A Response: Provoking the Establishment

Phillip Johnson’s credentials as a professor of law at Berkeley are doubly important. First, he is a recognized scholar at a prestigious institution who, clothed and in his right mind, does not think Darwinism is true. No one will confuse Berkeley with Bob Jones West, and his case cannot be dismissed by caricaturing the writer. Second, he teaches law, not science, and this is an advantage. Thinkers from literary critic C. S. Lewis to philosopher Thomas Kuhn have taught us that people outside a discipline can have the vantage point necessary to criticize a field’s dominant paradigm.

Johnson’s main thesis is this: Darwinism (which includes gradualism and punctuated equilibrium theory) is an untestable expression of dogmatic naturalism, not a real scientific hypothesis. Scientists have forced the facts to fit this Procrustean bed by using ad hoc hypotheses, circular arguments, and the like. But these practices have made evolutionary theory unfalsifiable. If Darwinism were a scientific hypothesis based on a fair assessment of the evidence, it would have been abandoned long ago.

Johnson’s concern is to get a fair hearing for “creationism” understood as the belief “that a supernatural Creator not only initiated this process but in some meaningful sense controls it in furtherance of a purpose.” He also criticizes the complementary view (science tells what happened and how; theology tells who did it and why), correctly in my view, because it inadvertently contributes to scientism and leaves no clear room for God to be involved in the process of creation.

This is an important book with a crucial message clearly unpopular in polite academic circles.

By J. P. Moreland, professor of philosophy of religion, Talbot School of Theology, La Mirada, California, and author of Christianity and the Nature of Science (Baker).

Also in this issue

The CT archives are a rich treasure of biblical wisdom and insight from our past. Some things we would say differently today, and some stances we've changed. But overall, we're amazed at how relevant so much of this content is. We trust that you'll find it a helpful resource.

Voting with Your Checkbook: What Every Christian Should Know about Boycotts

Esther Byle Bruland

Classic & Contemporary Excerpts from August 19, 1991

A Response: Taking off the Blinders

A Response: Tarring Christian Evolutionists

Book Feature: A Professor Takes Darwin to Court: A New Book Mounts a Credible Challenge to Evolution’s Sweeping Claims

Thomas Woodward

Anything but Boredom!: Half the Sins of Humankind Are Caused by the Fear of Boredom. But Boredom Can Be the Path to Holiness as Well

Donald W. Mccullough

Parental Choice: Will Vouchers Solve the School Crisis?

Frank C. Nelsen

Lost in the Mystical Myths

Donald G. Bloesch

Ministry: Giving Black Families a Boost

Taking on TV’s Bad Boys

Tim Stafford

When Sportcasters Fumble

Editorial

Really Good Sex

David F. Neff

Love ‘By Blood’ in a Uganda Prison

Not Quite Prime Time

Letters

A Methodist in Whom There Is No Guile

Religion, Abortion Key Issues in Court Nomination

Moscow: Graham School Bridges Soviet Church Divisions

Albania: First Evangelistic Campaign in 50 Years

Orthodox Suspend Ties with NCC, Episcopal Church

Religion, Abortion Key Issues in Nomination

Canadian Scholars Form Association

News from the North American Scene: August 19, 1991

General Convention: Episcopalians Fail to Resolve Sexuality Issues

World Scene: August 19, 1991

Religious Leaders Join Scientists in Ecological Concerns

Gulf War Slows Holy Land Digs

Human Rights: Does Islam Have Room for Religious Liberty?

TBN Bid for Station Stalled by Complaints

‘Biker Pastor’ Hits Rough Road

Deflating the Gender Myths

Armageddon: The View from Andromeda

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