Christianity News 2/29/2012

I have not seen Jeremy Lin play. But I am keeping a close eye on him. For those who don’t know, Jeremy Lin is a point-guard for the NY Knicks basketball team. He was a surprising star in college having received no scholarship offers to play …
http://homebrewedchristianity.com/ — Wed, 29 Feb 2012 05:20:33 -0800
A bit of a debate going on about whether Christianity is being marginalised in British society. The Daily Mail highlights a few of the recent cases that have hit the headlines. It does make one wonder. Gary McFarlane, 48, a former elder in a …
http://thesignofthecross.blogspot.com/ — Wed, 29 Feb 2012 04:57:00 -0800

It is abundantly clear to me that more of us Christian leaders need to grasp an unfortunate truth and distasteful reality that what the Bible describes as faithful and transformed followers of Jesus of Nazareth, or what has come to be known as …
http://bibletruthforyou.com/ — Wed, 29 Feb 2012 07:09:57 -0800

Big Bang Goes BOOM!

There are generally three evidences stated by cosmologists for the belief that the Big Bang was the cause for the universe and all that is within it. These three evidences are:

1. The ever expanding universe.

2. The measured background radiation

3. The ability of the Big Bang being able to account for the large amount of hydrogen and helium found in the universe.

This is supported by the website Big Bang Theory. Let’s take a closer look at each of these and see if they are evidences for the theory or are there other explanations for them that don’t fit into the Big Bang theory.

The Ever Expanding Universe

This assertion assumes a primeval particle of space/time from which the expansion began. If the universe can be shown to be expanding today then it had to be smaller in the past. Going back billions of years would take the universe back to a singularity or point so small it would be invisible to the naked eye. Cosmologists cite the red shift phenomenon as evidence for the expansion of the universe.

The Doppler Effect is used to explain the Red Shift. The Doppler Effect states that if a source that is emitting waves moves away from us, the wavelength of the waves we receive from it will be longer. This implies that stars moving away from us will be red shifted (light with longer wavelength appears at the red end of the spectrum). In the 1920′s, Edwin Hubble discovered that many galaxies appeared red shifted. This means that these galaxies are moving away from us. The universe is expanding. The idea that the universe is expanding seems to support the big bang theory but there are problems with red shift.

Halton Arp, one of the world’s finest astronomers has been studying and observing red shifts of stars and galaxies for many years and his findings do not support that the observed red shift is from an expanding universe. This is especially true of quasars.

Astronomer John Horgan stated:

Arp says he has observed many objects with red shifts that do not conform to the Hubble relation. He maintains that quasars, for example, whose red shifts suggest they are the most distant objects in the universe, are actually no more distant than galaxies and are probably offshoots of them.

If quasars, which are assumed by astronomers to be the further objects from earth, are connected to galaxies then their red shift profiles should be the same but they are not. Additionally, Dr. Arp measured two galaxies that were shown to be interacting or connected by six independent measuring methods yet they had vastly different red shifts, by up to a magnitude of six times. This simply should not be if red shift is an indicator or distance. Dr Arp has published many papers on his observations confirming his findings. His findings are not compatible with an expanding universe and the Big Bang theory.

It is significant to note Dr. Arp, who is not a creationist, was once a staff astronomer working from the United States at the Palomar Observatory and was president of the Astronomical Society of the Pacific. Upon publication of his work over many years he felt the need to move to Europe to continue his work as he was being denied access time to the telescopes previously made available to him. He was shut out when his observations didn’t fit the company line of the Big Bang Theory. Here is a link to his website. He continues his work in Germany today.

Background Radiation

Next is the evidence of uniform background radiation left over from the Big Bang. This background radiation, about 3 degrees kelvin, is a remnant of the Big Bang but some astronomers object to this. Jayant Narlikar, a leading Indian astronomer states:

“Secondly, the microwave background is believed to be the strongest evidence for the big bang. Yet, such a fundamental feature as its temperature cannot be deduced from any calculations of the early universe. Its value is assumed.”

Did you catch that? It’s almost as if astronomers made an observation and then fit that observation into their theory without being able to test it or know what the actual temperature should be. In other words, it isn’t science if it cannot be tested. Narlikar is no creationist. He actually promotes another theory called the quasi-steady-state theory. This theory does predict a temperature of 3 degrees kelvin for the background radiation observed. Swedish astronomer, Hannes Alfven, originator of the “plasma theory” states:

“The claim that this radiation lends strong support to hot big cosmologies is without foundation.”

Dartmouth’s Robert Oldershaw has also stated the same thing-the observations of the background radiation “has a non primordial astrophysical origin.”

Abundance of light elements

The third and probably the weakest argument for the Big Bang comes from the observation of hydrogen and helium throughout the universe. Fred Hoyle and Geoffrey Burbidge (both reject the Big Bang but support other theories) showed that intense energy from the Big Bang could create the large amount of hydrogen and helium but not the other elements observed. Narlikar stated:

Big-bang cosmology is supposed to explain the origin of most light nuclei. But although it can with some success explain the formation of helium and deuterium, it runs into problems with other nuclei such as lithium, beryllium and boron. Even with deuterium it places such stringent upper limits on how much baryonic matter (“ordinary” matter, in the form of neutrons and protons) is allowed in the Universe that it forces astronomers to suggest that the “dark” matter thought to make up most of the mass is in some exotic form.

