting tripped up when
they learn the main-stream scientific thinking regarding the origins
of biological diversity. For the purpose of this letter, it does not
matter if you agree with that main-stream scientific thinking or
not, it only matters that you recognize the problem that some people
are having their faith in God undermined as they learn that
thinking.
The basis of a mature faith is not advanced apologetics.
Observations I have made outside the field of science have
demonstrated clearly to me the issues that are critical for the
development of a strong faith that cannot be shaken by issues
involving ideological puzzles. Perhaps not surprisingly, my
observations are strongly supported by Scripture. I have served as
the chief administrator in church-based programs for boys in North
Carolina for more than five years, and have been a children’s church
coordinator for more than ten years. I have been a leader in a local
church-based scouting program for more than 25 years, with a total
of almost 30 years experience in children’s ministry in the church.
During those years of ministry, I have observed that we generally
give our children a great knowledge of the Bible. We teach them the
facts in that Book, and we often do a good job of it. Sadly, in many
cases, I have seen these same children fail to draw close to (to
recognize, to interact intimately with) the living God and walk
daily in His Spirit. My observations are supported by broad based
surveys conducted by the Barna Research Group (6). Many children go
through our children’s programs, then our youth programs, and then
they stumble spiritually when somebody points out some matter which
somehow disagrees with the young man or woman’s knowledge they
received as a child in church. As an example, I’ve seen whole groups
of adult Christians get tripped up when somebody pointed out the
undisputed speed of light to them, and then made the observation
that it takes much more than 6,000 years for that light to travel
from a distant galaxy to reach us on Earth. (The adults were taught
in church that the stars are about 6,000 years old.) The point is
not to start a debate about cosmology, but rather to take a look at
why some of our children have such weak faith and are so easily
stumbled. If those people had known God and walked in His Spirit,
these things that involve conflict between science and religious
teaching would not have bothered them. They would have leaned on God
rather than their own understanding, and He would have shown them
whatever they needed to know. However, they had a shallow faith
that was based on human intellect, not a faith based on the power
and anointing of the Holy Spirit. That is why they stumbled. That is
why many of our young people are stumbling spiritually when they
leave home today. They are extremely susceptible to disillusionment
when confronted with issues that contradict their weak,
intellect-based faith. They sometimes know the Scriptures, called
the “Graphe” (the Greek word for “Scripture”) by the New Testament
writers, but they do not know or even recognize God’s Voice,
described as the “Theos Rhema” (Greek words meaning “Word, Voice, or
Speech of God”) by the New Testament writers. They do not know God’s
Love and Power in their life, and they do not have a strong shield
of faith that comes from interacting with the living God (Romans
10:17). (7) Despite the fact that Scripture makes the importance of
the Theos Rhema in every day life very clear (Matthew 4:4), and
despite the fact that many prominent Christian teachers have written
excellent books about the importance of knowing the Theos Rhema, and
the way in which we can know this Rhema (8), much of the organized
church has abandoned The Voice of God in favor of an intellectual
study of Christian doctrine and apologetics.
