|
|
Repercussions of
“Natural Selection”
by
Frank Peretti
Next month marks the five-year anniversary of the
tragic shootings at Columbine High School, where
disturbed teens Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold killed
13 people before taking their own lives. And for the
past five years, people have been asking Why?
Allow me to suggest one possibility which continues
to remind me how important it is to help teenagers
see the world—and each another—from God’s
perspective.
On his Web page, Eric Harris listed many things he
hated, but Darwin’s theory of evolution,
particularly his suggestion of natural selection,
stood in stark contrast. “YOU KNOW WHAT I LOVE???
Natural SELECTION!,” he crowed. “It’s the best thing
that ever happened to the Earth. Getting rid of all
the stupid and weak organisms … but it’s all
natural! YES!”
On the day of the massacre, Eric Harris wore a white
T-shirt with the inscription “Natural Selection” on
the front. To some, that’s just a footnote in the
coroner’s report. But when we pause to ponder it
further, we are well on our way to explaining why
that tragedy happened. Highly respected author and
theologian Ravi Zacharias offered a profound insight
in the days following the Littleton incident:
“When we have told our young people today that
Naturalism is true—we have evolved from nothing more
than some primordial slime; when we have told them
objective moral values do not exist—you decide what
is right and wrong for you; when we have told our
young people that there is no ultimate Designer;
when we have told our young people that there is no
ultimate destiny; when we have told them that man is
the measure of all things, that there is no
transcendent basis on which to find out what life is
about and what life’s goal is, why then are we
surprised when we see the hell that is unleashed by
that kind of philosophy?”
Ravi is right! I wish every teacher who
indoctrinates his or her students with Darwinian
evolution, pawning off unproven theories as fact,
could be shown Harris’ bloodstained T-shirt.
Remember the old movie Inherit the Wind, in
which Christians were portrayed as bigoted
nincompoops for opposing the theories of evolution?
I wonder if the makers of that movie (and a host of
films similar to it) might change their minds if
they were called upon to survey the carnage in the
Columbine High School library April 20, 1999. Oh,
we’ve inherited the wind, all right—and a lot more.
It’s all perfectly logical: If evolution is true,
then there is no God. If there is no God, then there
is no fixed, external source of truth and morality.
If there is no fixed, external source of truth and
morality, then truth and morality are left up to the
individual. If the individual judges that killing
all the “stupid and weak organisms” in his life is
justified and right, then by what basis can we
question his judgment? He’s only following the moral
compass evolution provides. The question is not “Why
did the tragedy at Columbine happen?,” but rather,
“Why shouldn’t it have happened?”
With God rejected, morality becomes arbitrary. The
rights and dignity of others become secondary.
Unbridled violence by a Hitler or a Harris, to get
what he wants, to guard what is his, or to seek
revenge, becomes a perfectly logical alternative.
On the other hand, if a personal, loving Creator God
does exist and rule this universe, then we have in
Him a transcendent source for meaning, value,
sanctity and dignity, not to mention a fixed and
objective point of reference for determining right
and wrong—God’s Word, the Bible (for starters, Luke
10:27 and Matt. 7:12). If we attempt to remove God
from our culture, from our value system, and from
our thinking, then we have none of these things, and
neither do our children.
|
|