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The Gospel according to Darwin
National Review Online ^ | February 12, 2007 1:30 PM | John G. West

Posted on 02/14/2007 2:07:15 PM PST by Tim Long

There is scant reporting on the anti-religious zeal with which many atheists promote Darwinism.

February 12 used to be known in classrooms across the nation as Abraham Lincoln’s birthday. But over the last decade, an increasing number of schools and community groups have decided to celebrate the birthday of the father of evolution instead.

The movement to establish February 12 as “Darwin Day” seems to be spreading, promoted by a evangelistic non-profit group with its own website (www.darwinday.org) and an ambitious agenda to create a “global celebration in 2009, the bicentennial of Darwin’s birth and the 150th anniversary of the publication of The Origins of Species.”

Darwin Day celebrations provide an eye-opening glimpse into the world of grassroots Darwinian fundamentalism, an alternate reality where atheism is the conventional wisdom and where traditional religious believers are viewed with suspicion if not paranoia.

Promoters of Darwin Day deny that their activities are anti-religious, but their denial is hard to square with reality.

According to the Darwin Day website, the movement’s inspiration was an event sponsored by the Stanford Humanists and the Humanist Community in 1995. Since then the honor roll of groups sponsoring Darwin Day events has been top-heavy with organizations bearing such names as the “Long Island Secular Humanists,” the “Atheists and Agnostics of Wisconsin,” the “Gay and Lesbian Atheists and Humanists,” the “Humanists of Idaho,” the “Southeast Michigan Chapter of Freedom from Religion Foundation,” and the “San Francisco Atheists.” The last group puts on an annual festival called “Evolutionpalooza” featuring a Darwin impersonator and an evolution game show (“Evolutionary!”).

Given such sponsors, it should be no surprise that Darwin Day events often explicitly attack religion. At a high school in New York a few years ago, students wore shirts emblazoned with messages proclaiming that “no religious dogmas [were] keeping them from believing what they want to believe,” while in California a group named “Students for Science and Skepticism” hosted a lecture at the University of California, Irvine, on the topic “Darwin’s Greatest Discovery: Design without a Designer.” This year in Boston there is an event on “Biological Arguments Against the Existence of God.”

A musical group calling itself “Scientific Gospel Productions,” meanwhile, mocks gospel music by holding annual Darwin Day concerts featuring such songs as “Ain’t Gonna Be No Judgment Day,” the “Virgin of Spumoni” (satirizing the Virgin Mary), and my favorite, “Randomness Is Good Enough for Me,” the lyrics of which proclaim: “Randomness is good enough for me./ If there’s no design it means I’m free./ You can pray to go to heaven./ I’m gonna try to roll a seven./ Randomness is good enough for me.” The same group’s website offers for sale a CD titled “Hallelujah! Evolution!”

The original “honorary president” of Darwin Day was biologist Richard Dawkins, author most recently of The God Delusion. Dawkins is best known for such pearls of wisdom as “faith is one of the world’s great evils, comparable to the smallpox virus but harder to eradicate,” and “Darwin made it possible to be an intellectually fulfilled atheist.”

The Darwin Day group’s current advisory board includes not only Dawkins but Eugenie Scott of the National Center for Science Education (an original signer of the “Humanist Manifesto III”), philosopher Daniel Dennett (who praises Darwinism as the “universal acid” that eats away traditional religion and morality), and Scientific American columnist Michael Shermer (an atheist who writes that “Science Is My Savior” because it helped free him from “the stultifying dogma of a 2,000-year-old religion”).

Perhaps in an effort to revise the image of Darwin Day as merely a holiday for atheists, last year a professor from Wisconsin urged churches to celebrate “Evolution Sunday” on or near Darwin Day. But the fact that some liberal churches have now been enlisted to spread the Darwinist gospel cannot cover up the anti-religious fervor that pervades the Darwinist subculture.

Darwin Day celebrations are fascinating because they expose a side of the controversy over evolution in America that is rarely covered by the mainstream media. Although journalists routinely write about the presumed religious motives of anyone critical of unguided evolution, they almost never discuss the anti-religious mindset that motivates many of evolution’s staunchest defenders.

On the few occasions when the anti-religious agenda of someone like Dawkins is even raised, it is usually downplayed as unrepresentative of most Darwinists.

What Darwin Day shows, however, is just how ordinary the anti-religious views expressed by Dawkins are among grassroots Darwinists. Far from being on the fringe, Dawkins’ views form the ideological core of mainstream Darwinism.