My knowledge of God does not depend on the speed of light, the age
of the universe, finding a use for everything in the human body, or
any other scientific information. I know by faith that, to the
Almighty God who exists outside of time, ten billion years is no
more daunting than one fraction of a second. My knowledge of God, my
faith, comes from my personal relationship with Him. It comes from
being led daily by His Spirit and not by my own intellect, emotions,
or desires. Scientific experiments or observations may point toward
or away from particular religious beliefs, doctrine or dogma, but
they will never show the way to the living God. Spiritual
understanding is only obtained through God Himself, not through
human endeavor (1 Corinthians 2:14). I do not deny that some number
of people have become convinced that Jesus is the Christ because of
some sort of scientific evidence. However, based on an intellectual
assessment of whether God makes sense from the perspective of modern
science, many more people have become convinced the Jesus is not the
Christ compared to the number that have become convinced that Jesus
is the Christ. After all, even if the men closest to Jesus were so
convinced that He had risen from the dead that they gave up their
lives for that belief, modern medicine still says that recovery from
death after three days is not possible. This thinking is consistent
with Scripture that says the things of God are foolishness to the
learned and educated of this world (1st Corinthians 1:21, 23; 1st
Corinthians 2:14). Scripture never said that the things of God will
suddenly start to make sense if the learned and educated of this
world analyze the data correctly. More importantly, just believing
that Jesus is Christ does not mean that somebody has realized that
they must lay down their life and follow Christ (Luke 14:33; James
2:14-26), which is to live a life guided by His Holy Spirit (John
16:5-15; Romans 8:14). Scripture is clear that what we do in
obedience to God, not what we believe intellectually, will determine
salvation (See for example, Matthew, chapter 25 and Revelation
20:13.), and it is evident from history that the human intellect is
not sufficient for determining what to do in terms of religious
practice (9). Certainly what we believe intellectually can have a
profound effect on what we do, but it is the Holy Spirit, not our
own intellects, that will guide us into all Truth (John 16:13).
Finally, to show somebody the way to Christ, it makes sense and is
consistent with Scripture that the life we lead which bears the
supernatural fruits of the Spirit of God (Galatians 5:22-25),
including unconditional love (John 13:35), will be much more
effective at showing somebody the way to God than any argument we
may or may not win regarding some point about the origins of the
universe or of life on this planet.
Facilitating the transformation from childhood to men and women
of God.
Some would argue that we must do a better job of indoctrinating our
children during their formative years, and that will help protect
them from falling away from God when they get older. I disagree
completely, based on what I’ve observed (10). The most critical
issue is not indoctrination, but it is whether or not the child sees
the parents living by faith, walking out a life led by the Spirit of
God. If the child sees the parents bear the fruits of the Spirit in
a supernatural way, loving their enemies, having joy and peace in
the face of life’s storms, then the child will be well positioned to
survive spiritually. If the child sees the parents live a life
driven by anxiety, materialism, anger, or anything else other than
the Holy Spirit, then the child will not be prepared well to survive
spiritually. The child will pick up whatever form of religion the
parents have. For our children’s spiritual survival, they must
learn to walk in the power and anointing of God’s Spirit, and
children learn the most by watching their parents. It is what the
parent does, not what the parent says, that is important for the
child’s spiritual growth. Most importantly for this present
discussion, if a child’s faith is dependent on intellectual
instruction that we give them, many of them will fall to
spiritually-dead religious practices or an absence of faith
altogether, no matter how good our religious instruction may be.
History (9) and current statistics (6) both prove this point that I
have seen play out in front of my eyes over and over again during
the past 30 years. Any child who does not learn to walk in God’s
Spirit will be in great danger when they are exposed to this world.
When they are walking in the power and anointing of God’s Spirit,
then they are ready. Then they have the Holy Spirit, and do not need
anybody else to teach them (1 John 2:27).
What about the Bible: what should we teach our children?
The Bible contains a God-inspired description of the preparation of
the Garden of Eden, the section of this planet that mankind was
initially given charge of. It describes the first man, who we call
Adam and who was made without sin and death and who communed with
God, and the Bible describes a bad choice made by that man, bringing
sin and death to mankind and separating mankind from God. The Bible
also describes another man, Jesus Christ, who made the right choices
and paid the price for the sin of mankind, making a way for us to
have communion with God by His Holy Spirit if we choose to lay down
our life and take up that communion. Yes, I believe that the Bible
describes God’s relationship to humankind, and I teach those things
to the children entrusted to my care. Those are the vital things our
children need to know. More importantly, I point children to the
living God, and I tell them that it is not what they know, but Who
they know, that is most important (10). None of those vital issues
our children need to know, including the role of the Garden of Eden
in human history, the death and resurrection of Christ, or the
nature of a relationship with God, are the subject of scientific
inquiry, and I doubt they ever will be. Anything I know about those
things comes from God, and has nothing to do with the intellectual
pursuit of science.
