Some of the more bombastic among
atheists are fond of saying the evolution of all species from a
common ancestor is not just a theory, but a fact.
What a jump in logic they have made,
though, to assume that “theory” status is the worst-case
scenario for their belief system.
The scientific method, as you were
taught in gradeschool, basically goes like this: A hypothesis is an
idea that someone comes up with about something in science and
nature. Then, a plausible hypothesis will see evidence of its
probability gathered over time. When enough evidence is available
that it is likely true, this infant hypothesis graduates to the
adolescent-like state of “theory.” By then the hypothesis is
supposed to have been tested and demonstrated to be a likely truth.
After a time, when room for doubt has been completely removed, the
evidence having proven it, not just substantiated its plausibility,
then the theory matures to adulthood, becoming a scientific law.
For example, gravity is a scientific
law. Biogenesis (the fact that life forms are only produced by other
life forms, never by non-living material) is a scientific law. The
constancy of the speed of light is a theory. The distance from us to
the stars is theory. That all life forms are made up of microscopic
cells, even, is referred to in the scientific journals as “cell
theory.”
But before we discuss whether
evolution has progressed enough to be a law, an undeniable fact
without plausible alternatives, we need to not just skip over the
first question. Is it even worthy of “theory” status in a
scientific sense? Has this belief system actually met the standard
of evidence that the grand jury can indict it of probability, based
on the evidence? Not really.
When we refer to evolution as
"theory," we're being far too kind to the Darwinists,
granting them far too much benefit of the doubt. At best, their
belief is a hypothesis based on speculative philosophy. They not only
fail to bring to the table sufficient evidence of a scientific
theory--but they ask us to accept their beliefs without any evidence
at all, basing their teachings on mere assumptions from point A to point Z.
“But the fossil record proves
evolution, doesn't it?” you ask.
No, as Dr. Kent Hovind is fond of
pointing out, if you have a fossil, the only thing it proves is that
something died. It does not prove that said something ever had
offspring at all, much less offspring of a different kind from
itself. And why, he rightly asks then, would you dare to assume that
the fossil in your hand was capable of doing something no life form
on earth today can do, namely mutate into another lifeform with more
advanced gene code, coupled with survivability and the ability to
reproduce?
What's worse--their evolutionary
hypothesis is not just unproven, not just unsupported by evidence,
but implausible. It is literally incredible. The evolution of
species from a common ancestor not only didn't happen--it COULDN'T
happen.
Want evidence of that? Take their
favorite example of late that they say points to the “fact” that
we are not a special creation, but a member of the animal kingdom
called homo sapiens, which descended most recently from
ape-like ancestors. That example is this: They say humans and
chimpanzees are 98.4 percent alike in genetic code. The conclusion
they wish you their listeners to jump to is the belief that we,
therefore, are more than 98 percent the same thing they are. If they
are scientifically-minded, though, they are being deceptive
intentionally. Because if they aren't just ignorant, they are aware
that 1.6 percent difference in DNA structure is actually an
uncrossable gap, even given millions of years of time. The
geneticist who heads the human genome project, an evolutionist
himself, has pointed out that 1.6 percent of our DNA comprises
48,000,000 nucleotides, any three of which “would be fatal to the
animal” if changed.
That means we are 16 million fatal
genetic changes away from chimpanzees. 16 million generations of
genetic change happening over billions of years, and every single
time it had to work, meaning the animal produced still had to survive
the mutation and be able to reproduce the next generation, or break the chain and have to start the evolution over.
These 16 million generations of change would have taken billions of
billions of billions of billions of years, when you consider we have
6,000 years of history to look at, in which we have seen it happen
not even once, much less 16 million times.
Billions of billions of billions of
years. No one claims the universe is anywhere near that old. And
even if it were, we are now just talking about how long it would take
for one primate to turn into another, not to mention how long it
would take slime on a rock to evolve into people smart enough to
create the computer you're reading this on.
Since the genetic code of all living
things is so tightly locked against change, everything reproduces
according to its own kind, just like Genesis 1 says, making the Bible
the only scientifically accurate account of how life continues over
generations.
And worser still--even if there WERE
some way that the various species could have evolved from a common
ancestor, said ancestor couldn't have existed to begin with, because
even a one-celled life form could not have come into being apart from
the Creator. The scientific law of biogenesis proves this.
And that is a law, equal with the law of gravity in the weightiness
of its evidence, and more substantiated than the theory that you and
all living things are made up of cells, even though you have actually
seen cells under a microscope.
Evolution is an implausible idea. It
would take such a miracle to make evolution work, that only an
all-powerful all-knowing God could have done it. And He says He
didn't.
So no more of this nonsense about
evolution being a fact. Evolution, as a belief system, has never
made it past the embryonic stage of evidence-gathering. It has not
even been birthed properly into a theory yet.
When we Christians
call it a theory, we're just being polite.