Scientists discover more every day about how life developed on Earth. Details that stream in from the new field of molecular biology rival the ongoing findings of paleontologists as they fill in the missing pieces in the fossil record. Professors Stephens and Meldrum, aided by the perspective of a non-scientist, Forrest B. Peterson, review the data for a general Latter-day Saint audience.
Their approach comes from a position of faith. They quote from the Creation account in the Pearl of Great Price: And the Gods said: Let us prepare the waters to bring forth abundantly the moving creatures that have life. And the Gods saw that they would be obeyed and that their plan was good. In the authors view, the passage s emphasis on process over end result is consistent with modern science.
According to the LDS church, Whether the mortal bodies of man evolved in natural processes to present perfection or were formed by some other means is not fully answered in the revealed word of God. That God may have created the mechanism by which all life was formed rather than each organism separately is a concept that the authors find to be a satisfying and awe-inspiring possibility."
"synopsis" may belong to another edition of this title.
Trent D. Stephens (B.S., Brigham Young University; Ph.D., University of Pennsylvania) is Professor of Anatomy and Embryology at Idaho State University, where he was named Distinguished Teacher in 1992 and Outstanding Researcher in 2000. He is the co-author of ten textbooks. He currently serves as bishop of the Pocatello Century Ward.
D. Jeffrey Meldrum (B.S., BYU; Ph.D., State University of New York) is Associate Professor of Anatomy and Anthropology at Idaho State University and Affiliate Curator of Vertebrate Paleontology at the Idaho Museum of Natural History. He is co-editor of a series of books on paleontology. He serves as a scout master in the Pocatello Fourth Ward.
Duane E. Jeffery (B.S., Utah State University; Ph.D., UC Berkeley) is Professor of Zoology at BYU. He has published in such professional journals as Genetics and the Journal of Heredity, as well as in the Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences. He is a contributor to Science and Religion and The Search for Harmony.
Forrest B. Peterson is an award-winning writer and movie producer. In 1990 his Trouble in Oz won five Crystal Reel prizes from the Florida Film Festival. His church duties have included elders quorum president and gospel doctrine teacher."
FOREWORD
by Duane F. Jeffery
There is a certain irony in the fact that the twentieth century in Mormonism begins and ends with the teachings of Joseph F. Smith. He became president of the church in 1901, and from then until his death in 1918, he presided over a major consolidation of doctrines that, up to that time, had not been particularly well defined. This consolidation or reconstruction, as historian Thomas G. Alexander has called it was driven primarily by three prominent Mormon writers and doctrinal commentators whose roles in this area have not been fully recognized by the church at large: B. H. Roberts, James E. Talmage, and John A. Widtsoe.
These three were far more sensitive to the life of the mind than were many of their religious contemporaries; they believed deeply that the gospel was too precious to be defended with anything but the best scholarship and honesty the Saints could muster. They believed in an ultimate synthesis of truth, and that God reveals his truths through both prophets and academicians. And their names have come to symbolize that commitment. Talmages two seminal works "Jesus the Christ" and" Articles of Faith" remain the foundations of Latter-day Saint doctrinal study. Roberts s "Comprehensive History of the Church" still stands as the church s official history for its first century; his priesthood manuals for the years 1907-12 still constitute the high-water mark of our organized doctrinal study courses. Widtsoe s long history of doctrinal writings ("Evidences and Reconciliations") in the church s official magazine continues to exert considerable influence.
Not to be ignored or forgotten is Nels L. Nelson, an English professor at Brigham Young University who during the early years of the twentieth century enjoyed an unusual relationship with church president Joseph F. Smith. President Smith was known to send drafts of his speeches to Nelson for editing and suggestions, and it was Nelson who produced Mormonism s first book on that most controversial of issues: science and religion.
The book appeared in 1904 and was considered a missionary tract by both its author and by the church s governing First Presidency. Nelson envisioned it as the first of at least two books aimed at making Mormonism noticed and noted by the world s academic fraternity. He titled it "Scientific Aspects of Mormonism," and aimed to show that not only was Mormonism compatible with then-current scientific thought, but that indeed it had arrived at many of the basic philosophical positions before science did. Of particular interest is his teaching of a rather thorough-going brand of organic evolution he saw it as fully compatible with Mormon teachings and revelations.
