Can one believe in evolution and God? Some people of  faith and some scientists agree: "No." They are wrong. The theory of evolution  says that organisms are related by descent from common ancestors. Over time,  organisms change and diversify as they adapt to different environments. Species  that share a recent common ancestor are more similar to each other than species  whose last common ancestor is more remote. Thus, humans and chimpanzees are, in  configuration and genetic make-up, more similar to each other than they are to  baboons, elephants or kangaroos.
If humans came about by evolution, then the Bible isn't wrong  when it says that humans were created in the image of God.
Science has many other theories besides evolution. The  heliocentric theory says that the earth revolves around the sun rather than vice  versa. The atomic theory says that all matter is made up of atoms. And astronomy  teaches us that the galaxies expand in space and that stars and planets form  over time. Scientists agree that the evolutionary origin of plants and animals  is a scientific conclusion beyond reasonable doubt. They place it beside such  established notions as the roundness of the earth, its revolution around the sun  and the atomic composition of matter. That evolution has occurred is, in  ordinary language, a fact, not just a theory.
Many Biblical scholars have rejected a literal interpretation  of the Bible as untenable because it contains mutually incompatible statements,  if they are taken as scientific. The beginning of Genesis presents two different  creation stories. Extending through chapter one and the first verses of chapter  two is the six-day narrative, in which God creates human beings — both "male and  female" — in His own image on the sixth day, after creating light, earth,  firmament, fish, fowl and cattle.
In Genesis 2:4, a different narrative starts: God first creates  a male human, then plants a garden and creates the animals and only then  proceeds to take a rib from the man to make a woman. Which one of the two  narratives is correct and which one is in error? Neither contradicts the other,  if we understand the two narratives as conveying the same message, that the  world was created by God and that humans are His creatures.
There are numerous inconsistencies and contradictions in the  Bible. For example, in the description of the return from Egypt to the promised  land by the chosen people of Israel, not to mention erroneous factual statements  about the sun circling the earth and the like. Is the Bible "wrong"?
Biblical scholars hold that the Bible is inerrant regarding  religious truth, not in matters that are of no significance to salvation. St  Augustine, one of the greatest Christian authors of all time, wrote: "In the  matter of the shape of heaven, the sacred writers did not wish to teach men  facts that could be of no avail to their salvation."
He is saying that Genesis is not a book of astronomy. He also  noted that in Genesis's narrative of creation, God created light on the first  day but did not create the sun until the fourth day, concluding that "light" and  "days" in Genesis made no literal sense. The Bible is about religion. It isn't  the purpose of its authors to settle scientific questions.
Other religious scholars and authorities have made similar  statements. In 1981, Pope John Paul II asserted that the Bible "speaks to us of  the origins of the universe and its make-up, not in order to provide us with a  scientific treatise but in order to state the correct relationships of man with  God and with the universe. Sacred Scripture wishes simply to declare that the  world was created by God. Any other teaching about the origin and make-up of the  universe is alien to the intentions of the Bible, which does not wish to teach  how heaven was made but how one goes to heaven."
If evolution is true, it does not follow that humans were not  created by God. Science and faith speak about different aspects of reality. An  individual human develops from a single cell in the mother's womb, is born,  grows into an adult and eventually dies. A person of faith can accept these  natural processes and still believe a human to be a creature of God.
The scholarly Protestant theologian A. H. Strong wrote in 1885:  "We grant the principle of evolution, but we regard it as only the method of  divine intelligence." He explained that the brutish ancestry of humans was not  incompatible with their excelling status as creatures in the image of God. Yes,  one can believe in both evolution and God. Evolution is a well-confirmed  scientific theory. Christians and other people of faith need not see evolution  as a threat to their beliefs. Like Strong, many theologians see evolution as the  process by which God creates the wonderful diversity of plants, animals and  other living beings.
Science and religious beliefs need not be in contradiction  because science and religion concern different matters. Science concerns the  processes that account for the natural world: the composition of matter, the  expansion of the galaxies and the origin and diversity of organisms. Religion  concerns the proper relation of people to their creator and to each other, the  meaning and purpose of human life and of the world and how to live a virtuous  life.
Science and religion can be, for people of faith, mutually  motivating and inspiring. Science may inspire religious beliefs and religious  behaviour, as we respond with awe to the immensity of the universe, the wondrous  diversity of organisms, and the marvels of the human brain and the human  mind.
Religion promotes reverence for the creation, for humankind as  well as the environment. Religion may be a motivating force and source of  inspiration for scientific research and may move scientists to investigate the  marvellous world of the creation and to solve the puzzles with which it  confronts us.
The natural world abounds in catastrophic disasters,  imperfections, dysfunctions, suffering and cruelty: tsunamis bring destruction  and death; volcanic eruptions erased Pompeii and Herculaneum, killing all their  citizens; and floods and droughts bring ruin to farmers.
The human jaw is poorly designed, so that the wisdom teeth need  to be extracted and the other teeth benefit from being straightened; lions  devour their prey; malaria parasites kill millions of humans every year and make  500 million sick.
The scientific revolution, ushered in by Copernicus, Galileo  and Newton, provided a natural explanation of the calamities of the physical  world: tsunamis, earthquakes and volcanic eruptions occur as a result of natural  processes. They need not be attributed to specific actions of the Creator  directed to punish some humans and reward others.
Similarly, the theory of evolution, ushered in by Darwin's  revolution, accounts for the imperfections, dysfunctions and cruelties of the  living world. They are a consequence of the clumsy ways of the evolutionary  process.
Evolution is not the enemy of religion but, rather, it can be  its friend, because it accounts for disease, death, and the dysfunctions and  cruelties of living organisms as the result of natural processes, not as the  specific design of God. The God of revelation and of faith is a God of love and  mercy, and of wisdom.
Darwin's theory of evolution is a gift to science — and to  religion as well.

 
 
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