Not that this should come as a shock. According to a 1998 survey of members of the National Academy of Sciences (NAS), nearly 95 percent of NAS biologists are atheists or agnostics. A look at the major critics of the theory of intelligent design reveals similar views. Barbara Forrest, co-author of the anti-intelligent design harangue Creationism’s Trojan Horse, is a long-time activist and board member with a group calling itself the “New Orleans Secular Humanist Association,” although she fails to disclose that fact in her book, and reporters studiously avoid asking her about her own religious beliefs.

The anti-religious outlook of many of Darwin’s chief boosters exposes the hypocrisy in current discussions over Darwin’s theory. The usual complaint raised against scientists who are skeptical of Darwin’s theory is that many of them (like the vast majority of Americans) happen to believe in God. It is insinuated that this fact somehow undermines the validity of their scientific views. Yet, at the same time, defenders of Darwinism insist that their own rejection of religion is irrelevant to the validity of their scientific views—and most reporters seem to agree.

Of course, in an important sense these defenders of Darwinism are right. Just because leading Darwinists are avowed atheists or agnostics does not mean that their scientific beliefs about evolution are wrong. Scientific propositions should be debated based on their evidence, not on the metaphysical beliefs of those who espouse them.

But if Darwinists have the right to be debated based on evidence, not motives, then scientists who are supportive of alternatives to Darwin’s theory such as intelligent design should have the right to expect the same treatment.

If Darwin Day helps expose the blatant double standard about religious motives operating in the current evolution debate, then its evangelistic boosters will have performed an invaluable public service—however unintentionally.

—John G. West is a senior fellow at the Discovery Institute and author of Darwin’s Conservatives: The Misguided Quest.


TOPICS: Editorial; News/Current Events
KEYWORDS: antichristian; atheismandstate; christianbashing; christophobia; darwin; darwinday; darwinismsnotscience; dawkinsthepreacher; evolution; liberalbigots; religiousintolerance; stayondarwincentral; theorynotfact
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1 posted on 02/14/2007 2:07:17 PM PST by Tim Long
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To: Tim Long

Its a bit hard to understand how people who can except the story of the birth of Jesus Christ, the basis for Christianity and yet cannot accept creationism.For non-Christians it may not be a problem.


2 posted on 02/14/2007 2:10:24 PM PST by sgtbono2002 (I will forgive Jane Fonda, when the Jews forgive Hitler.)
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To: Tim Long
There is scant reporting on the anti-religious zeal with which many atheists promote Darwinism.

Yawn.

I fell asleep there....

3 posted on 02/14/2007 2:11:23 PM PST by narby
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To: sgtbono2002

There is empirical evidence contradicting the idea of creationism, while there is no evidence that contradicts the story of Jesus.


4 posted on 02/14/2007 2:12:28 PM PST by LtdGovt ("Where government moves in, community retreats and civil society disintegrates" -Janice Rogers Brown)
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To: sgtbono2002
It's not science. We don't live in the dark ages. The West came out of the dark ages when we entered the Age of Reason. You and your cohorts obviously missed that. Pitiful!
5 posted on 02/14/2007 2:12:47 PM PST by USMMA_83 (Tantra is my fetish ;))
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To: sgtbono2002

"Its a bit hard to understand how people who can except the story of the birth of Jesus Christ, the basis for Christianity and yet cannot accept creationism."

Actually, the position of the Catholic church does not challenge evolution or the big bang. Do a search of Pope John Paul II and evolution.


6 posted on 02/14/2007 2:14:29 PM PST by My GOP (Conservatives are realistic and pragmatic!!)
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To: Tim Long
"Darwin Day celebrations are fascinating... "
On Darwin Day the Darwin awards are announced, with full citations. Of course, it is fascinating to know that someone else was an ever bigger idiot than one is oneself. It is highly pleasurable, and instructive. I always look forward to Darwin Day celebrations.
7 posted on 02/14/2007 2:14:31 PM PST by GSlob
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To: sgtbono2002
Its a bit hard to understand how people who can except the story of the birth of Jesus Christ, the basis for Christianity and yet cannot accept creationism.

I was taught at the Falls Creek Baptist church camp in Oklahoma sometime around 1970 that there was no conflict between Genesis and science. No conflict between the bible and evolution.

Then came the "creation science" movement in the 1980's, and my respect for Christianity started downhill.

So was my church correct in 1970? Or correct today? Either way, the leadership of the church had it totally wrong at some time.

8 posted on 02/14/2007 2:15:05 PM PST by narby
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To: Tim Long

Evolutionists are so funny. They argue fervently for their religion while vehemently denying their religion exists.


9 posted on 02/14/2007 2:18:14 PM PST by dan1123
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To: dan1123

Yawn...I'm Jewish...your creation stroy is just that. Please don't pass that on as some scientific theory.