Demonstrating such a consilience of science and religion was necessary, Nelson believed, because a religion which is not scientific is scarcely worth the credence of our enlightened age. And while he recognized that he could not deal with all concepts of science, he insisted that he could show that Mormonism s basic data are not out of keeping with those general laws of nature on which all the conclusions of scientists rest, and that science and Mormonism see things in this world primarily in the same way, and also reason as to the purpose of things in the same way. For him, the book of nature is (like scripture) a direct revelation of God; the laws of the universe are nothing more than the general divine laws of God. Mortality was meant to be a glorious university the only real university for the development of (God s) sons and daughters.
Unfortunately, Nelson was not trained in science and his treatise suffers from that fact. His overall outlook was laudatory but ultimately flawed, both by his own limitations and those of the science of the day. For evolution is surely the most controversial philosophical concept of the modern world, and its mechanisms were only dimly seen in 1904. The entire process is founded on the science we now call genetics but that word was not even coined until the year after Nelson s book appeared. In 1904 we did not even know if the laws of genetics applied to human beings the first demonstration of that came also the year after Nelson s book was published.
So Nelson s effort was doomed despite the soundness of his overall conceptual scheme that religion must progress along with science or it will quickly become irrelevant for anything other than social niceties. I fear that subsequent developments in the twentieth century have validated that point of view.
Ultimately religions can do only about three things with science. They can, of course, attack it, and many religious concepts now lie in the dust bin of history from that approach. They can ignore it in which case they progressively become incapable of addressing modem and future problems. Or they can engage it and incorporate the demonstrated truths found thereby into a more productive view of their overall universe.
This latter path is difficult, and to many people of faith it sounds like selling the store, given the past history of science/religion relationships. But that is so only if one takes the view that God reveals himself solely through revelation and scripture, and that scripture is doctrinally complete or, if not complete, at least sufficient. And that has not been the position of historical Mormonism.
The angel Moroni had spelled that out to church founder Joseph Smith, citing the ancient prophecy of Joel: And it shall come to pass afterward, that I will pour out my spirit upon all flesh; and your sons and your daughters shall prophesy, your old men shall dream dreams, your young men shall see visions (Joel 2:28; JS-H 1:41). This scripture has been consistently understood by Mormon commentators to refer to the rise of science. Apostle Joseph Fielding Smith (son of President Joseph F. Smith) probably stated this interpretation most succinctly:
"the Lord has already commenced to pour out his Spirit upon all flesh," and we do find even now that the sons and daughters prophesy; the old men dream dreams, and the young men see visions.
Now, my brethren and sisters, "I am not going to confine this prophecy to the members of the Church." The Lord said he would pour out his Spirit upon "all" flesh (p. 176)
"There has never been a step taken from that day to this, in discovery or invention, where the Spirit of the Lord was not the prevailing force, resting upon the individual, which caused him to make the discovery or the invention nor did the Lord always use those who have faith, nor does he always do so today. He uses such minds as are pliable and can be turned in certain directions to accomplish his work, whether they believe in him or not." ("Doctrines of Salvation," 1:176, pre-1954; emphasis in original.)
I suppose that Joseph Fielding Smith may not have meant to include Charles Darwin and evolution in this sweeping idealism, though in this particular passage he did not qualify his sentiment at all.
But in President Joseph F. Smith s day, the church began to deal with Darwin and evolution fairly directly. The Nelson book was a beginning. In 1908 President Smith and his counselors in the First Presidency took note of the rising tide of international discussion regarding the implications of evolution for religion and morals. They appointed a committee to formulate a position statement for the church, to be released in November 1909. This was a double anniversary fifty years to the month since Darwin had published his fundamental work, "On the Origin of Species," as well as the centennial of Darwin s birth.
The committee s work appeared over the signatures of Joseph F. Smith and his counselors. It has been reprinted many times by critics of evolution in the church, for it is easily interpreted as having an anti-evolutionary tone. Its major argument is that man is composed of both body and spirit, and it labors long to establish that the human spirit results from a spirit birth to a Heavenly Father and a Heavenly Mother. The origin of the human body is less clear, however. After stating that Adam, like Christ, took upon himself an appropriate body, the statement turns briefly to other matters, then dismisses evolution and concludes by saying that humans are capable of evolving into Gods.
