A story connecting hunger, happiness, and evolution appeared in
Live Science recently. “Contrary to the
moans of many dieters, being hungry may make you happy. Or, at least, it can be
a serious motivator whose evolutionary intent was to help you find dinner
instead of becoming dinner. When our bodies notice we need more calories, levels
of a hormone called ghrelin increase. Ghrelin is known to spur hunger, but new
research suggests this may be a side effect of its primary job as a
stress-buster.
Stories like this afford Christians an opportunity to
dialogue at a worldview level with others. That opportunity allows believers to
create a cultural milieu where biblical explanations for things are plausible.
In such a context, a pathway for the gospel may be generated.
For example, attributing the increased production of ghrelin
in our bodies to evolutionary modification for the sake of avoiding becoming
some other animal’s dinner is owing to the presuppositions of an evolutionary
worldview. There is no evidence to support such a notion. The scientists are
simply looking at increased levels of ghrelin and explaining it by their
worldview. Christians can certainly say the increase of ghrelin is owing to God
creating our bodies to do such a thing under certain circumstances. In so
doing, we are offering an explanation based upon our worldview. Each of us is
interpreting what we see through our presuppositions.
The point is that we all have presuppositions and interpret
reality through them. The question then becomes, which presuppositions offer
better explanations for our experience or all of reality? In the end, the
Christian worldview does that. When people question their own presuppositions
and begin to listen to the Christian position, a door is opened for the gospel
to be given.
Why
would anyone want to explain hunger by a theory that does not explain what it claims to explain? For example, scientists tell us that it is impossible for something to come from nothing. Yet, that is what evolution asserts as an explanation for the origin of the universe. Evolution does not explain the origin of the universe as the worldview in which it is grounded, naturalism, rejects the possibility of something coming from nothing. There is no explanation of the origin of the universe on a naturalistic worldview. That worldview is fundamentally flawed.
On the other hand, the Christian worldview asserts that God exists outside of time and space and created the universe out of nothing. That assertion makes since on the Christian worldview and is a philosophically justifiable claim. Christianity explains what it claims to explain and therefore makes sense.
Does it not make sense, then, that hunger is a product of the fall of man into sin and the reality that without food we will die? At the same time, does not the satisfying nature and variety of food put God's multi-faceted glory and grace on display? Does not food remind us of our need for a Savior and point us to the Savior at the same time? That is indeed an open door for speaking the gospel.
Sign up free for “The
Dean’s List,” a weekly news and Christian worldview e-letter highlighting
relevant news stories affecting Christians. An editorial by Dr. Dean is
included as well as his comments on the highlighted stories. The e-letter is
sponsored by "Calling for Truth," a live, call-in radio program
hosted by Dr. Dean. Simply e-mail us at pauldeanjr@juno.com
to receive your first issue this week.
To listen live to "Calling for Truth" each
M-W-F from 1:00 pm to 2:00 pm Eastern Time, go to www.callingfortruth.org
and click on the "Listen Live" button. You may listen to archived
shows as well. They are uploaded each day after the broadcast.