The acceptance of the big bang theory would indicate there should be much more matter in the universe than can currently be observed. In order to make their theory work they invent the presence of “dark” matter that we can’t observe.

Conclusion

The Big Bang theory is in trouble. Oldershaw stated:

In light of all these problems, it is astounding that the big-bang hypothesis is the only cosmological model that physicists have taken seriously.

Evolutionist John Maddox stated:

In all respects save that of convenience, this view of the origin of the Universe is thoroughly unsatisfactory.

Geoffrey Burbidge stated:

Big-bang cosmology is probably as widely believed as has been any theory of the universe in the history of Western civilization. It rests, however, on many untested, and in some cases, untestable, assumptions. Indeed, big-bang cosmology has become a bandwagon of thought that reflects faith as much as objective truth…This situation is particularly worrisome because there are good reasons to think the big-bang model is seriously flawed.

There is a model that does fit all of the observable data much better than the Big Bang Theory and evolution. Its rather simple and doesn’t break the first and second laws of thermodynamics. The problem is that evolutionists have a predisposed position that God does not exist therefore all things must be explained by natural causes regardless of whether the observations fit the theories.

Genesis 1:1  In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth.

What Does the Bible Say About the Nature of God?

Is There Really a God?

News February 28, 2012

http://video.foxnews.com/v/1475147837001/irans-war-against-christianity/?playlist_id=86856&intcmp=obnetwork. A former National Security Advisor, Kate McFarland, discusses Pastor Youcef Nardarkhani, Iran, it’s nuclear intentions, Israel …
http://reformationanglicanism.blogspot.com/ — Tue, 28 Feb 2012 17:18:00 -0800
A recent find by archaeologists during a tomb exploration in Jerusalem uncovered what could be the earliest archaeological evidence for Christianity in Jerusalem. One ossuary, an object similar to a coffin or sarcophagus, contains a four line …
http://indianajen.com/ — Tue, 28 Feb 2012 15:57:27 -0800
You and I have the freedom to worship and decide what to do for Lent. We can go to church in any of our cities and praise the Lord with all our heart. We can carry Bibles and wear crosses, but it’s not that way for many brothers and sisters …
http://www.bellofthewanderer.com/ — Tue, 28 Feb 2012 15:36:51 -0800
Tomb exploration reveals first archaeological evidence of Christianity from the time of Jesus | e! Science News. Tomb exploration reveals first archaeological evidence of Christianity from the time of Jesus | e! Science News. Posted by …
http://realityzone-realityzone.blogspot.com/ — Tue, 28 Feb 2012 15:15:00 -0800
On the morning of Tuesday, June 29, 2010, outside the Old City of Jerusalem, we made an unprecedented archaeological discovery related to Jesus and early Christianity. This discovery adds significantly to our understanding of Jesus, his …
http://fourbluehills.com/ — Tue, 28 Feb 2012 14:38:44 -0800

Christianity in the U.K.

I found this survey on the state of Christianity in the United Kingdom. It is disheartening to say the least. Some of more troubling parts are:

Nearly 72 per cent of respondents answered the religious question in the last census ‘Christian’.

When asked why they responded with this answer they said:

Only 28 per cent of ‘census Christians’ say that it is a belief in the teachings of Christianity which makes them tick the Christian box, with over 72 per cent saying it is because they were christened and 38 per cent because it was their parents’ religion.

It is even worse when asked whether they believed some of the basic tenets of the Christianity. They said:

Just 30 per cent of ‘census Christians’ say they have strong religious beliefs.

60 per cent of ‘census Christians’ have not read the Bible from choice in the last year.

Only 10 per cent of ‘census Christians’ say they seek most guidance on questions of right and wrong from religious teachings or beliefs, with over 50 per cent preferring to draw upon their own inner moral sense.

48 per cent of ‘census Christians’ believed Jesus was a real person who was the Son of God, died and came back to life.

Really! Only 48% believed Jesus was a real person who was the Son of God, died and came back to life? I believe their faith is in vain.

How about this reading from I Corinthians 15:

1 Corinthians 15:12-17  But if it is preached that Christ has been raised from the dead, how can some of you say that there is no resurrection of the dead?  13  If there is no resurrection of the dead, then not even Christ has been raised.  14  And if Christ has not been raised, our preaching is useless and so is your faith.  15  More than that, we are then found to be false witnesses about God, for we have testified about God that he raised Christ from the dead. But he did not raise him if in fact the dead are not raised.  16  For if the dead are not raised, then Christ has not been raised either.  17  And if Christ has not been raised, your faith is futile; you are still in your sins.

The survey goes on to state,

“It shows that ‘civic’ and ‘cultural’ Christian self-identification is a very different thing to the deeply rooted faith held by a much smaller number of people whose believing, belonging and behaving is strongly shaped by regular participation in active Christian communities.”

“While we can argue over details, the broad outline of what this survey reveals should not come as any shock or threat to church leaders who have been paying attention to what has been happening in recent decades.

“Top-down and institutional religion is in decline. Trying to restore or maintain the cultural and political dominance of religious institutions in what is now a mixed-belief ‘spiritual and secular’ society is a backward-looking approach,”

Here is a link to the raw research.

The United States is on a similar path. I would not be surprised to see numbers similar to these from the northeastern and southwestern parts of the United States. We are losing our Christian heritage in this country. As the survey shows, the United Kingdom appears to have already lost theirs.