Some anti-evolutionists may read the previous paragraph and be
disappointed or even angry that I don’t take a stand about exactly
how God formed Adam from the dust of the earth or exactly how all
life on this planet originated. As a scientist, I have published
nothing in this field and therefore it is completely impossible for
me to add anything valid to what the scientific experts say. As a
Christian, I should be silent except for the message that God gives
me to deliver by His Holy Spirit, and the message here has nothing
to do with those issues. Rather, the message has to do with why many
church-raised children in the next generation are falling away from
God, and why many in our generation do not walk in His Spirit, but
rather in the flesh. God is not concerned with our science nearly so
much as He is concerned with our heart.
The basis of mature faith is a relationship with God
God is calling us to guard against an intellect-based Christianity
in our own hearts. If we have intellect-based Christianity, our
children will obtain it. This form of Christianity is not really
Christianity at all, and, like religious practice based on human
emotion, results in a shallow faith that is weak and unstable.
Intellect-based Christianity is very, very deeply engrained in our
Christian culture, although the Apostle Paul warns us explicitly
about this trap in the second chapter of his first letter to the
church at Corinth (1 Corinthians 2: 1-5), and numerous scriptures
indicate that true faith is independent of human understanding.
(e.g. Proverbs 3:5, Proverbs 28:26, 2 Corinthians 10:5, Isaiah 55:8,
All great Bible heroes are examples of this principle.) There are
many forces at work in our culture that effectively destroy and
dismantle intellect-based Christianity. The scientific education I
have been describing in this letter is one of those forces. These
forces, characteristic of the “post-modern” culture, have no effect
on true Christianity that is based on a relationship with God
through His Holy Spirit and not on human intellect or human emotion.
It is only when our faith and our children’s faith is based on the
power and anointing of the Holy Spirit, that our intellect and
emotions and our children’s intellect and emotions can come into
line with God’s Word and Will. It is a matter of having a mature
faith that comes from hearing and obeying the “Theos Rhema”. It is
this Rhema that is known as the Shepherd’s Voice or the Voice of our
Guide in this life, the Holy Spirit. It is this Rhema that is our
daily bread for spiritual nourishment. Without an awareness of this
Rhema, we are left with a blind faith and can never begin to know
our Creator as absolute Ruler and omnipotent King and, at the same
time, as intimate friend, whose unconditional love for us is
stronger, deeper, and greater than any human mind can comprehend.
Religion conflicts with science: Tragedy part II.
The primary point of this letter so far is that any faith that is
not based on a firm relationship with the living God is very weak,
and may be undermined if some of the doctrine upon which that faith
is founded is undermined. I’ve also tried to explain why many people
abandon anti-evolution thinking for the thinking of main-stream
science. With these two points in mind, one can see how science
education might lead some to lose their faith in God. This is the
first tragedy. The second tragedy is no less sad. It is this tragedy
that I will consider now, and a return to the function of the human
appendix will be helpful for this consideration.
