To accept those assumptions means believing that for thousands of years the Lord purposely kept all His people under a veil of ignorance regarding Creation. It means accepting, too, that God used Darwin to reveal these truths, even though Darwin worked from a fundamentally flawed premise:
“There seems to me,” wrote Darwin, “too much misery in the world. I cannot persuade myself that a beneficent and omnipotent God would have designedly created the [parasitic wasp] with the express intention of their feeding within the living bodies of caterpillars, or that the cat should play with mice.”
Of course, “a beneficent and omnipotent God” did none of those things. Ignorant of the great controversy and the consequences of the Fall, Darwin began from a fatally wrong premise about the creation he sought to explain.
Those who accept these assumptions must accept, too, that the Lord used Darwin to reveal crucial theological truth about God the Creator even though Darwin was not even close ?to being a worshipper of that Creator. “But I had gradually come, by this time,” wrote Darwin, “to see that the Old Testament from its manifestly false history of the world . . . was no more to be trusted than the sacred books of the Hindoos, or the beliefs of any barbarian.”
Now, there’s nothing contradictory about the Lord using someone like Darwin to teach the world about how He created it. But it does raise this question: When using Charles Darwin to ?pull back the veil of ignorance on origins, why did the Lord raise up—at about the same time—?a prophet, Ellen White, only to keep her wrapped under that very veil of darkness and ignorance He was using Darwin to pull away?
Even if one rejects the every-word-of-Ellen-White-as-verbally-inspired-terminal-eternal-truth, shouldn’t a woman who helped found a church with a message about creation—?“worship him who made the heavens, the earth, the sea and the springs of water” (Rev. 14:7), etc.—have been clued in, one way or another, about the startling new light being uncovered by Darwin about creation? Wouldn’t it be reasonable, if nothing else, for the Lord to have tapped His messenger lightly on the shoulder and told her to cool her vehement opposition to the very truth He was now revealing to the world?
Instead, all through her ministry, Ellen White was uncompromisingly anti-evolution. “It is,” she wrote, “the worst kind of infidelity; for with many who profess to believe the record of creation, it is infidelity in disguise” (The Signs of the Times, Mar. 20, 1879). “Evolution and its kindred errors are taught in schools of every grade, from the kindergarten to the college. Thus the study of science, which should impart a knowledge of God, is so mingled with the speculations and theories of men that it tends to infidelity” (Education, p. 227). “Shall we, for the privilege of tracing our descent from germs and mollusks and apes, consent to cast away that statement of Holy Writ, so grand in its simplicity, ‘God created man in his own image, in the image of God created he him’? (Genesis 1:27, [KJV])” (ibid., p. 130). “When the Lord declares that He made the world in six days and rested on the seventh day, He means the day of twenty-four hours, which He has marked off by the rising and setting of the sun” (Testimonies to Ministers and Gospel Workers, p. 136).
Of course, who’s naïve enough to think that anyone who believes in evolution would take Ellen White seriously? After all, they don’t take the Bible seriously. I bring up this point simply to provide more evidence about the absurdity of the notion that evolution can be harmonized with Adventism.
Choose the God you’re going to serve: the one who raised up Darwin, or the One who raised up Ellen White. But let’s end the farce of thinking you can do both.