Numerous questions from church readers prompted a clarification just five months later. In April 1910, in their official columns in the church magazine, the First Presidency took a more detailed stance. They identified three possible options for the origin of the human body, listing evolution by natural processes through the direction and power of God as one acceptable view. No First Presidency since then has ever clarified the details of this issue any further. I find it regrettable that the church s study manual for 2000-2001 includes only the 1909 statement, with no context whatever nor any evidence of the subsequent clarification.
Commentary on evolution continued cautiously from that time on. The next major LDS book dealing with the subject was written by geologist Frederick J. Pack in 1924 and is decidedly pro-evolution. As this present book details, that guardedly favorable attitude in the church continued for some time. A major discussion among the general authorities in 1931 resulted in a First Presidency ruling that the church had no doctrinal position on either side of the two most controversial issues: whether there were human-like beings on Earth before the time generally ascribed to Adam, and whether there was death on Earth prior to the fall of Adam. So for several decades, beginning with Joseph F. Smith s administration, the church remained open on the subject of evolution, though aware of possible pitfalls. The chosen course was one of minimal engagement, little attempt at accommodation, but certainly not one of rejection.
All that changed, however, at mid-century, as a couple of books claiming to be authoritative took a decidedly antagonistic stance toward evolution. That story is well known. Less well known is that those works have not found substantive support from church history, and none whatever from ever-advancing science. A careful study of the subject clearly demonstrates that the anti-science position espoused by some in the church is untenable. Perhaps consequently, some recent writers have decided to take refuge in the third option outlined above and ignore science altogether. Lacking the training and discipline to adequately study science, they have asserted that science is irrelevant to matters of interest to religion. If we give scientists any credence at all, they argue, we would be making them into rival prophets a clearly intolerable thought.
What does this new stance do to Mormonism s long history of claiming that no man can be saved in ignorance, or that man can be saved no faster than he gains knowledge ? What, to be more precise, does it do with Nelson s view that mortal life is a glorious university the only real university ? Perhaps Nelson and his sponsoring First Presidency were simply wrong. Mortality, says the new wisdom, is really not a university in which we learn divine natural laws. Rather it is a testing center where we learn ordinances and obedience, not science and natural laws.
Of course, this is self-defeating. It produces a mentality ever more incapable of dealing with modern issues, a people progressively irrelevant to discussing and resolving society s challenges. For if science is irrelevant to religion, perhaps religion is equally irrelevant to science. And since science is incontestably the force that shapes modern society, both by its technology and its increasing understanding of natural laws, we clearly run the danger of defining ourselves right out of relevance to modern life.
So, as a new century dawns, we find ourselves studying once again the teachings of the prophet who opened the twentieth century. And the present book serves as a fine introduction to the idealism found in the broader church literature of that earlier day.
Trent Stephens and Jeff Meldrum are both established research scientists. Their undergraduate careers at Brigham Young University exposed them early to the details of Mormonism s history with science and religion. Their own interests in the field were evident even then to members of their faculty. Some students in biology muddle through, while others do well but with their sights set either on technical details of research or on a disciplined preparation for professional careers in, say, medicine or dentistry or wildlands management. Rare indeed are those who address the broader philosophical issues, who want to engage the issues rather than shrink from the fray. Trent and Jeff were clearly members of this latter group.
After completion of their own doctorate training, both joined the faculty of a state university whose student body is largely composed of Latter-day Saints. These students predictable questions forced continued consideration of the issues by Trent and Jeff. Their active church involvement brought additional questions and insights to bear on the topic. One of their students, Forrest Peterson, eventually convinced them that it was a worthy effort to share their thoughts with a broader LDS audience. Thus the present book was born.
This work should not be seen as a final synthesis of Mormonism and science, much less of science and religion in general. We Latter-day Saints have fallen too far behind the discussion to envision any such synthesis; the first thing we need to do is a lot of catching up. We have no significant ecclesiastical tradition dealing with the substance of either science or scripture on the majority of science/religion issues.
In December 1910 President Joseph F. Smith and his counselors laid down a critical criterion to guide church members in discussions of this sort. Our religion is not hostile to real science, they attested. That which is demonstrated we accept with joy. "Demonstrated." A key requirement. What in evolutionary science can be said to be demonstrated ? This book attempts some initial answers.