Many Christians might see God’s hand in the “ideal design” of the
appendix, and scoff at those which see the hand of evolution as
acknowledged by main-stream science. Sadly, such views often leave
those who acknowledge main-stream science with the impression that
some Christians ignore obvious natural causes in favor of blind
faith or even superstition (9). The intellectual credibility of
those Christians in the view of the person accepting main-stream
science can be severely damaged. St. Augustine of Hippo made this
point beautifully 1600 years ago:
“Usually, even a non-Christian knows something about the earth, the heavens, and the other elements of this world, about the motion and orbit of the stars and even their size and relative positions, about the predictable eclipses of the sun and moon, the cycles of the years and the seasons, about the kinds of animals, shrubs, stones, and so forth, and this knowledge he hold to as being certain from reason and experience. Now, it is a disgraceful and dangerous thing for an infidel to hear a Christian, presumably giving the meaning of Holy Scripture, talking nonsense on these topics; and we should take all means to prevent such an embarrassing situation, in which people show up vast ignorance in a Christian and laugh it to scorn. The shame is not so much that an ignorant individual is derided, but that people outside the household of faith think our sacred writers held such opinions, and, to the great loss of those for whose salvation we toil, the writers of our Scripture are criticized and rejected as unlearned men. If they find a Christian mistaken in a field which they themselves know well and hear him maintaining his foolish opinions about our books, how are they going to believe those books in matters concerning the resurrection of the dead, the hope of eternal life, and the kingdom of heaven, when they think their pages are full of falsehoods and on facts which they themselves have learnt from experience and the light of reason?” St Augustine, in “The Literal Meaning of Genesis“. The translation is by J. H. Taylor in Ancient Christian Writers, Newman Press, 1982, volume 41.
Notice that this loss of credibility that St. Augustine is talking
about does not depend on whether the anti-evolutionist is absolutely
correct in his or her thinking or not. It certainly does not depend
on if the anti-evolutionist thinks he or she is correct. It only
depends on whether the person who needs to hear about the
resurrection of Christ thinks that the anti-evolutionist is being
ridiculous about matters of the physical universe. Such loss of
credibility can greatly diminish or even destroy completely any
potential for the Christian to effectively convey matters of
spiritual significance to the person who accepts main-stream
science. Indeed, the very idea of a relationship with the living God
must seem like a grand delusion to skeptics who view Christians as
being deceived by their religion regarding matters of obvious
scientific truth. Remember that the majority of the American people
who do not know God are probably accepting of main-stream science,
and this situation certainly applies to many other industrialized
countries. This tragedy, I firmly believe, is not the will of the
living God. If we walk in the Spirit of the living God and avoid
debates and conflicts that He has not ordained, the fruits of the
Spirit that are independent of circumstances, including peace,
unconditional love, and joy, will surface in our lives, and those
fruits will not drive people away from Christ, but will draw people
to Him.
I once had a conversation with a minister (professional clergy) who
was responsible for the religious messages broadcast by a well-known
and widely syndicated Christian music radio program. When I
explained to this minister that the brief anti-evolution
advertisements he was periodically inserting between Christian songs
would offend a huge percentage of the population, and those people
who were offended may never hear the important parts of his radio
broadcast because of that offense, he seemed rather surprised. He
told me that I was the first to ever complain. He said that the
anti-evolution advertisements were set to run for a little longer,
and that he would re-consider the matter when it came time for new
advertisements. It turns out that the new advertisements, which I
heard later, not only pushed an anti-evolution viewpoint, but
referred to the main-stream scientific community as “elitist”. This
minister’s response told me that he was predominantly preaching to
his own choir, and he wasn’t paying much attention to the people who
really needed to hear the Gospel of Christ. I work with many that
would benefit greatly from the Gospel of Christ, and I can tell you
that anti-evolution advertisements will alienate many of them in the
sense that they will think that whoever is running the programming
for the Christian radio station is a superstitious idiot. I am sure
that calling them elitists doesn’t help them see the love of Christ
either. One other fact is interesting in this particular case: for a
radio program that reaches a few million people every day in a
country where more than half are converts to Darwinism, I was the
first to ever ask this minister why he was potentially offending
over half the population if his main objective was to reach the lost
for Christ. Nobody else had ever bothered to deliver St. Augustine’s
message to him. Is this because we got so focused on particular
interpretations of the first two chapters in Genesis that we forgot
what the rest of the Book was telling us that we need to be doing?
Have we become completely ensnared in the trap of fruitless debate
warned of by the Apostle Paul in 1st Timothy 1:3-7? Only Christ can
effectively repair any tragedies of faith that have been brought
about by fruitless debate. Thus, we must point others to Christ, not
to additional debates regarding the origins of species on planet
Earth. Christ is more than able to repair the damage, but our eyes
must be singularly on Him, and not the stormy debate surrounding us.
