Volume 6, Number 42009 - The Year of Darwin? by Bert Cargill, St. Monans
2009 has been called ‘The Year of Darwin’. It is the 200th
anniversary of his birth and the 150th anniversary of the
publication of his hugely influential book On the Origin of Species
by Means of Natural Selection - a book greatly applauded by
many and yet greatly regretted by not a few. This has been a
significant year for promoting evolution even more than usual,
with events organized all over the world in Darwin’s memory. In
the UK a £2 coin has been struck to mark it, on its reverse an
image of Darwin facing a
chimpanzee.
To many, this milestone marks
more progress on the onward
march of atheism.But believers
in the Bible-based account of
divine creation have nothing
new to fear, in fact have
nothing at all to fear. Our faith
rests on the perfect revelation
of the Creator God Himself, not
the imperfect reasonings and
biased proposals of man.
What kind of man was Darwin
to have such a deep and
lasting influence upon science
and popular thinking? How did
he reach those conclusions which are now taken for granted?
Did he have any encounter with the Bible and Christianity?What
about his family life and lifestyle? Here are some answers to
these questions [1].
Family Background and Early Life
Charles Robert Darwin was born on 12th February 1809 in
Shrewsbury, England, the second youngest of six children. His
father Robert Darwin was a wealthy doctor, with a staunchUnitarian religious background, as
had his mother Susannah, the
daughter of Josiah Wedgewood, the
pioneer of the elegant blue andwhite
Wedgewood pottery. As a baby
Charles was ‘baptized’ in the Anglican
church but attended the Unitarian
chapel with his mother. His first
school was run by a Unitarian
preacher, but when he was eight his
mother died, and thereafter he and
his older brother Erasmus went to a
local Anglican boarding school.
After his schooling, for a short time he
was an assistant to his father who
sent him to the University of
Edinburgh to study medicine at the
age of sixteen. But contact with
human suffering and the sight of
blood proved too much for him. He
neglected his medical studies and
side-stepped into taxidermy, botany
and zoology during his second year.
This annoyed his father immensely,
who then sent himto Christ’s College,
Cambridge, to study for a BA degree,
intending this to be a step towards
‘the ministry’ in the Church of
England. However, his interest in
natural history developed further at
Cambridge, influenced by Sedgwick,
a geologist and Henslow, a botanist
who believed that scientific work was
‘natural theology’. William Paley’s
writings also impressed him,
Evidences of Christianity, and Natural
Theology which argued for design in
nature and explained adaptation as
God acting through laws of nature
(which it is!). In his final examination
in January 1831 he came tenth out of
a pass list of 178.
The Famous Beagle Voyage
He spent the rest of 1831 doing field
work in geology and biology, then in
December, he found a place as a selffunded
naturalist on HMS Beagle
under the command of Robert
Fitzroy, a strict man with
fundamentalist religious beliefs. The
voyage was to take two years
charting the coast of South America,
but it lasted for five years and
circumnavigated the globe. Darwin
was often badly seasick, for many
days lying in his hammock eating
only raisins. On board the Beagle, he
would often quote the Bible as an
authority on morality.
Observing the great variety of
geological formations in different
continents Darwin tried to reason
how these came about by the effects
of natural forces. He also observed
many fossils and living creatures
never seen before, sending many
specimens back to England. At this
time he read Charles Lyell’s Principles
of Geology which described gradual
geological change over immense
periods of time. These observations
and ideas set him thinking about a
new theory to account for the origin
of different species which heretofore
he had believed were the result of
divine creation.
The Beagle returned to England in
October 1836. By then, Darwin was a
celebrity thanks to the specimens
and reports he had sent home. He
travelled and lectured widely,
interacting with many other
scientists. He developed his theory
about Transmutation of Species (he
did not call it evolution) and started
to write seriously.Work on his famous
book had begun, but aware of its
controversial nature he hesitated
repeatedly over publication. That
would not be until 1859, but other
things intervened.
Marriage and Later Life
The strain of overwork affected his
health. Stomach problems and heart
disease, worsened by stress, plagued
him for the rest of his life. His doctors
recommended spells of living in the
country. One such spell with his
Wedgwood relatives found him with
a charming and intelligent lady called
Emma, his cousin nine months his
senior. Romance blossomed, and in
January 1839 Charles Darwin married
Emma Wedgewood in an
Anglican/Unitarian ceremony. Emma
held staunch Christian beliefs which
she never abandoned. He had told
her all about his new ideas on origins,
by that time clearer in his mind. They
candidly shared their differences, but
Emma expressed her deep concerns
that they might be separated after
death because of this.
They lived at Downe, Kent, where
they had ten children. Two of them
died in infancy, and he was
particularly distressed by the death of
his 10-year old daughter Annie in
1851. By then he had abandoned any
profession of Christianity and had
stopped going to church.
