By Dr. Francis Collins
Special to CNN
Special to CNN
Editor's note: Francis S. Collins, M.D., Ph.D., is the director
of the Human Genome Project. His most recent book is "The Language of God:
A Scientist Presents Evidence for Belief."
ROCKVILLE, Maryland (CNN) -- I am a scientist and a believer, and I find no conflict
between those world views.
As
the director of the Human Genome Project, I have led a consortium of scientists
to read out the 3.1 billion letters of the human genome, our own DNA
instruction book. As a believer, I see DNA, the information molecule of all
living things, as God's language, and the elegance and complexity of our own
bodies and the rest of nature as a reflection of God's plan.
I
did not always embrace these perspectives. As a graduate student in physical
chemistry in the 1970s, I was an atheist, finding no reason to postulate the
existence of any truths outside of mathematics, physics and chemistry. But then
I went to medical school, and encountered life and death issues at the bedsides
of my patients. Challenged by one of those patients, who asked "What do
you believe, doctor?", I began searching for answers.
I
had to admit that the science I loved so much was powerless to answer questions
such as "What is the meaning of life?" "Why am I here?"
"Why does mathematics work, anyway?" "If the universe had a
beginning, who created it?" "Why are the physical constants in the
universe so finely tuned to allow the possibility of complex life forms?"
"Why do humans have a moral sense?" "What happens after we
die?"
I
had always assumed that faith was based on purely emotional and irrational
arguments, and was astounded to discover, initially in the writings of the
Oxford scholar C.S. Lewis and subsequently from many other sources, that one
could build a very strong case for the plausibility of the existence of God on
purely rational grounds. My earlier atheist's assertion that "I know there
is no God" emerged as the least defensible. As the British writer G.K.
Chesterton famously remarked, "Atheism is the most daring of all dogmas,
for it is the assertion of a universal negative."
But
reason alone cannot prove the existence of God. Faith is reason plus
revelation, and the revelation part requires one to think with the spirit as
well as with the mind. You have to hear the music, not just read the notes on
the page. Ultimately, a leap of faith is required.
For
me, that leap came in my 27th year, after a search to learn more about God's
character led me to the person of Jesus Christ. Here was a person with remarkably
strong historical evidence of his life, who made astounding statements about
loving your neighbor, and whose claims about being God's son seemed to demand a
decision about whether he was deluded or the real thing. After resisting for
nearly two years, I found it impossible to go on living in such a state of
uncertainty, and I became a follower of Jesus.
So,
some have asked, doesn't your brain explode? Can you both pursue an
understanding of how life works using the tools of genetics and molecular biology,
and worship a creator God? Aren't evolution and faith in God incompatible? Can
a scientist believe in miracles like the resurrection?
Actually,
I find no conflict here, and neither apparently do the 40 percent of working
scientists who claim to be believers. Yes, evolution by descent from a common
ancestor is clearly true. If there was any lingering doubt about the evidence
from the fossil record, the study of DNA provides the strongest possible proof
of our relatedness to all other living things.
But
why couldn't this be God's plan for creation? True, this is incompatible with
an ultra-literal interpretation of Genesis, but long before Darwin, there were
many thoughtful interpreters like St. Augustine, who found it impossible to be
exactly sure what the meaning of that amazing creation story was supposed to
be. So attaching oneself to such literal interpretations in the face of
compelling scientific evidence pointing to the ancient age of Earth and the
relatedness of living things by evolution seems neither wise nor necessary for
the believer.
I
have found there is a wonderful harmony in the complementary truths of science
and faith. The God of the Bible is also the God of the genome. God can be found
in the cathedral or in the laboratory. By investigating God's majestic and
awesome creation, science can actually be a means of worship.
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