It has been 10 years since Eric Hedin, an Assistant Professor of Physics
at Ball State, promoted the idea to his students that the complex and intricate
balance in nature reflects an intelligent design as opposed to a random series
of accidental events. The president of
the University ruled that such teaching was not a scientific discipline and had
no place in academia, an opinion widely shared in the academic community. Dr.
Hedin once taught a course entitled The Boundaries of Science that was later
cancelled.
Baylor University was embroiled in the controversy when
Robert Marks, Distinguished Professor of Electrical and Computer Engineering
set up a website and lab on the Baylor server to investigate intelligent design
in 2007. Marks used the term “Evolutionary Informatics Lab.” Both the website
and the lab were shut down within months and removed from the Baylor server. The
lab continues on a third-party server at evoinfo.org.
This month a bill permitting discussion of Intelligent
Design in the classroom was passed by the House in West Virginia and sent to
the Senate for approval. The ACLU claims
the bill violates the “establishment clause” separating church and state.
Regardless of academic positions on the subject, reflections
on creation, purpose and intelligence beyond our own are important to all of
us. We must ask the questions, “Are we alone?”
“Is there anyone else out there?” “Is the human race simply the result
of eons of random chance on this third planet from the sun?” “Have millions of years of random chance and
survival of the fittest resulted in, well, ‘us?’” Or are we created in the
divine image of the Creator?
We consider ourselves intelligent. We can solve problems. We can manipulate the
natural laws of physics to make them work for us resulting in mechanical and
electronic machines that magnify our strength and accelerate our speed. We can ponder ourselves and our own existence.
We can imagine things as they could be.
We are quickly making strides in our own creation of
artificial intelligence, the design of robotic machinery that perform complex
tasks. We already have cars that can drive themselves. Information technology is taking us into realms
reserved for the writers of science fiction. “Data,” the popular android on
Star Trek, may not be so far-fetched after all.
So, whenever we finally create “Data” and others like him,
what will the androids think? Will they
sit around and discuss whether they were the result of random coincidence,
concluding that they have no accountability or connection to the humans that
created them?
The Bible is quite clear regarding our own origin. The Psalmist says, “For You
formed my inward parts;
You wove me in my mother’s womb. I will give thanks to You,
for I am fearfully and wonderfully made; wonderful are Your works, and my soul
knows it very well. My frame was not hidden from You, when I was made in
secret.” (Psalm 139:13-15).
Something beyond science resonates within
us when we stand in awe on the rim of the Grand Canyon; when we behold the
beauty of a sunset splashing the sky with crimson, purple and gold; when we walk
by the sea listening to the waves crashing on the shore. When we watch a bird
take flight, singing in the branches of a tree.
Only worship will satisfy the emptiness within. The realization that we
are part of a grand design in the mind of God calls us to accountability and fills
us with meaning, purpose and peace.
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