Later in life he professed to be ‘an
agnostic’ rather than an atheist
denying the existence of God. But his
upbringing, his belief in the truth of
the Bible while at Cambridge, his
quotations from scripture on board
the Beagle, his church attendance in
the early years of his marriage were
all now far away. He adopted the
position of denying all miracles and
denying the factual and historical
basis of the Gospels.
Charles Darwin died on 19th April
1882. He was given a state funeral
and buried in Westminster Abbey.
Sadly, there seems to be no truth in a
story published in 1915 that he
returned to Christianity and trusted
Christ at the end of his life [2]. It is sad
also that this story is still used by
some to discredit evolution without
checking the facts.Many other better
reasons exist, the greatest being the
Bible, the word of God.
The Origin of Species, 1859
Darwin was forced to publish swiftly.
In 1857 Alfred Wallace published a
paper on the Introduction of Species.
Seeing the similarities with Darwin’s
theory his friend Lyell urged him to
establish precedence. On 18 June
1858, another paper by Wallace
described natural selection. Shocked
that he really had been forestalled,
Darwin consulted Lyell. They quickly
decided on a joint presentation of
Darwin’s work at the Linnean Society
on 1 July. However, his youngest son
of 18 months died of scarlet fever on
28 June and he was too distraught to
attend.
On the Origin of Species by Means of
Natural Selection, or The Preservation
of Favoured Races in the Struggle for
Life (its full title) was published on 22
November 1859. All 1,250 copies sold
out at once. In the book, Darwin set
out ‘one long argument’ with
observations, inferences and consideration
of anticipated objections. He
did not link man to animal ancestors
in this book, afraid of its deeper
implications, but in two more books
published in 1871 and 1872 he clearly
stated this link. His 1859 book has
been called the most influential book
ever published, although that
accolade farmore deservedly belongs
to the Bible, and for far better
reasons.
Reaction to it was mixed. Some
scientists supported it enthusiastically,
most notably Thomas Huxley,
whose vigorous suppor t earned
him the title ‘Darwin’s bulldog’. But
others had grave doubts [3]. The
same was true within the Church of
England - his Cambridge tutors
Sedgwick [4] and Henslow dismissed
the ideas, but the growing band of
liberals interpreted natural selection
as ‘an instrument of God’s design’.
The process continues. In 2008, the
Church of England issued an article
saying that the 200th anniversary of
his birth was a fitting time to
apologize to him.5
Darwin never observed the transmutation
(change) of species - this
has never been observed because it
does not happen! Species are
permanent with fixed boundaries.
What he did observe was adaptation
within species in response to
environmental conditions, a wellrecognized
process throughout
nature. His bold, hypothetical jump
was from ‘microevolution’ (observed)
to ‘general evolution’ (imagined).
Once he publicized this idea, others
gladly seized upon it,and have used itever since to bolster atheism and
materialismbecause that iswhat they
prefer.
So is 2009 the Year of Darwin? – the
man who gavemankind its true place
as descended from primates and
then from vague ancestors all the
way back to nothing?
No, it is 2009 AD – ‘the year of our
Lord’. Year after year we remember
the Son of God becoming man in
order to redeem us, so that we might
obtain the privileged place of the
very sons of God, 1 John 3. 1. ‘His
name shall be continued as long as
the sun: and men shall be blessed in
Him’, Ps. 72. 17.
References
1. Factual material from Charles
Darwin -Wikipedia, the free
encyclopedia en.wikipedia.org
2. Darwin’s Deathbed Conversion—a
Legend?
www.answersingenesis.org
3. ‘I have also seldom read a scientific
book which makes such wideranging
conclusions with so few
facts supporting them . . . I regard
this as somewhat of a high-handed
hypothesis, because he argues
using unproven possibilities,
without even naming a single
example of the origin of a
particular species’, J.H. BLASIUS,
director of the Duke’s Natural
History Museum, Germany, in 1859.
4. Sedgwick wrote to Darwin,‘I have
read your book with more pain
than pleasure. Parts of it I admired
greatly, parts I laughed at till my
sides were sore; other parts I read
with absolute sorrow because I
think them utterly false and
grievously mischievous’. Cited by H.
Enoch, Evolution or Creation?,
Evangelical Press, p.145.
5. M. Brown,Director of Mission and
Public Affairs (2008) wrote,‘Charles
Darwin: 200 years from your birth,
the Church of England owes you
an apology for misunderstanding
you and, by getting our first
reaction wrong, encouraging
others to misunderstand you still’.
BERT CARGILL was a chemistry lecturer for
over thirty years.He has contributed to the
work of the St.Monans assembly ever since
his conversion as a teenager and has
written several books and articles on this
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