Does Genesis One Teach Millions of Years or Single Days?

I really hate to put too many videos up but this presentation by Ken Hamm is an excellent investigation into whether Christians should believe in six literal days of creation or whether millions of years fit between Genesis 1:1 and Genesis 1:2. It is rather lengthy but well worth the time.

The bottom line for me is this-Are we going to believe what God wrote in scripture or are we going to believe what man says?

The Law of Biogenesis [Part II]

by Jeff Miller, Ph.D. of Apologetics Press

[EDITOR’S NOTE: Part I of this two-part series appeared in the January issue. Part II follows below, and continues, without introductory comments, where the first article ended.]

“Well, I know it’s impossible, but maybe…”

How do atheistic evolutionists get away with teaching a viewpoint that so brazenly contradicts the scientific evidence? Concerning this question, Wald said:

Most…biologists, having reviewed with satisfaction the downfall of the spontaneous generation hypothesis, yet unwilling to accept the alternative belief in special creation, are left with nothing. [Actually, they “are left” with God.—JM] I think a scientist has no choice but to approach the origin of life through a hypothesis of spontaneous generation. What the controversy reviewed above showed to be untenable is only the belief that living organisms arise spontaneously underpresent conditions. We have now to face a somewhat different problem: how organisms may have arisen spontaneously under different conditions in some former period, granted that they do so no longer (1954, pp. 46-47, emp. added).

So, pre-biotic planetary conditions were different? Conditions which would allow for the spontaneous generation of life? On what is this conjecture based? Has any evidence been brought to light which proves that there are any possible conditions that could lead to abiogenesis? No. Else scientists would be able to create life in a laboratory. Conclusion: “different conditions” = evidenceless speculation. Abiogenesis is impossible, but life is here and had to come from somewhere. We, the atheistic, evolutionary community, refuse to consider the God option. That leaves us with the assumption that Earth’s planetary conditions must have allowed for the miracle of abiogenesis in the past. There is no evidence for such speculation, but who cares? In his next breath, Wald went on to admit:

To make an organism demands the right substances in the right proportions and in the right arrangement. We do not think that anything more is needed—but that is problem enough. One has only to contemplate the magnitude of this task to concede thatthe spontaneous generation of a living organism is impossible. Yet here we are…. (1954, pp. 46-47, emp. added).

Evolutionists write, in essence, children’s fables—full of wild speculation, theories, and conjecture about the possible pre-life planetary conditions, but ultimately their viewpoint is “inaccessible to the empirical approach” (Hoyle and Wickramasinghe, 1978, p. 26). Richard Dickerson agreed with Wald. Writing in Scientific American under the heading of “Chemical Evolution and the Origin of Life,” he remarked that when speculating about Earth’s pre-biotic conditions we have “no laboratory models: hence one can speculate endlessly unfettered by inconvenient facts” (1978, p. 85, emp. added). He went on to concede: “We can only imagine what probably existed, and our imagination so far has not been very helpful” (p. 86, emp. added). So, basing theories upon imagination is now considered scientific!

Notice from this discussion that in holding to such a position about “pre-biotic conditions,” atheistic evolutionists have nonchalantly moved away from the standard evolutionary model—recognizing that it simply cannot account for the existence of life. Evolutionary theory has historically been based on uniformitarian principles, which assume that geological processes existing today on Earth have existed throughout the past as well (Merriam-Webster On-line Dictionary, 2003). Theorizing conditions that are not in existence today is, in effect, a rejection of standard evolutionary assumptions. It is the creation model—not the evolutionary model—which has historically rejected uniformitarianism. Sadly, in today’s scientific community, it appears that evolutionists have been given the freedom to cherry-pick what their standard assumptions will and will not apply to. How can such be deemed scientific?
“Watch us convert young minds to the Church of Evolution, in spite of the evidence!”

Some 50 years ago, in Frontiers of Modern Biology, George Wald admitted:

As for spontaneous generation, it continued to find acceptance until finally disposed of by the work of Louis Pasteur—it is a curious thing that until quite recently professors of biology habitually told this story as part of their introductions of students to biology. They would finish this account glowing with the conviction that they had given a telling demonstration of the overthrow of mystical notion by clean, scientific experimentation. Their students were usually so bemused as to forget to ask the professor how he accounted for the origin of life. This would have been an embarrassing question, because there are only two possibilities: either life arose by spontaneous generation, which the professor had just refuted; or it arose by supernatural creation, which he probably regarded as anti-scientific (1962, p. 187, emp. added).

So, according to Wald, in 1962 the demise of spontaneous generation was openly taught in biology classes “until quite recently,” and then, with the next breath, the teacher would proceed to engage in self-contradiction by teaching evolutionary theory with its abiogenesis myth. Though this statement was made years ago, the same is still the case a half century later.