10 posted on 02/14/2007 2:19:31 PM PST by USMMA_83 (Tantra is my fetish ;))
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To: Tim Long; ninenot; sittnick; steve50; Hegemony Cricket; Cicero; GarySpFc; Wolfie; ex-snook; FITZ; ..
Darwin Day celebrations are fascinating

Hmm, isn't it in conflict with Celebration of Diversity? What Darwin was thinking about survival rate of gays?

11 posted on 02/14/2007 2:21:09 PM PST by A. Pole (Van den Boogaard: "I am not a warrior. I do not fight for freedom. I am only good at enjoying it.")
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To: DaveLoneRanger; GrandEagle; WKB; Jo Nuvark; JamesP81; chesley; rwrcpa1; guitar4jesus; Miss Maam; ...
Six Days Ping List


12 posted on 02/14/2007 2:23:21 PM PST by Tim Long (Two of my favorite creationists: Jesus Christ (Matthew 19:4) and Ronald Reagan)
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To: Tim Long
From the article: Darwin Day celebrations provide an eye-opening glimpse into the world of grassroots Darwinian fundamentalism, an alternate reality where atheism is the conventional wisdom and where traditional religious believers are viewed with suspicion if not paranoia.

I visted the web site at www.darwinday.org, and I didn't see any anti-christian or anti-muslim (they're creationists too, you know) bashing whatever. There's some intolerance going on here, and I don't think it's the scientists who are intolerant of faith, but it's faithful people being intolerant of science.

It's a bit like watching the Israeli Palestinian food fight. The Israelis are tolerant of Arab "Palestinians", even having some in their Parliament. While the Palestinians refuse to tolerate Jews in their midst, and have no functioning Parliament.

I am intolerant of intolerance, and it's the creationists attacking science who are on the wrong side of this issue.

13 posted on 02/14/2007 2:25:57 PM PST by narby
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To: dan1123
Evolutionists are so funny. They argue fervently for their religion while vehemently denying their religion exists.

Creationists are funny. Being immersed in a religion allows them to view everything else as just another religion to compete with.

Kind of like my Southern Baptist grandmother and her attitude about Catholics.

14 posted on 02/14/2007 2:28:33 PM PST by narby
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To: USMMA_83

You seem tired. Maybe you shouldn't skip naptime. Now go back and play with the other preschoolers.


15 posted on 02/14/2007 2:29:15 PM PST by dan1123
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To: Tim Long; Alamo-Girl; P-Marlowe

Religions come in all shapes and sizes. Darwin Day is a day for a "long dead guy" by his followers.

There will be rituals performed, texts read, dreams forecast, and community feeds.

And the transfiguration will have Dawkins alongside Darwin and Carl Sagan and Obi Wan.

May the farce be with you.


16 posted on 02/14/2007 2:29:40 PM PST by xzins (Retired Army Chaplain and proud of it! Supporting our troops means praying for them to WIN!)
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To: Tim Long
But if Darwinists have the right to be debated based on evidence, not motives, then scientists who are supportive of alternatives to Darwin’s theory such as intelligent design should have the right to expect the same treatment.

OK, let's see their evidence - if any - of ID.
17 posted on 02/14/2007 2:30:20 PM PST by canuck_conservative
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To: dan1123
That's the operative word for evos: Funny.

Like characters in the funnies/comics they jump to conclusions, create false assumptions, never attempt alternative hypotheses, beat up on Darwin doubters and are intolerant towards dissenting views all while passing it all off as "science"

Hilarious.
18 posted on 02/14/2007 2:30:41 PM PST by eleni121 ( + En Touto Nika! By this sign conquer! + Constantine the Great))
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To: xzins

Too funny. I'd throw in Eugenie Scott as a Marian apparition. : )


19 posted on 02/14/2007 2:31:23 PM PST by Tim Long (Two of my favorite creationists: Jesus Christ (Matthew 19:4) and Ronald Reagan)
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To: USMMA_83

Funny how Darwins evolution has seemed to stop. Since the modern man has been around for 25000 years but where are the monkeys that are in the middle of evolution, half human half ape? Last time I checked there were not any talking monkeys around. Also wouldn't the gay people have died off by now. I think the provincetown birth rate is about zero. I group that can't reproduce should be gone according to darwin or some of them should be (an not artificially) switching to female or male to maintain the populat ion like some frogs do. BTW where are all the fossils for the different stages of development. I have only ever seen artist interpretations. Plus Darwin was a die hard Christain. He never denied creationism.


20 posted on 02/14/2007 2:31:25 PM PST by CptRepublican (Relax....)
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