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A Tale of Two Scientists: What Really Happened 'In the Beginning'

How two evangelicals—one a young-earth creationist, the other an evolutionary creationist—have lived out their faith and professions.
Photos by Greg Schneider and Tamara Reynolds

A Tale of Two Scientists: What Really Happened 'In the Beginning'

Darrel Falk grew up in a "wonderful home and a wonderful church" near Vancouver, British Columbia. A shy, serious child, he had a reputation among his friends for never lying or swearing. He asked Jesus into his heart at age 4, and through an altar call at age 10, asked for a second work of grace, in the holiness language of his Nazarene church. "I feel so clean inside," he said afterwards in tearful wonder.

Todd Wood was born a generation after Falk in Rives Junction, an unincorporated village in the heart of Michigan. His father was a truck driver, and they lived on 13 rural acres, out of sight of the nearest neighbor. Northwest Baptist, a small, fundamentalist church his parents had helped to start and many relatives attended, was at the heart of his life. He attended a K-12 Baptist school with 25 students in his graduating class. A quiet boy, Wood loved doing research papers, going far beyond teachers' expectations in tracking down extensive sources. Few in his acquaintance had been to college, and he had never met a scientist.

Both Wood and Falk grew up with absolute confidence in the Bible, a strong sense of family, and a belief that church was the place to find meaning and community. Both of them had an unusual aptitude for mathematics and an interest in science—though neither one had much idea what science was. They could have followed very similar pathways, and in a sense, they did.

But the controversies over evolution within the Christian community have taken the two scientists on very different journeys in a time when common ground on human origins and the Genesis narrative seems to be shrinking.

Evolutionary Creationist: Under Falk's leadership, BioLogos has become an important Christian group advocating a more gradual creation. Falk holds to his plea for Christians to love and respect each other while advancing different viewpoints.

Evolutionary Creationist: Under Falk's leadership, BioLogos has become an important Christian group advocating a more gradual creation. Falk holds to his plea for Christians to love and respect each other while advancing different viewpoints.

After Literalism

As an introspective and worrying child, Falk occasionally wondered whether Christianity was too good to be true. "I wanted it to be true because it was so beautiful. Jesus was my best friend. I felt very close to God."

In junior high he encountered a textbook that pictured humans evolving from apes. He didn't believe it was true—his church read Genesis with a strict literalism—but he feared that it might be and that his faith would be undone. Consequently, he stuck to chemistry and physics through high school in the 1960s. His one biology class never talked about evolution or DNA. After a year at a church Bible college, Falk started at Simon Frazer, Canada's leading research university, based in Vancouver. He had decided to become a doctor, which meant he had to take biology.

He was completely unprepared for the beauty he encountered. "I had known the beauty of Christianity. Now I discovered the beauty of genetics. When I saw how the cell worked, it was unbelievably beautiful. Thousands of protein molecules, intricately folded, each doing a particular job in the cell. This astonishing process was going on in every one of my trillions of cells, making me who I am. Forty years later, I'm still in love with it. It never gets old, never loses its appeal."

For Falk, evidence that all of life is related due to common origin was clearly written in the cell. Every organism used the same molecules, the same proteins, the same assembly processes. Even for organisms as different as birds and sea slugs, grass and elephants, similarities at the molecular level jumped out at him. In the church of his boyhood, he found no place for this knowledge or this beauty. He only knew how to read Genesis as six-day history, which he could not reconcile with what enthralled him in the laboratory. The beauty of the cell seemed to him evidence of God's design and providential oversight. But he had no one to help him rebuild his picture of God's creation.


From Issue:
July/August 2012, Vol. 56, No. 7, Pg 22, "A Tale of Two Scientists"
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Displaying 1–5 of 48 comments

gary champagne

September 02, 2012  8:30pm

True science Glorifies God and importantly blesses mankind and the theory of evolution does neither. All manner of evil originates from an evolutionary theory (okay to murder after all we are just random chance creations, survival of the fittest etc) and no useful inventions come from the theory of evolution, only a designed observation of what the Creator has set in place is a basis for many useful inventions. The Lord God is One and common sense says that SOMETHING can never come from Nothing.

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Roger McKinney

August 23, 2012  12:29pm

Good point, John! Some people call the attitude toward science in the US "scientism" because it commits that category fallacy. Some Christians have replaced God with science and are guilty of a type of idolatry.

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John Delius

August 19, 2012  3:56pm

As a Brit, I am always surprised that American believers don't seem to realize that the atheists' Evolution - with a capital E - is a philosophy or world-view. They claim that the scientific theory of evolution has 'proved' their philosophy. But a world-view cannot be proved or disproved scientifically. That is a logical error, called a category confusion. No exception to the law "life only comes from life' has ever been found. The biggest computers have not discovered a mechanism, although the properties of the elements are precisely known. The idea that chance can create DNA is a mathematical perpetual motion machine. Evolutionists believe that one day they will find answers. This is faith not science. Personally I think it is more intellectually reasonable to believe that Jesus rose from the dead. With regard to Genesis 1, I find that 'Creation revealed in 7 days' is a satisfying interpretation. (P.J. Wiseman - Clues to Creation in Genesis).

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Roger McKinney

August 07, 2012  7:52am

I suggest that Christians read science "in a manner where you can embrace both faith and reason." Christian should show far more respect for the Word of God than for a mere theory fabricated by atheists.

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Roger McKinney

August 06, 2012  11:58am

Wayne, Doesn't honesty count for anything? The only honest way to interpret the Bible, and to prevent attributing to God something he did not say, is to use the principles of hermeneutics. I'm always amazed out how little Christians care about basic honesty.

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