According to evolutionists, the planetary conditions must have been different in the distant past—more conducive to abiogenesis. Enter the endless speculation about the pre-biotic world. Consider an example of how such speculation plays out in the high school biology classroom. In one high school biology textbook from the 1990s, published by the popular company Prentice Hall, immediately after explaining how Pasteur, Redi, and Spallanzani disproved spontaneous generation, the authors queried: “If life can come only from life, how did life on Earth first arise?” (Miller and Levine, 1991, p. 342). The book proceeds to speculate with profound certainty what conditions were like on Earth billions of years ago. The observant student, who is able to see through all of the jargon, will notice that throughout the ensuing discussion about these hypothetical conditions, subtle disclaimers are made. “No one can say with certainty…”; “Somehow these earliest life forms appeared…” (p. 343, emp. added). While discussing the experiments of Miller and Urey conducted in 1953, the textbook says, “Thus, over the course of millions of years, at least some of the basic building blocks of life could have been produced in great quantities on Earth” (p. 344, emp. added). The authors proceed to admit concerning the experiment’s products: “A collection of organic molecules such as amino acids is certainly not life” (p. 344, emp. added).

Next, as if emphasizing the power of intelligent design, the authors briefly discuss the experiments of Russian scientist Alexander Oparin and American scientist Sidney Fox and the round droplets (deemed “protolife”) they “created” in their lab, which can “perform tasks necessary for life” (p. 344). However, they admit that, “we would still not say that these droplets are alive” (p. 344, emp. added). So, recapping the evolutionary rhetoric to this point: evolutionary theory’s explanation of the origin of life is based on words and phrases such as, “no one can say with certainty,” “somehow,” “some,” “could have,” “certainly not life,” and “still not say that these droplets are alive.” Recall that the original point of the authors’ discussion was to explain how life could have spontaneously arose in the past. The authors, in spite of several paragraphs of “explanation,” have yet to answer the question. Assuming they have a brilliant answer coming in the following paragraphs, the ambitious student reads on.

Unfortunately, by now, the authors have likely “lost” the typical student. At this point, these students, probably not catching the authors’ disclaimers, will tend to “zone out” and just take the evolutionist’s word for it—“So, we came from goo. Please move on.” However, now the authors actually start to make candid, significant admissions. Under the heading “From Proto-life to Cells,” the authors concede:

The next step in our story is the most difficult to understand completely. From the jumbled mixture of molecules in the organic soup that formed in Earth’s oceans, the highly organized structures of RNA and DNA must somehow have evolved. Scientists do not know how these vital information-carriers formed, but there are several interesting hypotheses (pp. 344-345, emp. added).

The authors then imaginatively give several potential suggestions for how matter could have arranged itself in preparation for life to spring into existence, liberally sprinkling in words like “could have arisen” and “might have combined.” They finish off the section stating, “This is one piece of evidence supporting this interesting, but as yet unproven, hypothesis” (p. 345, emp. added). Notice that the authors still have yet to prove, or even attempt to explain, how spontaneous generation could have occurred. They spent their time presenting imaginary ways matter allegedly could have randomly and accidentally arranged itself in ways that might prepare it for life—although they have no way of knowing whether that arrangement would help or hinder the process, since abiogenesis has never been observed to occur. No evidence was given for how matter could have actually sprung to life.

Finally, the authors simply skip over the question of how the spontaneous jump from inorganic matter to living cells occurred, perhaps correctly realizing that most of the dazed and confused students will not catch this subtle sleight of hand. The authors boldly state, “Although the origin of the first true cells is uncertain, we can identify several of their characteristics with certainty” (p. 345, emp. added). So, the student is quickly distracted and led away from the original question. According to the authors, scientists do not know how living cells actually spontaneously generated, but they assert they know “with certainty” what those cells were like once they mysteriously sprang into life. The authors state this assertion as if they have decisively answered the original question about how life arose. They then proceed to speculate concerning the nature of these living cells, never answering the question of how they originally came to life. In all fairness, how could they answer such a question? Spontaneous generation has already been disproven—scientifically—and they admitted as much on previous pages. Yet they have conveniently failed to come to grips with the import of their own admissions.

The 2006 edition of the textbook did not rectify the problem. The authors acknowledge the work of Spallanzani and Pasteur, unabashedly stating that Pasteur’s work,

convinced other scientists that the hypothesis of spontaneous generation was not correct. In other words, Pasteur showed that all living things come from other living things. This change in thinking represented a major shift in the way scientists viewed living things (Miller and Levine, 2006, pp. 12-13, emp. added).

Sadly the evolutionary community has not allowed Pasteur’s findings to “shift” the way they view living things and their origins.

In this same, more recent edition, the authors “wisely” separated the discussion of Pasteur’s and Spallazani’s work from the discussion on the origin of life by 415 pages. This helps students to forget that evolution contradicts the scientific evidence found by these scientists’ work. In discussing the origin of life, the authors once again fail to accept the implied conclusion from Pasteur’s work regarding the origin of life, stating, “As you will see shortly, researchers still debate such important questions as precisely how new species arise and why species become extinct. There is also uncertainty about how life began” (p. 386, emp. added). Undaunted, the authors proceed to engage in the same hapless speculation they engaged in 15 years earlier. Similar to the previous edition, they discuss the findings, or rather non-findings, of the Miller-Urey experiments. A significant change in the 2006 edition was a candid admission about those experiments which was couched in the midst of the discussion: “Scientists now know that Miller and Urey’s original simulations of Earth’s early atmosphere were not accurate” (p. 424, emp. added). If such is the case, one might rightly ask why the experiments are still discussed at all. The answer lies in the embarrassing fact that evolutionists still have absolutely no evidence that can corroborate abiogenesis. Leaving the discussion out would highlight the unscientific nature of evolution. Leaving the discussion in the textbook creates the impression with youth that some hidden support remains for the abiogenesis postulate in the Miller-Urey experiments—support that is somehow too advanced to discuss with them at their current competency. After all, many youth are more likely to believe the teachers and textbooks they have been trained and taught to believe than they are to think critically about the material actually being presented.

