Do you realize that birds are not the only animals that lay eggs to propagate? There are many others; reptiles, such as lizards, crocodiles, turtles, and insects, fish, etc. Each one has its own story as to how it all happens. The only mammal that lays eggs is the platypus.
Referring to my previous blog as background for this one, the same problems of the development stages required by the evolutionary process are again extremely troubling to the evolutionist. But here is something that most of us never think about.
Dd you know that you and I also came from an egg? The process of human reproduction is extremely complicated, so much that it is mind-boggling. It screams out “design” all over. There are so many facets to the process that any thinking person would have to concede that a very great intelligence had to be behind it all. Nature has no intelligence.
Just take a look at this. In a human mother, at ovulation, an egg enters the uterine tube. Sperm enters the uterus through intercourse and goes into the uterine tube through its own rhythmic propulsions. How does it know to do this? The acid environment kills most of the sperm, but when one gets through it binds to the egg utilizing the complimentary surface proteins. Where did they come from? Binding triggers acrosome reaction in the sperm and its enzymes digest the egg membrane. Who told the enzymes to do that?
The sperm then goes into the cytoplasm of the egg and the egg is fertilized. It releases enzymes that harden the egg’s membrane and deactivates the sperm binding which prevents other sperm from fusing. Mitotic cell division occurs without cell growth (called cleavage). The fertilized egg becomes a blastocyst, embedding in the enometrium. The outer layer called trophoblast forms the fetal part of the placenta as the inner cell mass becomes a human embro.
Now catch this amazing fact; the fetal blood and the maternal blood flow through the placenta without mixing. Nutrients, hormones, gases and wastes travel through the placenta crossing in the proper directions, to nourish the forming baby, yet get rid of unwanted wastes. If evolution is in place here, how did these processes learn to do this and how many million years did it take? How were humans reproduced as this process was developing? You can’t answer these questions.
The placenta is actually composed of fetal and maternal tissues, where blood vessels enter and leave the placenta through the umbilical cord. The amniotic fluid buffers to protect the forming baby from outside disturbances.
Why are evolutionary scientists so blind to these issues? Just “Google” a web site on human reproduction and marvel at all that scientists have learned about it. Yet, they still maintain that it all happened by “natural selection,” or “chance.” In my estimation, natural selection is just another way of saying that God created it all, without actually acknowledging Him. There is no “mother nature.” That’s a misnomer if there ever was one. Neither is there a “mother earth.” However, there is a “Father God,” and it is so obvious that He designed it all.
Only one problem remains here, if the evolutionists ever acknowledge God, they will have to serve Him, and thereby hangs their dilemma.
J. Hartline
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