Beyond these concepts from the First Presidency, the authors return to the philosophical stance of traditional Mormonism, to Nelson s insight that mortality is a glorious university. They have labored hard to render the fundamentals of modern genetic and evolutionary science understandable to anyone willing to expend a modicum of serious effort. Thy mind, O man! exclaimed Joseph Smith, if thou wilt lead a soul unto salvation, must stretch as high as the utmost heavens, and search into and contemplate the darkest abyss, and the broad expanse of eternity (qtd. in Smith, "History of the Church," 3:295).
Exaltation is not, said Joseph and traditional Mormonism, a matter of marching lockstep through mortality; it is instead a conscientious, dedicated, disciplined, and rigorous search for truth, for an understanding of the laws that make this world and universe run. And the study of those laws need not be seen as a threat to one s religious commitment. Quite the contrary. God himself seems to have asserted that a study of nature s laws leads only to a greater understanding and appreciation of him and his ways: all things are created and made to bear record of me, both things which are temporal, and things which are spiritual; things which are in the heavens above, and things which are on the earth, and things which are in the earth, and things which are under the earth, both above and beneath: all things bear record of me (Moses 6:63).
This book is a much-needed attempt to get us back on the road to pursuing that ideal. It was that ideal that fired Nelson, Roberts, Talmage, and Widtsoe in the early years of this century. Now, a century later, we have come, in a sense, full circle, with a book that stems from the same commitment. But where they (Nelson particularly) struggled with high ideals but inadequate science, the present authors have at their command a century of the most spectacular advances in knowledge "demonstrated" knowledge ever to be possessed by the human race. To the extent that knowledge fulfills the prophecy of Joel, it is God s knowledge and is an integral part of our religion. It is clear that the twenty-first century will bring even more of that type of knowledge, knowledge which takes us right to the fundamental principles of life itself and the management of those principles both in humans and in other organisms. Such knowledge most certainly is relevant to religious concerns. Knowledge of the natural laws is essential to the wise stewardship of God s creations and creatures. We must bring ourselves into a position to deal with this massive outpouring of truth. In my opinion, we can no longer afford to ignore it. Active, honest, and rigorous engagement is the only response worthy of those who would uphold the ideals that fired the Restoration. The present book is a major step in that direction.
INTRODUCTION
Over the past few hundred years, a variety of issues has created seeming conflicts between science and religion. One of the major points of disagreement has to do with the origin and nature of humankind. On one side is the revealed word and particularly its interpretation, which indicate that humans were created by God, in his image, and are unique and separate from Nature. On the other side are the scientific data and their interpretation, which indicate that we evolved from other preexisting life forms by random processes, and that we are related to all of Nature. Church leaders and other members have sometimes expressed strong opinions on both sides of the issue. Some members of the church have even alleged that a person cannot be in good standing in the church and believe in human evolution. Yet LDS students are presented with compelling data and persuasive arguments in their biology, geology, and anthropology classes that support the theory of evolution. Can a person acknowledge these data and accept these arguments while remaining an active member of the church? Can the theory of organic evolution and the doctrines of the LDS church be reconciled?
There is a relatively common experience among LDS students who enter colleges and universities. Some, perhaps many, of these students have been taught that evolution is false and, even more, that it is evil and not God s way. Enrolled in a college biology course, these students become confused when faced with a body of well-established evidence that supports the theory of evolution and seemingly contradicts previous religious education. Students who pursue a health-sciences profession or attend a graduate biology program often major in biology as undergraduates. They are required to take advanced courses in genetics and evolution and become acquainted with even more compelling evidence for evolution. Such a student is then faced with a difficult dilemma: Do I believe what I ve been previously taught in spite of what seems to be convincing evidence, or do I accept the evidence of science and discount the ideas of my family and former teachers? If I discount what they have told me about evolution, what about other church teachings? Must students be forced to choose between science and their faith? We think not.
Every year students come to us when they discover we are active members of the LDS church and also evolutionary biologists and ask, How do you reconcile your faith with the theory of evolution? We discuss our opinions with these students, but when our discussion has ended, we have found that we cannot refer them to any good book on the subject because most are at least twenty years old, very dated, and often out of print. (An exception is a short but well-written section on evolution and the church in Paul, "Science, Religion, and Mormon Cosmology," 180-8 1.) We have written this book to fill that void. We attempt to resolve the apparent discrepancies between the theory of evolution and the concept of the creation as taught in the LDS church.