In the next section, under the heading, “The Puzzle of Life’s Origins,” the authors admit, “A stew of organic molecules is a long way from a living cell, and the leap from nonlife to life is the greatest gap in scientific hypotheses of Earth’s early history” (p. 425, emp. added). And that’s it. Proof for abiogenesis is not presented. A scientific refutation of the Law of Biogenesis is not conducted. Once again, the authors fearlessly launch into pages of speculation concerning the origin of the building blocks of life, liberally using qualifying language to subtly admit that nothing the authors are saying has been proven. Concerning proteinoid microspheres, which have some cell-like characteristics but which are not considered living entities, the authors note: “Microspheres are not cells, but they have some characteristics of living systems…. Several hypotheses suggest that structures similar to proteinoid microspheres might have acquired more and more characteristics of living cells” (p. 425, emp. added). Such unending speculation, not backed by any proof whatsoever, is being allowed to fill the minds of unsuspecting youth, causing them to lose faith in the biblical model of life origins—which, in reality, is the origin model actually in keeping with the scientific evidence. The authors proceed to admit once again, “Another unanswered question in the evolution of cells is the origin of DNA and RNA” (p. 425, emp. added). So, in their pointless trek to prove evolutionary theory, evolutionists cannot even reach the abiogenesis chasm of impossibility that they must cross in order to prove their theory. They are still hampered by the chasms that exist much earlier in their mythical journey.
Structure of a Cell

Structure of a Cell

Notice that the phrase “unanswered question” can be misleading to a young biology student. It leaves the subtle impression that scientists have answered many questions about how life arose, and those answers are established fact. In actuality, the “unanswered question” is not referring to the question of whether or not evolutionists know anything about how life or its building blocks arose on the planet. The question is referring to the fact that there are questions regarding the feasibility of the origin of life that evolutionists cannot answer, but which must be answered in order for the theory of evolution even to be a possibility, much less the true, factual scientific explanation of the origin of life. Still, many unashamedly—and unscientifically—tout evolution as a fact.

In spite of the truth, sadly, with the wave of a hand, the typical biology student becomes an evolutionary disciple, not realizing that he has just succumbed to the longest, evidence-less leap into the dark that he may ever make in his life. Such vague speculation, substanceless hope, and blind “faith” can hardly be dignified as scientific. One might rightly ask, “Why are Americans allowing their children to be subjected to such anti-scientific propaganda? Why are parents not outraged that their students are wasting valuable class time learning about such speculation, rather than learning true science?”

OTHER IMPLICATIONS OF THE LAW OF BIOGENESIS

An Unreasonable Assumption which Leads to Contradiction of the Evidence

There is no scientific evidence in nature that life can come from non-life. Not one experiment has been conducted which can boast an exception to this rule. One must start with the assumption that there is no Creator and that only nature exists in order to even consider abiogenesis—in spite of all the evidence to the contrary. Again in his lecture series, Origins of Life, Robert Hazen said:

In this lecture series I make a basic assumption that life emerged by some kind of natural process. I propose that life arose by a sequence of events that are completely consistent with the natural laws of chemistry and physics. In this assumption I am like most other scientists. I believe in a universe that is ordered by these natural laws. Like other scientists, I rely on the power of observations and experiments and theoretical reasoning to understand how the cosmos came to be the way it is (2005, emp. added).

[Notice the fact that Hazen contradicts himself by claiming that he relies “on the power of observations and experiments” in his belief on the origin of life, while also admitting in his lecture series that he and all evolutionists are “woefully ignorant” concerning the origin of life, and that likely, “any scientific attempt to understand life’s origin is doomed to failure; such a succession could not be duplicated in a program of lab experiments” (2005, emp. added). He claims to rely on “observations,” “experiments,” and “reasoning” to arrive at his scientific conclusions—one of which is abiogenesis. However, he accepts this belief without reason since it is not, and cannot be, backed by observation or experiment, and according to his own words, such may not ever even be possible.] Hazen states that he considers himself to be in line with “most other scientists” in his self-contradictory assumption regarding the naturalistic origin of life. Of course, he means “atheistic evolutionists” when he speaks of such “scientists” and is absolutely correct in his assertion.

Atheistic evolutionists begin with the biased assumption that there is no God, regardless of its contradictory and unsubstantiated nature. Atheistic evolutionist, prominent science writer, and director of the Knight Science Journalism Fellowship at M.I.T., Boyce Rensberger, admitted:

At this point, it is necessary to reveal a little inside information about how scientists work, something the textbooks don’t usually tell you. The fact is that scientists are not really as objective and dispassionate in their work as they would like you to think. Most scientists first get their ideas about how the world works not through rigorously logical processes but through hunches and wild guesses. As individuals they often come to believe something to be true long before they assemble the hard evidence that will convince somebody else that it is. Motivated by faith in his own ideas and a desire for acceptance by his peers, a scientist will labor for years knowing in his heart that his theory is correct but devising experiment after experiment whose results he hopes will support his position (1986, pp. 17-18, emp. added).

