How Did Charles Darwin's Finch Changed Traditional Religious Thinking About Evolution?

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Darwin's finch changed traditional religious thinking about evolution. "It is not the strongest of species that survive, not the most intelligent that survives. It is the most adaptable to change." (good reads). Charles Darwin's discoveries changed a God centered belief to a God passive belief with the evolutionary process. This was a contemporary thought of the time about God and HIS active involvement in life. P2. The biblical age of the Earth does not support Darwin's evolutionary theory. An ancient Earth supports Darwin's theory while a younger Earth supports the religious version of creation. At the time of Charles Darwin, Bishop Ussher of the 17th century and most people believed the Earth to be 6,000 years old. (http://www.csicop.org/sb/show/darwinism_and_the_age_of_earth/). …show more content…

Charles Darwin's landmark of discovery and strengthen new trade routes in South America on the vessel called, the HMS Beagle. In December 1831, The HMS Beagle launched out of Plymouth Harbor to begin its 5-year voyage to explore South America. The Emperor Napoleon had closed all trade with Britain and this had an major economic impact during the Napoleonic War. Britain economically, desperately needed to grow with new trade routes to South America and improve its weak economy (about Darwin). For Charles Darwin, this happily gave him the opportunity to explore his naturalistic interests and end his family's goal of a religious …show more content…

Creation beliefs needed to accept that the Earth was much older than originally believed and God's Creation of life was unchanging and eternal from the beginning. This thinking changed from God playing an active role in evolution to being more restrained. This gives theologians an idea that God allows life to change, freely. God created the universe, solely. There was no evolution for the creation from nothing, to life. God is allowing change to occur autonomously and with his permission. This thinking process allows for the idea of free will that is a basic tenet in Judeo/Christian faiths. Many religious leaders maintain that religion and evolution are not incompatible. The basis of life religious creation cannot be fully explained by the scientific method.