
Why I thank God for Charles Darwin
July 1st marked the 150th anniversary of the theory of evolution. For years, I believed that Darwin was of the devil. Now, I deeply honor his contribution to religion and my walk with God. Indeed, other than Jesus, no one has had a more positive impact on my faith and my ministry than has Charles Darwin.
For the last six years as an itinerant evolutionary evangelist, I have preached the good news of evolution from the pulpits of hundreds of churches across America. My message: faith can be strengthened and difficulties in life surmounted--all by bringing a mainstream scientific understanding of evolution into our religious lives. The response has been phenomenal. People of all ages and across the theological spectrum light up when they see new possibilities open for them, their loved ones, and the world. Often tearfully, always excitedly, they share their testimonials. Here is mine.
Jesus and a nurturing church community gave me a lifeline in my struggles to find sobriety as a young man. A corollary of being born again, however, was that the preachers I listened to and the authors I read told me that accepting evolution would seduce me away from godly living. At first I believed them. But then I met professors, ministers, priests, nuns, rabbis, and chaplains who not only accepted an evolutionary view of cosmos and culture but found it religiously inspiring. Soon I too came to embrace the history of everyone and everything as our common Creation story.
Today, thanks to Charles Darwin and the countless evolutionary scientists and writers he inspired—in fields as diverse as astrophysics, geology, genetics, primatology, sociobiology, and brain science—I interpret my Christian faith in far broader and more this-world realistic ways than ever before. It is obvious to me now that God didn't stop revealing truth vital to human wellbeing back when people believed the world was flat and religious insights were recorded on animal skins. God is still communicating faithfully today, publicly, through the worldwide, self-correcting scientific enterprise. I now see science as revelatory and facts as God's native tongue.
From this perspective, divine grace and guidance extend back billions, not just thousands, of years. Looking at the history of the universe through sacred eyes, my faith is strengthened and my heart filled with joy. No longer do I fear that my family and friends will suffer for eternity in the fires of an otherworldly hell. No longer am I led astray by my instinct—my unchosen nature. And no longer do I find it difficult to live in integrity and know the peace that passes all understanding.
When I ponder the past, I am humbled and filled with unspeakable awe and gratitude at our journey through deep time to the present moment. When I see suffering nearly everywhere today, I am overwhelmed with compassion and called to action. And when I look to the immediate or distant future, I am filled with faith, hope, and a sense of urgency to do my part in ushering in God's kingdom on Earth as it is in heaven.
For me, the ethics of evolution are not only consistent with the teachings of religion, they advance it. An evolutionary understanding urges me to grow in morality and to expand my circles of care and compassion—even to include those who see the world in very different ways. My worship of God now includes doing everything I can to ensure a just and thriving future for planet Earth, for our children's children, and for as many species as possible. As an ordained Christian minister, I cannot imagine a higher calling for myself.
I am not, of course, trying to claim that Darwin's legacy has been entirely positive. Just as atrocities have been committed in the name of Jesus and Christianity, so have evils been perpetrated in the name of Darwin and evolution. There will always be those who distort the work of great men and women to advance their own shortsighted and self-centered ends. But when I look back over my life and reflect on the significant people who have blessed me, my relationships, and my world, Jesus and Darwin are at the top of my list.










Thank God for articulate authors!
Dear Michael,
Thank you for devoting your life to this pursuit. In your book I have found gracious words describing what I've been sensing in my own mind and spirit for several years. Your writing has given me confidence to continue engaging people in healthy conversation about finding God in evolutionary creation and seeing the potential for every situation to usher in the good that God and the Universe have in store.
I would be interested in corresponding with others who have a sense that the Universe itself has an intelligence that is evolving on a macro scale as well as through ever-deeper manifestations of human understanding. I often wonder if the quantum systems of the Universe function as do the systems of biological organisms, giving rise to an "intelligence" (sentience perhaps?) that transcends what we can observe with our current instruments. The possibility of the stars and solar systems having a collective mind blows my mind!
Who wants to have fun with this idea?
Phil Kadidlo
Stillwater, MN
pkadidlo@comcast.net
Help! DFW Texas
I read your wonderful book celebrating science and religion 'Thank god for evolution'. I must add that I listened to you when you spoke on LIVE 105.3 Fm radio while you were here in Dallas/Fort Worth, Texas. I was drawn in by your powerful words, Rev. Micheal Dowd. Your wonderful ideas about the future of the world and of people ALL together! I understand that you live the mobile life, ongoing with your teachings. But as a grandson of a baptist preacher, and a 'agnostic' in reguards to religion I would supremely love to speak to you (via) any way possible! I would love to ask maybe some of the hard-hitting questions for myself that I never heard while you were on air. Please as one christian to another Im not trying to show face. I really and truly respect with great passion, your ideas, I hold so charished, as my own: My e-mail is greed_sin777@hotmail.com please respond with great swiftness so I may enjoy your company! ~god bless ~ B.D.Leonard
in the context of Richard Dawkins
I love your idea that god is everywhere. I just wanted to know what your view about Richard Dawkins' The God Delusion is. I think in some ways that you and Richard share the same views yet; very complex differant takes on life and meaning. Can you both come to agreement about evolution and what entails as a direct result from it, i.g. religion, beliefs etc. or is your vision that very different from that of Dawkins altogether?