Rensberger’s overgeneralized statement certainly does not describe all scientists’ approach to their day-to-day research, but it is clear from its handling of the matter of origins that such a statement certainly describes the evolutionary mindset—hardly “objective and dispassionate,” and often given to “wild guesses.” Regardless, with the assumption in place that only the physical or natural exists—no Creator exists—abiogenesis must be true, since life is here and had to start somehow. Thus, if abiogenesis is true, biogenesis cannot be a law. [Note: Rather than making assumptions that do not contradict the scientific evidence, evolutionists resort to unscientific assumptions—assumptions that contradict scientific laws which have been time-tested to be scientifically accurate 100% of the time.]

Consequently, some scientists have become increasingly uncomfortable with calling biogenesis a “law,” since a scientific law, by definition, is “a regularity which applies to all members of a broad class of phenomena,” and abiogenesis would constitute an exception, thus removing it from “law” status (McGraw-Hill…, 2003, p. 1182, emp. added). What once was commonly taught in textbooks due to its universal support by the scientific evidence is being systematically stripped from biology courses in spite of its continued universal support. In the commonly used middle school/junior high textbook, Life Science, the text’s authors do not even mention the word “biogenesis,” much less, “The Law of Biogenesis.” Instead, under the heading, “Life Comes From Life,” the authors explain the work of Redi and Pasteur and proudly proclaim:

Living things arise from living things through reproduction…. The mistaken idea that living things can arise from nonliving sources is called spontaneous generation. It took hundreds of years of experiments to convince people that spontaneous generation does not occur (Coolidge-Stolz, et al., 2005, pp. 36-37, emp. added).

So, the truth of biogenesis still stands as law, though now stripped of its appropriate scientific designation: “Living things arise from living things”; “[S]pontaneousgeneration does not occur.” Unfortunately, it seems that evolutionists, like these very authors, still have not gotten the memo. One would think that the admission, “spontaneous generation does not occur”—clearly implying there are no exceptions to this rule—would mean that biogenesis is still a law. After all, the same statements were made when it was considered a law. The only change appears to be the removal of the word “law,” while still teaching the same truth. Starting on page 170, the authors proceed to teach evolutionary theory, never even addressing the question of how life could have come about—a question which must be able to be answered before the impossible theory of evolution could even begin its “work” millions of years ago.

Other textbooks still use the term “biogenesis,” but have lowered its standing from that of a law. Under the heading, “Spontaneous Generation and Biogenesis,” another prominent life science textbook briefly explains the work of Pasteur, stating that he “provided enough evidence to disprove the theory of spontaneous generation. It was replaced with biogenesis, which is the theory that living things come only from other living things” (National Geographic…, et al., 2005, p. 19, emp. added). Notice the sly adjustment from a “law” to a “theory.” Why change biogenesis to a “theory” instead of a “law,” particularly since the same textbook defines a “scientific law” as “a statement about how things work in nature that seems to be true all the time” (p. 10)—a statement which perfectly describes biogenesis? Based on this definition, has scientific investigation over the last several years nullified biogenesis as being a “law”? As we have already seen above, the answer to that question is a resounding, “No.” There is absolutely no evidence for abiogenesis. Thus, biogenesis, by all rights, is still a law, not a theory. Only the biased evolutionist would proclaim otherwise.

Again, in spite of “hundreds of years of experiments,” in an attempt to lighten the certainty and implication of biogenesis, others are now calling it a “principle,” instead of a law. Has experimentation proven there are exceptions to its validity? No. Quite the contrary is true. However, if it is considered to be a law, then atheistic evolution cannot be true, and one must then concede the existence of God. In their textbook, Biology: A Search for Order in Complexity, Moore and Slusher discuss the Law of Biogenesis. In a footnote, they say:

Some philosophers call this a principle instead of a law, but this is a matter of definition, and definitions are arbitrary. Some scientists call this a superlaw, or a law about laws. Regardless of terminology, biogenesis has the highest rank in these levels of generalization (1974, p. 74, emp. in orig.).

In truth, calling Biogenesis a “principle” instead of a “law” does absolutely nothing to aid the evolutionary model, other than making its proponents falsely feel more comfortable with the self-contradictory viewpoint they embrace. After all, the McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms defines a “principle” as “a scientific law which is highly general or fundamental, and from which other laws are derived” (2003, p. 1671, emp. added). Evolutionists simply cannot escape the truth of the Law of Biogenesis. Evolution cannot be true, and the Law of Biogenesis also be true. Why go against the scientific evidence in support of an unscientific whim?

A Recent Quibble

Today’s evolutionist tries to side step the abiogenesis problem by contending that evolution has nothing to do with the origin of life, but rather is a theory which starts with life already in existence and explains the origin of all species from that original life form. However, this is wishful thinking. Historically, evolutionists have recognized that abiogenesis is a fundamental assumption inherent in evolutionary theory. Recall that Kerkut listed abiogenesis as the first assumption in a list of non-provable assumptions upon which evolution is founded (Kerkut, 1960, p. 6). Recall further that atheistic evolutionist Robert Hazen admitted that in his assumption of abiogenesis, he is “like most other scientists” (2005). After all, without abiogenesis in place, there is no starting point for atheistic evolution. One would have to concede, at the very least, some form of theistic evolution. However, proposed theistic evolutionary models have been found to be untenable as well (cf. Thompson, 2000). Further, evolutionists themselves often use the term “evolution” as a generalized catchall word encompassing all materialistic origin models, including those dealing with the origin of the cosmos, not just the origin of species. Creationists are merely using the evolutionists’ terms in the same way they use them. The truth is, one cannot logically commence a study of Life Science or Biology—studies which are intimately linked with the theory of evolution by scientists today—without first studying the origin of that life which allegedly evolved from a single-celled organism into the various forms of life on Earth today. The two are linked and logically cannot be separated. The reality is that since macroevolution cannot harmonize with true theism (cf. Thompson, 2000), that theory is left alongside abiogenesis as a fundamental plank of atheism. The two are intimately linked and stand or fall together.

