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In Britain, Still Room to Doubt Darwin

In Britain, Still Room to Doubt Darwin

Chuck Colson

BreakPoint


March 2, 2009

Judging by church attendance, it seems the British have lost their religion. Although 71 percent of Brits identify themselves as Christians, only 10 percent go to church weekly. Only one in four attends church even once a year.

But something funny is going on among Her Majesty’s citizenry. I’ve just read an astonishing article by Associated Press writer Raphael Satter. It’s titled “UK marks Darwin’s 200th birthday with pride [and] humor.”

Satter described the 600 parties and events organized worldwide in Darwin’s honor on his birthday this month. Some were nuttier than others. For one, a zoo in Bristol offered free entry to anyone wearing a beard—real or fake. Visitors to London’s Natural History Museum were invited to try some pea soup made from Mrs. Darwin’s recipe.

As Satter noted, Charles Darwin, whose influence is deeply felt almost 130 years after his death, “enjoys a special place of pride in Britain.” At least, he does among the elite.

But Satter—clearly a good reporter—thought to examine just how influential Darwin is among rank-and-file Brits. What he found was that, according to a recent poll commissioned by the think tank Theos, “only 37 percent of people in the UK believe that Darwin’s theory of evolution is ‘beyond reasonable doubt.’” Moreover, 51 percent “say that Intelligent Design is either definitely or probably true.”

In other words, the majority of British public rejects Darwinism. And this from a population that, for the most part, no longer darkens the doors of their churches.

We really should not be surprised. The truth is that humans bear the imago Dei—we are made in the image of God and are designed to long for Him.

By contrast, Darwinism supposes an entirely naturalistic worldview or religion. For many people, Darwinian evolution provides answers to the fundamental worldview questions: Where did I come from? Why am I here? Where am I going? Does life have any meaning and purpose? Darwinism’s answers are clear: We came from chance collisions of atoms; there is no purpose to life, no life after death, no objective moral law.

This is why the issue of Darwinism versus intelligent design continues to be such a fierce battleground. The debate is not just about fossils or genetic mutations. Our theory of origins determines our identity, our values, our sense of meaning.

And this is why—after a century and a half of having Darwinian evolution rammed down their throats by their professors and the media—people still say they believe in God, and that He created heaven and earth. This is one of those cases where intuitive human understanding and reason itself are more reliable than scientific theory.

And our non-churchgoing friends in Britain are proof that scientific theory cannot ultimately eradicate what’s written on the human heart. That’s something worth celebrating as we teach our nearer neighbors about the Christian worldview, and how well—unlike Darwinism—it answers the basic questions, not only of our origins, but of life and meaning.


Chuck Colson’s daily BreakPoint commentary airs each weekday on more than one thousand outlets with an estimated listening audience of one million people. BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. 

Most Recent User Comments
digitalice
3/2/2009 9:52 PM

Four out of five Britons repudiate creationism

• Belief map shows support for Darwin's theories
• God and evolution can be compatible, says thinktank

Interactive: Belief map of the UK
Comments (255)

* Ian Sample, science correspondent
* The Guardian, Monday 2 March 2009
* Article history

The east of England may be the most godless region of the UK, according to a "belief map" published by a theology thinktank today. Almost half of adults there believe the theory of evolution makes God obsolete, and more than 80% disagree with creationism and intelligent design, which propose that humans were created by God in the past 10,000 years, and that life owes its complexity to divine intervention.

The map was drawn up by the thinktank Theos following a survey of 2,060 people across the country who were chosen to be representative of the adult population.

The survey, which was conducted to mark the 200th anniversary of Charles Darwin's birth, found that nearly half of the
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