98cwitr said:
I have re-read most of this thread and I would like to chime in on the 'good scientist'/'bad scientist' debate.
Did it every occur to anyone that maybe the reason that there are no high position creationists in the scientific field is due to a choice they had to make. If you think about it, you are going to have to chose way before getting your PhD on which side you stand. Either you are going to accept what God is telling us in Gen. or you are going to believe the Earthly, and logical (yes, evolution is wholly logical...people who say "I didnt come from a monkey!" are just being closed minded and completely egotistical).
It all bowls down to fact vs faith...and when considering eternal damnation for not accepting the latter, then most logical persons who have an inclination of spirituality and a feeling of 'there is something bigger than me out there that is completely intangible' will choice it over what is staring them in the face.
jm2c
Well, it is also possible to use the theory of evolution in science, while ultimately rejecting it as absolute truth. For example, when I took a biology class a couple years ago, we were taught evolution (though fortunately, not once did the professor make the claim that humans evolved from other animals, we only discussed the evolution of non-humans). On the exams, there were questions about evolution. I could have written "God did it," but instead I provided the responses that the grader wanted to hear. And I do not have a bad conscience for doing so, even though I reject the theory of evolution.
Now on a larger scale, it is possible for Christian scientists to write papers on evolution, and to use the theory of evolution in their work, while believing that it is false. After all, science doesn't generally tell us very much about absolute truth. Science is a
predictive tool. Saying "God did it" is a true statement, and I think it is of the utmost importance that we recognize God's sovereignty over creation, even in science. But that statement isn't useful as a predictive tool.
I respectfully propose a different reason as to why most scientists believe in evolution. A poll in
Nature (a prestigious scientific journal) a few years ago showed that the vast majority of scientists are either atheists or agnostics. If I recall correctly, only 7% of scientists actually believe in a creator God. And of that 7%, I am left to wonder how many of them are Christians who believe in God's Incarnate Word. At my university, I estimate that there are around 100 fellow physics majors. I know many of them, and to my knowledge, precisely one person other than myself is an evangelical Christian.
Why is this? It seems to me that the culture of the scientific community in modern times is rather atheistic. One graduate student who works in my lab explained to me his "testimony" of how he became interested in physics. He explained that he was raised a Christian, but he questioned Christian doctrine constantly. This inquisitive nature led him to science. My guess is that it isn't really science's fault. Rather, he probably found
like-minded people in the scientific community.
I don't fully understand it. Even before I was a Christian, I never questioned the existence of a creator God, and in part I thank science. Before modern cosmology, people used to believe that the universe had existed eternally; this negated the need for a Creator. But of course, growing up in the 90's, I was raised on the Big Bang theory. This theory requires the universe to have a beginning. And thus, I always understood that there
must be a Beginner. Now as a Christian, I understand that the Big Bang theory is in good agreement with the Biblical claim that "In the beginning, God created the heavens and the earth." I've since taken a more rigorous course in General Relativity and Cosmology. Amazingly, science is able to explain in great detail how the universe expanded after the Big Bang. Yet even the greatest cosmologists in the physics community are unable to explain the origins of the universe. As such, they shy away from such topics.
But again, the scientific community tends to be very secular. A great testament to the doctrine of original sin is that even when the average scientist can stare the Truth in the face, he will deny it. "I don't know" is a popular way for even a Ph.D to dismiss the role of God in creation, to say nothing of Jesus Christ, who is the Voice by which the creation came into being.