One wonders why some “scientists” are so unscientific in their view of origins. Why pick the view that is, by their own admission, “impossible”? Why not look at the scientific evidence and allow it to lead to a conclusion that is in keeping with that evidence—regardless of whether or not they wish to accept it, and regardless of whether the ultimate Cause of life can be directly observed? Would not such an approach be the reasonable one? Would not such an approach be the scientific one? Why should the assumption be made that there is no Creator? Recognizing the existence of a Creator allows for an explanation of the origin of life that is in keeping with the scientific evidence—unlike abiogenesis. The late, renowned British philosopher and former atheist, Antony Flew, after decades of promoting atheism, decided at the end of his life to accept the evidence and concede the existence of a Supreme Being. He wrote, “The only satisfactory explanation for the origin of such ‘end-directed, self-replicating’ life as we see on earth is an infinitely intelligent Mind” (2007, p. 132). While his willingness to stand against the overwhelming tide of false science in becoming somewhat of a deist is certainly commendable, coming to such a conclusion should not be difficult. An unbiased examination of the scientific evidence on the matter shouts the truth to the unbiased mind.

CONCLUSION

If it could be said that the Law of Biogenesis contradicts the scientific evidence, it would be false. However, such is not the case. It is in keeping with all the evidence. Consider, though, that if one rejects the Creation model, the Law of Biogenesis must be false, since without the Creation model, life had to come from non-life—in violation of that law. The atheistic evolutionist’s conclusion: all of the scientific evidence over the centuries which has proven, according to the evolutionists themselves, the impossibility of abiogenesis, should be discarded in support of a theory which has no scientific support.

Evolution is not in harmony with true science. Creation, however, is. If abiogenesis is not true according to science, special creation, which does not contradict the Law of Biogenesis, must, of necessity, be true. Science, once again, is the friend of God and His Word and the enemy of the atheist.

REFERENCES

Coolidge-Stolz, Elizabeth, Jan Jenner, Marylin Lisowski, Donald Cronkite, and Linda Cronin Jones (2005), Life Science (Boston, MA: Prentice Hall).

Dickerson, Richard E. (1978), “Chemical Evolution and the Origin of Life,” Scientific American, 239[3]:70-110, September.

Flew, Antony and Roy Varghese (2007), There Is No God: How the World’s Most Notorious Atheist Changed His Mind (New York: HarperOne).

Hazen, Robert (2005), Origins of Life (Chantilly, VA: The Teaching Company).

Hoyle, Fred and Chandra Wickramasinghe (1978), Lifecloud (New York: Harper & Row).

Kerkut, George A. (1960), The Implications of Evolution (London: Pergamon).

McGraw-Hill Dictionary of Scientific and Technical Terms (2003), pub. M.D. Licker (New York: McGraw-Hill), sixth edition.

Miller, Kenneth R. and Joseph Levine (1991), Biology (Englewood Cliffs, NJ: Prentice Hall).

Miller, Kenneth R. and Joseph S. Levine (2006), Biology (Upper Saddle River, NJ: Prentice Hall).

Merriam-Webster On-line Dictionary (2003), http://www.m-w.com/cgi-bin/dictionary.

Moore, John N. and H.S. Slusher (1974), Biology: A Search for Order in Complexity (Grand Rapids, MI: Zondervan).

National Geographic Education Division, Lucy Daniel, Peter Rillero, Alton Biggs, Edward Ortleb, and Dinah Zike (2005), Life Sciences (New York: McGraw-Hill/Glencoe).

Rensberger, Boyce (1986), How the World Works (New York: William Morrow).

Thompson, Bert (2000), Creation Compromises (Montgomery, AL: Apologetics Press).

Wald, George (1954), “The Origin of Life,” Scientific American, 191[2]:44-53, August.

Wald, George (1962), “Theories on the Origin of Life” in Frontiers of Modern Biology (Boston, MA: Houghton-Mifflin).

 

Man Shall Live by Faith

Conventional wisdom says Christians (or any person who doesn’t believe in evolution) live by faith. In contrast Evolutionists live by fact based scientific knowledge. When an Evolutionist states they believe in evolution, their statements are made based on what they believe is scientific evidences presented through scientific study, experimentation and evaluation. Is this true?

As Berkeley University states, “Only testable ideas are within the purview of science. For an idea to be testable, it must logically generate specific expectations — in other words, a set of observations that we could expect to make if the idea were true and a set of observations that would be inconsistent with the idea and lead you to believe that it is not true.” They go on to state, “A scientific idea may require a lot of reasoning to work out an appropriate test, may be difficult to test, may require the development of new technological tools to test, or may require one to make independently testable assumptions to test — but to be scientific, an idea must be testable, somehow, someway.