It is through faith in Him, not faith in any particular doctrine of
creation, that we are able to walk in the power and anointing of the
Holy Spirit.
Keep in mind the Apostle Paul's approach when he reached out to
people who did not know Christ. The Apostle Paul looked for common
ground rather than zeroing in on disagreement even in matters of
worship of gods other than the God of the Bible (Acts 17:22-23).
Further, early Christians under Paul's authority did not even attack
the idea that "the city of the Ephesians is temple guardian of the
great goddess Diana, and of the image which fell down from Zeus"
(Acts 19:35, NKJV). In addition, they didn't blaspheme the name of
the goddess Diana (Acts 19:37). They preached Christ’s love, but
they did not attack Diana’s deity. If Paul was so willing to
overlook belief in foreign gods in order to reach people for Christ,
then it should be no great difficulty for Christians of today to
overlook theories of science in order to reach people for Christ.
Paul knew that if you walk into somebody's house and threaten their
most prized possession, they aren't going to listen to you
concerning matters of eternal importance. They are going to want you
out of their house before you cause more trouble. This is the
reaction of most intelligent people. On the other hand, if you
leave their prized possession alone long enough to help them find
Christ, then you can be confident that they will have the ability to
correctly decide for themselves the value of that possession you
wanted to destroy. If you are not able to show them about Christ,
the right thing to do is to leave their prized possession alone so
that you don't build a huge barrier that will prevent them from
hearing from the next Christian that comes across their path.
Tragedy part I and Tragedy part II come together, making matters
worse.
Some anti-evolutionists are very aware of the second tragedy, that
some non-believers will be offended by their beliefs, but they are
willing to accept the losses because they are “taking a stand for
education”. In essence, they are willing to sacrifice the potential
good of many for the potential good of their children. This might
seem reasonable since children have a lot more potential than
adults. Further, it is normal for parents to be willing to sacrifice
for their children. However, the problem with this approach in this
particular case is that, casualties from part I of the tragedy end
up getting swept up in part II of the tragedy. For example, a young
lady who begins to question her belief in God as a result of some
things she has observed in a science class (Tragedy part I), may
quickly fall into a state of complete disdain for all religious
teachings in general (Tragedy, part II). Keep in mind that, at the
same time the science professor (or friends, or the media) is asking
this young lady about some aspect of biological diversity, a
philosophy professor (or her friends, or the media) might also be
asking her about the rationality of other elements of her theology.
Basically, if this young lady knows God personally, she will be more
than fine. She will be a light in a dark world. If she only has
doctrine and head knowledge, any anti-evolution doctrine she carries
with her may potentially feed into a bad situation, making the bad
situation even worse.
Science and religion: why the conflict?
Science is a man-made system for evaluating our physical universe.
Science can help make our lives more enjoyable and healthy, and it
certainly stimulates the human intellect. Although I am passionate
about science, science is worthless in terms of providing answers
related to the spiritual universe. Our understanding of that
spiritual universe depends on our relationship with the living God
through the power and anointing of His Holy Spirit. If we depend on
science or our own intellect for spiritual answers, we are searching
for water in a can of oil, and trying to fly using a bicycle. We and
our children will die of thirst unless we search for water in the
right place, and we will never get off the ground until we find the
right means of transportation. Certainly oil and bicycles can be
very useful for many purposes, but oil can’t quench our thirst and
bicycles don’t enable us to fly. Neither can science or intellect
satisfy our spiritual needs that can only be met by communion with
the living God.