In one of only two official First Presidency statements concerning the origin of Adam, President Joseph F. Smith and his counselors stated in November 1909: The Church declares man to be the direct and lineal offspring of Deity. Man is the child of God, formed in the divine image and endowed with divine attributes. (This statement, which remains the official church position, is reprinted in this book s appendix; see also chap. 2.) This statement has been interpreted by some members of the church to mean that our physical bodies, as well as our spirit bodies, are the lineal offspring of deity. Because the 1909 First Presidency statement stimulated several High Priests quorums to wonder, In just what manner did the mortal bodies of Adam and Eve come into existence on this earth? an editorial in the "Improvement Era" entitled Priesthood Quorum s Table addressed the issue in April 1910. Whether the mortal bodies of man evolved in natural processes to present perfection, through the direction and power of God, it stated; whether the first parents of our generations, Adam and Eve, were transplanted from another sphere, with immortal tabernacles; whether they were born here in mortality, as other mortals have been, are questions not fully answered in the revealed word of God. (The entire editorial is also reprinted in the appendix.) Even though many people continue to debate the issue of Adam s origin, the "Improvement Era" editorial clearly allows for the possibility of a natural process employed by God in the physical creation of humankind.
Two major problems contribute to the perceived rift between evolution and some commonly held LDS beliefs: (1) If evolution is an entirely random process, as many evolutionary biologists say, how then can there be order in the universe? How could God have been in control of the process if the outcome was unpredictable? How could we have been created in God s image as the result of a random evolutionary process? (2) If Adam and Eve came into being as the result of evolutionary processes, how then could they have been immortal? If they were not immortal, how do we explain the Fall? If there was no Fall, what was the mission of Jesus? If there was no Fall and Atonement, is there then no Christianity?
In this book we hope to discuss these and other questions in a way that will benefit students and other members of the church. We also hope to compare science and faith as ways of knowing about the universe and our place in it. Science is limited to questions that can be addressed through observations; conclusions and theories must be consistent with those observations. Faith, on the other hand, is based on revelation. We are confident that religious truth and scientific truth do not conflict. Our opinions are based on years of study, both in the fields of theology and biology. We recognize the distinct but complementary roles that knowledge in each field plays in our understanding of life. We believe that God created the earth, but we also believe that as scientists we can begin to understand some of the processes God employed and interpret the prehistoric record of creation. We believe we are the spirit children of God, but we also believe that we can discover the laws of Nature which brought our bodies into being. We believe that by gaining greater knowledge and understanding, the perceived rift between evolution and LDS theology can be bridged and disagreements dispelled.
When Charles Darwin introduced the theory of evolution by natural selection, the mechanisms of inheritance (genetics) were a mystery. The subsequent discovery of Gregor Mendel s work explained the mechanism of inheritance but did not seem to allow for variations, which Darwin s theory required. During the first three decades of the twentieth century, many scientists viewed Darwin s theory of natural selection as having been supplanted by the newly discovered principles of Mendelian genetics, with its precise statistical assortment of discrete genes. However, in the 1920s H. J. Muller demonstrated the principle of mutation, which provided the variations necessary for natural selection. The combination of Darwin s natural selection, Mendel s genetics, and Muller s mutation theory in the late 1930s and 1940s has been called by biologists the modern synthesis (sometimes called Neo-Darwinism). The modern synthesis has reaffirmed the integral role of evolution by natural selection in the biological sciences. Many statements made by scientists during the decades of skepticism regarding evolution were quoted by critics of evolution for many years after their obsolescence, and they are repeatedly cited by some individuals (mainly fundamentalist) to this day.
An impressive amount of new scientific data has accumulated in the past twenty-five years, data that were unknown when the previous generation of science and religion books was published. Many writers addressing the subject of evolution and creation have not considered the modern synthesis and its implications, let alone the more recent molecular evidence. The entirely new field of molecular biology has added its enormous weight to the discussion.
Concerning Adam s origin, the First Presidency under Heber J. Grant stated in a meeting of general church authorities in 1931, Our mission is to bear the message of the restored gospel to the world. Leave geology, biology, archaeology, and anthropology to scientific research (reprinted in the appendix). As scientists who are also active in the church and have strong faith in the gospel of Jesus Christ, we, in the spirit of that admonition from the First Presidency, present this book in the hope that it will help readers in their quest for understanding."
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