In other words and from the above explanation of science, we would have to be able to (1) observe evolution and then (2) design experimentation to not only prove evolution but also (3) design tests in which evolution does not work.

Does evolution fit these criteria? Has evolution been observed? Have experiments been devised to prove evolution as well as disprove it? It doesn’t appear so. These things we know:

1. No one has ever observed evolution taking place, either scientifically in existing biological activity, or,

2. Historically in the records of past biological phenomena.

Additionally, it shouldn’t even be considered a hypothesis since there is no conceivable experiment that can be devised which might refute it.

Two evolutionary biologists Paul Ehrling and L.C. Birch admitted this when they said:

“Our theory of evolution has become….one which cannot be refuted by any possible observations…No one can think of ways in which to test it.”

If anyone objects to this, devise an experiment that disproves evolution. It can’t be done. As they stated further, “Every conceivable observation can be fitted into it.” In other words it doesn’t meet one of the criterion for the scientific method. Karl Popper, professor of philosophy of science said,

“Agreement between theory and observation should count for nothing unless the theory is a testable theory, and unless the agreement is the result of attempts to test the theory. But testing a theory means trying to find the weak spots; it means trying to refute it. And a theory is testable if it is refutable…It is far from clear what we should consider a possible refutation of the theory of natural selection.”

Evolutionists respond by saying Popper still believed in evolution; but that’s the point isn’t it? He ‘believed’ but didn’t have any evidence. In other words, he too lived by faith. He believed evolution even though it isn’t testable and isn’t observable.

Even while writing the forward to Origin of Species by Natural Selection in 1971 L. Harrison Matthews stated;

“Belief in evolution is thus exactly parallel to belief in special creation – both are concepts which believers know to be true but neither, up to the present, has been capable of proof.”

Matthews states both the evolutionist and the creationist must believe in their respective positions without proof. Neither evolution nor creation is testable or verifiable by scientific standards. We are left with nothing but faith.

The evolutionist believes and insists that evolution is true yet believes it on faith. The Christian believes and insists that Christianity is true based on faith and this is exactly what the Bible says is the case:

(Hebrews 11:3)  By faith we understand that the universe was formed at God’s command, so that what is seen was not made out of what was visible.

God, in His infinite wisdom, created the universe and placed all mankind on equal footing. As we all stand before God in judgment, the evolutionist will be forced to tell God he rejected Him based on his faith (belief) while the Christian will confidently state they believe in special creation based on faith. Both are correct but which on stands justified before God? Only the one who accepts Jesus as Savior and obeys the Gospel will escape the judgment.

Have You Ever Obeyed the Gospel?

Were the Days Really Days?

by Eric Lyons M.Min from Apologetics Press. The article and other apologetics resources can be found here.

Evolution has become so popular in today’s world that even many religious people, including some members of the church, have accepted the teachings of Genesis 1 as “partial” truth. A loose interpretation allows them to “straddle the fence,” hanging onto evolution with one hand and onto Creation with the other. Bible believers who desire to incorporate the long ages of evolutionary geology must find some way to fit billions of years into the biblical record. One theory they use to add eons of time to the age of the Earth is the Day-Age Theory, which suggests that the days of Genesis 1 were not literal, twenty-four hour days, but rather were lengthy periods of time. Is such a theory to be welcomed with open arms, or is there good reason to reject it?

The available evidence reveals several reasons why we can know that the days mentioned in Genesis 1 are the same kind of days we experience in the present age, and were not eons of time. First, whenever the Hebrew word for day (yom) is preceded by a numeral (in non-prophetic passages like Genesis 1), it always carries the meaning of a 24-hour day. The same occurs in the plural (cf. Exodus 20:11 and 31:17).

Second, yom is both used and defined in Genesis 1:5. The words “evening” and “morning” are used together in the Old Testament with the word yom over 100 times in non-prophetic passages, and each time they refer to a 24-hour day. Furthermore, if the “days” of Genesis 1:14, were “eons of time,” then what were the years? And, if a “day” is an “age,” then what is a “night”?

Third, if the “days” of Genesis were not days at all, but long geological periods, then a problem of no little consequence arises in the field of botany. Plants came into existence on the third day (Genesis 1:9-13). If the days of Genesis 1 were long geological ages, how did plant life survive millions of years of total darkness? Also, how would the plants that depend on insects for pollination have survived the supposed millions or billions of years between “day” three and “day” five (when insects were created).

Fourth, while Jesus was on the Earth He taught that men and woman had been here from “the beginning of creation” (Mark 10:6; cf. Matthew 19:4). Paul affirmed this same sentiment in Romans 1:20-21, where he stated that man and women have been here “from the beginning of the creation” when they were “perceiving the things that were made.” The Day-Age Theory, on the other hand, places man at the end of billions of years of geologic time. Both cannot be true.

Finally, one must ask, if God wanted us to know that He created the world in six literal days, what words would He have used? Or if a person wanted to explain to someone else that God created all things in a literal six days, what words would he use? The answer?—the exact words used in Genesis 1.

You can trust your Bible when it says, “For in six days [not six billion years—EL] the Lord made the heavens and the earth, the sea, and all that is in them, and rested the seventh day” (Exodus 20:11).