The Kingdom of Heaven is not affected by the intellectual
battlefields of words over the origins of species any more than it
was affected by the military battlefields for the occupation of
Jerusalem during the crusades, regardless of how intensely
Christians might be engaged in the effort. The Kingdom of Heaven is
affected by the hearts of people who decide that they will not live
a life after their own desires, but rather that they will follow
Christ and live a life directed by the Holy Spirit of the living
God. If we really understood the meaning behind Christ’s claim that
His Kingdom was not of this world, there would be no need for this
letter. Just as Christ assured Pilate that He had no intentions of
setting up an Earthly throne that would compete with the Roman’s
military rule, so should the church be able to tell the scientific
community that they have no intentions of setting up an organization
of any type to compete with science’s intellectual quest.
The real spiritual conflict
For some reading this letter, I know it will be refreshing, and I
bless our Lord from which all such refreshing comes. For others
reading this, the letter will be offensive and it will not help you
in your goals to which you are committed. This letter isn’t for you,
at least not now. My prayer for us is that we will walk together in
the perfect harmony and unity of Christ’s unconditional love,
despite disagreement, as Scripture commands. For the final group,
the ones who find this letter unsettling or even disturbing, I am
most interested in writing to you. Many of you are not particularly
concerned with the exact details that we teach our children, as long
as we teach them whatever it takes so that they stay with God and
don’t get trapped in a lifestyle outside the Body of Christ. The
whole business of a post-modern culture is deeply concerning to you,
and you don’t care what it takes, you just need to know what to do
to give our kids the best chance of staying with God. For you, I am
going to say the bottom line plainly: Science education has nothing
to do with the spiritual battle you are in. You are not wrestling
against scientists in your battle. They are made of flesh and blood.
You are wrestling against something else. Forget about science
education. The whole business of science education is only a
distraction from the real battle. You need to draw close to God so
that He can give you guidance (as promised in Scripture; See John
16:13.) and unconditional Peace in the face of life’s storms. This
is the same guidance and the same peace that our children will need
when they face a post-modern culture. You need it first before you
can show a child. With this in mind, I again recommend Joy Dawson’s
book (See note # 8 at the bottom of this letter.) and maybe Tim
Enloe’s book (The title of that book is “Want More?”) if you don’t
know God’s Voice well enough to have a peace that passes
understanding in the face of life’s storms. If, on the other hand,
you feel like your kids just aren’t acquiring the same relationship
with God that you have, and this is driving you up the wall, I
helped compile a lot of very good information about helping your
child draw close to God (See note # 10 at the bottom of this
letter.), and that book is an eye-opener for many people. The
take-home lessons from that book are: (A) pure Christianity is MUCH
easier to transfer to a child than is a mixed religion such as part
Christianity, part materialism, and (B) The process of
transformation from parent-led child to Spirit-led adult should be
complete by the ripe-old age of 13 years. Waiting longer than that
is much harder on everybody concerned, whereas completing the task
on schedule makes child-rearing astonishingly easier than one might
think possible. Yes, astonishingly. That is a wonderful word that
describes the situation perfectly.
I wish you His joy and grace as you consider the contents of this
letter, and I pray that God will astonish you in the most wonderful
of ways.
God be with you,
William (Bill) Parker, PhD
Acknowledgements: The author thanks Zoie Holzkencht and
Susanne Meza-Keuthen for careful and critical proofreading of the
manuscript, and thanks Gina Gomperts and George Ayer for their
prayers specifically for this project. Many thanks also to Kevin
Sluder for his thoughtful insights and for providing the
server space to post this letter on the web.
Thanks also to Greg Neyman for his kind comments
and his willingness to post this letter on the OEM website.
Notes:
1. R. B. Bollinger, A. S. Barbas, E. L. Bush, S. S. Lin and W.
Parker. Biofilms in the large bowel suggest an apparent function of
the human vermiform appendix. Journal of Theoretical Biology 249:
826-831 (2007).
2. M. L. Everett, D. Palestrant, S. E. Miller, R. B. Bollinger and
W. Parker. Immune exclusion and immune inclusion: a new model of
host-bacterial interactions in the gut. Clinical and Applied
Immunology Reviews 5: 321-332 (2004); J. L. Sonnenburg, L. T.
