S
Servant222
Guest
As a Christian who is also a scientist, I am often asked whether I believe in evolution.
My first response is always: how do you define "evolution"?
If evolution refers to changes that occur in life forms, then the answer is "yes"- animal breeding, changes that we see in viruses, etc. all demonstrate evolution. But the question is, how far does that "evolution" go- for example, can new species be produced through evolution? An even more basic question to ask an evolutionary biologist is: how did life begin; how was that first living organism produced?
In order for life to begin, an evolutionary biologist needs to believe two things: that through some accident, inorganic material was given the breath of life AND that at exactly the same instant, that new life was given the ability to reproduce itself.
For me, thinking as a scientist, it is simply impossible for those two "accidents" to happen without divine guidance, without the direction of a divine Creator.
My first response is always: how do you define "evolution"?
If evolution refers to changes that occur in life forms, then the answer is "yes"- animal breeding, changes that we see in viruses, etc. all demonstrate evolution. But the question is, how far does that "evolution" go- for example, can new species be produced through evolution? An even more basic question to ask an evolutionary biologist is: how did life begin; how was that first living organism produced?
In order for life to begin, an evolutionary biologist needs to believe two things: that through some accident, inorganic material was given the breath of life AND that at exactly the same instant, that new life was given the ability to reproduce itself.
For me, thinking as a scientist, it is simply impossible for those two "accidents" to happen without divine guidance, without the direction of a divine Creator.