What Even Darwin Could Not Unsee
On November 24, 1859, John Murray published Charles Darwin's On the Origin of Species in London, and the entire first printing of 1,250 copies was snapped up by booksellers that very day. The book proposed that life's staggering diversity arose through natural selection rather than direct divine design. Yet buried in Chapter 6, Darwin made a remarkable admission. Writing about the human eye — with its capacity to adjust focus across distances, regulate light, and correct optical distortion — he confessed that to suppose it "could have been formed by natural selection, seems, I freely confess, absurd in the highest possible degree."
Darwin went on to argue his case. But the concession lingers. Even the man who most boldly challenged the prevailing understanding of creation could not examine the eye's intricate engineering without pausing in something close to wonder.
Romans 1:20 tells us that God's "invisible qualities — his eternal power and divine nature — have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made." Paul's point was not that creation settles every scientific debate, but that honest observation of the natural world points beyond itself to a Creator whose power and wisdom are woven into every living thing.
The next time you blink, remember: you are looking through a lens that made even Darwin stop and marvel. Creation's testimony is not fragile. It does not depend on winning an argument. It simply speaks — to anyone willing to see.
Scripture References
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