Angenent and J. I. Gordon. Getting a grip on things: how do
communities of bacterial symbionts become established in our
intestine? Nature Immunology 5: 569-73 (2004).
3. R. B. Bollinger, A. S. Barbas, E. L. Bush, S. S. Lin and W.
Parker. Biofilms in the normal human large bowel: fact rather than
fiction. Gut 56: 1481-1482 (2007); D. Palestrant, Z. E. Holzknecht,
B. H. Collins, S. E. Miller, W. Parker and R. R. Bollinger.
Microbial biofilms in the gut: visualization by electron microscopy
and by acridine orange staining. Ultrastructural Pathology 28: 23-27
(2004).
4. Statistics on the cause of death in developed countries collected
by the World Health Organization in 2001 show that acute diarrhea is
the fourth leading cause of disease-related death in developing
countries. (Data summarized by the Bill and Melinda Gates
Foundation) Two of the other leading causes of death are expected
to have exerted limited or no selection pressure on humans in the
past because one (HIV-AIDS) is very recent and another (ischaemic
heart disease) primarily affects people in their post-reproductive
years. Thus, acute diarrhea may have been one of the primary
disease-related selection pressures on the human population in the
past.
5. D. J. Barker, J. A. Morris, S. J. Simmonds and R. H. Oliver.
Appendicitis epidemic following introduction of piped water to
Anglesey. Journal of Epidemiology & Community Health 42: 144-8
(1988); D. J. Barker, C. Osmond, J. Golding and M. E. Wadsworth.
Acute appendicitis and bathrooms in three samples of British
children. British Medical Journal Clinical Research Ed 296: 956-8
(1988); D. J. Barker and J. Morris. Acute appendicitis, bathrooms,
and diet in Britain and Ireland. British Medical Journal Clinical
Research Ed 296: 953-5 (1988).
6. G. Barna "Transforming Children into Spiritual Champions". Gospel
Light, Ventura, CA (1996)
7. Scripture references are provided throughout this article to
demonstrate that the author’s experience with God is consistent with
Scripture, not as stand-alone evidence for any particular issue with
which the author has no experience. Logical exceptions to this rule
are the Scriptures pertaining to historical information or to
judgment day. It is not that the author ignores Scripture, but
rather that the author believes that only the Holy Spirit, not our
own intellects, can reveal the meaning of Scripture to us.
8. Several Excellent books dealing with knowing the Theos Rhema, the
Voice of the Holy Spirit, are as follows: “Is that really you,
God?”, by Loren Cunningham; “Forever Ruined for the Ordinary”, by
Joy Dawson; “Developing a Conversational Relationship with God”, by
Dallas Willard; “Hearing God’s Voice”, by Henry and Richard Blackaby;
“How to Hear from God”, by Joyce Meyer; and “The Normal Christian
Life” by Watchman Nee.
9. The currently popular book entitled “god is not Great: How
Religion Poisons Everything”, by Christopher Hitchens. (Hachette
Book Group USA, New York 2007) includes an excellent description of
a rejection of God based in part on errors that
intellectually-driven Christians have made throughout history. Among
the author’s many grievances with religion is the typical and rather
convincing post-modern viewpoint that intellect-based Christianity
has proven not only worthless, but actually harmful. The book is
anything but faith-building and is not recommended reading for
anybody seeking God, but it does give many insights into how
Christians needlessly offend non-Christians. Most telling is the
author’s experience at the age of “about 9” that initiated his turn
from the intellect-based Christianity that the adults around him
practiced: one of his teachers credited God with something in nature
(the color of plant leaves, to be specific) that had a perfectly
natural explanation.
10. W. Parker and S. Meza-Keuthen "Handbook for parents and church
workers: facilitating the transformation from childhood to men and
women of God." Authorhouse, Bloomington, IN (2007). Proceeds go to
help TrueLife church in Briar Creek, North Carolina.
(www.mytruelife.org)