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| Copyright © 2003 by The Voice of Prophecy |
| David B. Smith |
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P.O.
Box 53055 |
| August 14, 2003 |
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OF MEN AND MONKEYS #9
SHUFFLING CLUBS INTO SPADES In the category of “It’s not the size, but the sincerity,”
a basketball player named Tyrone Bogues concluded a successful career
a few seasons ago, playing brilliant hoops for NBA teams like the Toronto
Raptors. What made his achievement so amazing is that “Muggsy,” as he
liked to be called, was just 5’ 3”. That’s right – just 63 inches high.
Players like teammate Manute Bol towered almost two feet over him. Bogues
once starred in a television commercial for Sprite, which proclaimed that
“Height is nothing, thirst is everything. Obey your thirst.” And he cheerfully
told the devoted members of his fan club that he got the nickname “Muggsy”
because, as short as he was, his best –and almost only – weapon was to
“mug” or steal the ball from the giants lumbering past him. You have to
wonder how a 5’ 3” guard could ever get a shot off in the NBA, except
by endlessly saying, “Look, Shaquille, your shoelace is untied,” and then
letting it fly. That trick must have been a temptation for Bogues, who
capped off his basketball career by writing a book entitled In the Land
of Giants. “To make a reasonable extrapolation, we must have good grounds for believing that the process being extrapolated will continue at a steady rate. And therein lies the fatal flaw in Darwin’s theory. Centuries of experiments show that the change produced by breeding does not continue at a steady rate from generation to generation. Instead, change is rapid at first, then levels off, and eventually reaches a limit that breeders cannot cross.” And then this soundbite is really good; listen: “Breeding does not create new genes, any more than shuffling cards creates new cards.” Colson then borrows an argument from the late Christian apologist Francis Schaeffer. “Suppose a fish evolves lungs?” he asked. “What happens then? Does it move up to the next evolutionary stage? Of course not. It drowns.” Thoughtful scientists have conceded that the same argument
dooms the idea that the miracle of an eye could just spin itself into
place over ten thousand years. Suppose at least the iris appeared somehow.
There’s no retina yet, no lens, no rods and cones. But there is an iris.
Would the retina pop itself onto the stage a few centuries later. No,
because by then – according to the “survival of the fittest” – the iris,
being useless and unused and obsolete those many years, would have already
phased itself out and become extinct. The only way a human eye can develop
is if the iris, lens, cornea, optic nerve, retina, macula, extraocular
muscles, rods, cones, vitreous fluid, eyelashes, EVERYTHING . . . all
show up simultaneously on a Friday afternoon. Say, in a garden named Eden,
and in the two eye sockets of a basketball center named Adam. “Darwinism is not just about mutations and fossils; it is a comprehensive philosophy stating that all life can be explained by natural causes acting randomly – which implies that there is no need for the Creator. And if God did not create the world, then the entire body of Christian belief collapses.” And what’s really at stake here is this: the entire
framework of what’s BEHIND the universe’s hidden curtain. There’s either
a creative Designer behind what we see in the surging ocean and the vast
reaches of space . . . or there’s nothing but the random jiggling of atoms
and a one-in-a-trillion flinging together of a world where people just
start growing. “Men do not make laws. They do but discover them.” But other national leaders, who hold to the Darwinian point of view, instead craft legislation simply based on what will hold the random elements of society together. Oliver Wendall Holmes, who operated effectively in that camp, suggested that: “Laws are merely a codification of political policies judged to be socially and economically advantageous. Law is reduced to a managerial skill used in the service of social engineering – the dominant view in the legal profession today.” What else does the worldview of Darwin give us? That Cornell scholar, Dr. Provine, concludes with these chilling words: “Consistent Darwinism means: ‘No life after death; no ultimate foundation for ethics; no ultimate meaning for life; no free will.’” That’s from a videotaped debate, dating back to 1994, held at Stanford. And friend, if we came FROM nothing, then it’s certain that we’re heading TO nothing – nothing but two faded dates carved on a tombstone. Colson puts it in five words: “Our origin determines our destiny.” Friend, I’m humble enough to say: evolution may be
how we all got here. Maybe so. And if that’s what happened, then the Christian
faith – and our 75 years here on the radio – have been an interesting
but random exercise in spiritual futility. But I’ve seen the face of a
newborn baby. I’ve seen Banff National Park and Lake Louise. I’ve seen
adulterers become sainted men of God, faithful husbands, because they
were touched by the hand of the Designer. I’ve not only read how the Bible
promises a victorious conclusion to this very real experiment we call
sin, but I already see the inexorable movements as God’s family draws
closer and closer to the moment of rescue.
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