Point of View
BREAKPOINT: Sticker Wars: Intelligent design foes fight evolution sticker
By CHARLES COLSON
BreakPoint
Published January 27, 2005
Last week a federal judge, egged on by the American Civil
Liberties Union (ACLU), ordered a Georgia school district to
remove stickers from biology textbooks. Why? Because, according
to the judge, a simple statement written on the stickersthat
evolution is a theory, not a factwas an unconstitutional
endorsement of religion. He held evolution as fact!
This is just the latest example of a plague of intellectual
blindness among our secular elites.
In Georgia's Cobb County, school officials added the stickers
two years ago onto the textbooks which presented evolution as an
established fact, ignoring competing ideas about life's origins.
Now, this is not just another burst of Christian-bashing. What
this ruling really represents is a blindness to realitya
mindset rampant within our culture.
According to this mindset, any challenge to Darwinism is by
definition religious. Now, imagine applying this logic to any
other area. Suppose your state passed a law against murder, and
the ACLU went to court, claiming it was an endorsement of
religion. After all, the Ten Commandments prohibit murder! Or
imagine someone suing a town over its zoning laws. The Bible
tells us to put a fence on our roof so that no one will fall off.
Are building codes, therefore, religious? If the courts
approached conflicts over other laws the way they do over
biology, we'd soon have no laws left at allexcept maybe
pooper-scooper laws, because I don't think the Bible says
anything about that.
The constitutional argument is phony. Honest observers quickly
realize that the debate here over life's origins is not one of
science versus religion, but of science versus science. Take the
work of biochemist Michael Behe, a professor at Lehigh University.
Initially, Behe accepted Darwinist teachings. But then he began
reading articles questioning evolutionary theories. He found the
arguments compelling. So he began to do research of his own.
In his book published 10 years ago, Darwin's Black Box,
he introduced a concept he calls "irreducible complexity."
He argues that complex structures like proteins cannot be
assembled piecemeal, with gradual improvement of function.
Instead, like a mousetrap, all the partscatch, spring,
hammer, and so forthmust be assembled simultaneously, or
the protein doesn't work.
Soon after the book was published, its thesis was challenged
by the leading expert in America on cell structure, Dr. Russell
Doolittle at the University of California. He cited a scientific
study supposedly disproving irreducible complexity. Behe
immediately researched it and found it proved just the opposite:
It confirmed him. So Behe went back to Dolittle. In a phone
conversation, Doolittle admitted he was wrong, but he has never
made a public retraction.
This is the strategy of Darwinists: to simply deny what they
know to be true. Look, nobody was around at the time of the
creation with a video camera. Naturalism requires at least as
much faith as intelligent design. And then science has to be
objectively examined, but Darwinists won't do this. So, when
judges rule scientific ideas out of bounds, well, it's time to
expose all of this for what it is: know-nothingness of the worst
kind, willful blindness.
Don't you be taken in. Keep demanding the truth, and in time,
we're going to win an honest debate.
Copyright © 2004 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission