Heavens Declare, The

The Microscope & DNA -part 1

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Jim Burr

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Series Code: HDS

Program Code: HDS000002A


00:24 Hi, I'm Jim Burr.
00:26 Welcome to the Heavens Declare.
00:28 And you know, I've been talking about the heaven
00:30 for 25, 20 some, 25 years
00:33 and you'd think it would get old.
00:35 And I'm still blown away
00:37 by this incredible God that we worship.
00:39 And now as I look into the microscope,
00:41 I'm even more blown away.
00:43 Whether you're looking through telescope or the microscope,
00:45 you see the incredible God.
00:47 And so today, as we talk about the genetic code,
00:51 you know, Adam lived 930 years, do you believe that?
00:55 I believe that, I believe Adam lived 930 years.
00:58 And why aren't-- Why don't I live 930?
01:01 Why don't you live 930 years?
01:02 Well, you know, we didn't get Adam's gene pool.
01:05 You've heard of the gene pool, you know,
01:07 we got a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy of a copy...
01:10 maybe 150, 200 copies.
01:13 And every time you make a copy, it runs down.
01:19 I had made a picture,
01:21 I had a picture of our little grandson,
01:24 and I put it on a copy machine and I made 15 copies
01:27 of a copy of a copy of a copy
01:28 and the picture was absolutely horrible
01:31 after 15 copies, you know.
01:33 So what they tell us is that the new studies shows
01:39 that individual humans inherit some 100 genetic mutation
01:42 not found in either parent,
01:44 100 mutations not found in either parent.
01:48 I was going to say as we're evolving upward,
01:50 but the science says we're evolving downward.
01:53 Now there's fellow by name Dr. John Sanford,
01:56 and Dr. Sanford has written
01:57 a book called "Genetic Entropy".
02:00 And he is world recognized authority
02:04 on genetic information.
02:07 Dr. John Sanford has 32 patterns
02:10 in the fields of genes, 32 patterns.
02:14 You can imagine that,
02:15 so he is really respected authority
02:17 on genetic engineering.
02:20 And Dr. John Sanford says that...
02:25 every generation is running downward,
02:27 he invented the gene gun,
02:30 and he sold the gene gun for a billion dollars.
02:33 Now he's from one of the university
02:35 I think Stanford back east.
02:38 He sold the gene gun for a billion dollars
02:40 and he says, "I'm done working,"
02:41 and he just going like do what he wanted to do.
02:45 And so he started looking at the gene pool.
02:48 If the gene pool of the genetic--
02:49 If the gene pool going downward,
02:50 every child has 100 mutations not found in either parent.
02:54 Dr. John Sanford put the gene pool back together.
02:58 He started putting those 100 genes back together.
03:03 And lo and behold that
03:05 Dr. John Sanford didn't believe in God,
03:06 he was an evolutionist, didn't believe in God.
03:09 And he thought the only hope for mankind
03:13 was genetic engineering,
03:15 the only hope that we have to improve our life,
03:17 and our health, and our longevity
03:19 is genetic engineering.
03:20 But as he began to put the gene pool back together
03:22 lo and behold, he became a Christian.
03:24 He discovered when you get back 150, 200 generations,
03:27 you have a perfect gene pool, a perfect genetic code.
03:32 And now Dr. John Sanford says
03:33 "The only hope for mankind is Jesus Christ,"
03:36 he is a Christian putting the gene pool back together.
03:39 And then Dr. John Sanford looked ahead and he says,
03:42 "In 100 generations, there is nobody left on earth."
03:46 And that is incredible, that's amazing
03:50 because you know something,
03:52 God showed
03:53 what Dr. John Sanford discovered in the lab,
03:57 God showed Ellen White about 154 years ago
04:00 in the book "The causes on Health,"
04:04 in the chapter the violation of Physical Law.
04:07 God showed Ellen White this statement.
04:10 In fact what she says, "If Adam had our gene pool,
04:13 if Adam started where we are today,
04:15 we wouldn't be here.
04:16 If he had our rundown gene pool,
04:19 we wouldn't be here."
04:20 Nobody would be on Earth today and she says,
04:22 of course, she didn't use the word gene pool
04:24 150 years ago,
04:25 yeah, but she would like the vital force of Adam,
04:28 if he had our vital force, if Adam had,
04:30 in this case, she says, I'll just read it to you,
04:33 "Had Adam originally possessed no greater physical power
04:37 than men now have the race ere this would become extinct."
04:42 We wouldn't be here.
04:43 "Through the successive generations
04:45 since the Fall,
04:47 the tendency has been continually downward.
04:50 Disease has been transmitted from parent to children,
04:52 generation after generation."
04:54 Then she goes on,
04:55 "Satan's power upon the human family increases.
04:58 If the Lord should not soon come
05:00 and destroy his power,
05:02 the earth erelong would be depopulated."
05:06 So you see, what God showed Dr. John Sanford
05:08 in the laboratory,
05:10 God showed 154 years ago, in 1862, God showed her exactly
05:16 what Dr. John Sanford had discovered
05:18 in the laboratory.
05:20 Up when he was there, they all were living longer.
05:22 Right? We were living longer.
05:23 You know, but when I was born,
05:24 my life expectancy was 57 years, I think it was.
05:29 But, you know, if you get through infant mortality,
05:33 when I was born,
05:36 1 out of 10 children never made it.
05:40 They died before, you know, in like the age of one.
05:43 So if you make it through infant mortality,
05:45 all of a sudden,
05:46 now your longevity is greatly improved,
05:48 and I've been around the sun already 78 times,
05:51 okay, I'm on my 79th trip around the sun.
05:54 That's one of the benefits you get for living on earth,
05:57 you get a free trip around the sun every year,
05:59 and I'm on my 79th trip around the sun.
06:02 But we will say,
06:04 "Oh, we're living longer, we're living longer."
06:05 We are right.
06:06 Dr. John Sanford says,
06:08 "Okay, have you ever heard of bypass surgery?
06:11 Have you ever heard of cholesterol medication?
06:14 Have you ever heard of, you know, insulin?"
06:19 The first shot for insulin was given in 1922.
06:22 In 1922, millions of people were dying of a coma
06:28 in sanitariums
06:31 because they had a diabetic coma.
06:33 They were--
06:34 With diabetes, they were in a coma,
06:36 millions of people.
06:37 And so we have insulin
06:39 that extends your longevity, you see.
06:41 So Dr. Johns Sanford,
06:42 you take away all the medication
06:43 that was happening.
06:45 The doctors are trying to contract
06:48 this explosion of diseases, have you heard,
06:50 what have you heard diseases in the last couple years?
06:52 Ebola, this new virus,
06:55 we have mass extinctions of the animals, the bees,
07:00 they're worried about the bees, and the butterflies,
07:02 and we see birds, and so forth,
07:04 you know, through these extinctions.
07:06 So Dr. Sanford says you know that,
07:11 "Yes, we're living longer but it's through medicine,
07:13 in fact, you can go on the web, if you look up NORD,
07:17 that's National Organization of Rare Diseases.
07:22 NORD says, you know
07:24 what the headline of the front page says
07:26 when you go on NORD?
07:27 "Every day, a new disease."
07:31 So science is trying to keep up with these diseases,
07:33 the medicine is, you know,
07:35 pharmacology trying to keep up with these terrible diseases,
07:38 every day a new disease, folks, we're going downhill.
07:41 We're not evolving upward like evolution
07:44 would want you to think.
07:46 And they tell us that 90 percent of rare diseases
07:48 have not one single FDA approved treatment
07:53 for rare diseases.
07:55 And so, I want to show you a picture of my family tree,
08:02 my heredities, my family.
08:03 And we'll, you'll see here, my great-grandfather.
08:10 So then, he got 100 mutations not found,
08:13 you know, his father didn't have.
08:15 And in the green boxes, you see my grandpa and grandma,
08:18 they had 200 mutations not found
08:20 in my great-great-grandfather.
08:22 And my father in the blue and my mother,
08:24 they have 300 mutations not found
08:27 in my great-great-grandfather.
08:28 And then you'll see me and my two sisters
08:30 in the orange there,
08:31 and we have 400 mutations
08:33 that were not found in my great-grandfather.
08:38 Okay, so we're going to show you
08:40 the genetic code coming up now
08:42 and this would be in your DNA.
08:48 The letter codes in your DNA, okay?
08:51 And there are six billion letters
08:56 in your DNA, six billion letters.
09:00 If you were to sit at a keyboard and type out,
09:04 you know that, that is
09:05 the information that makes you, those letter codes,
09:09 you would need about, depending on your font size,
09:12 about two million to three million pages
09:17 of the code that makes you.
09:19 That code tells every cell in your body
09:22 what it's going to be.
09:24 You know, you've got 50 million heart cells,
09:28 you guys are going to be hearts.
09:30 Over here, you've got liver cells,
09:31 you guys are going to be liver.
09:32 You guys are going to be kidneys, kidneys cells.
09:34 Oh, I think it would be cool.
09:35 Wouldn't it be cool to have a kidney on each side?
09:37 No, you have to be in the body,
09:38 you have to hook up to the plumbing
09:40 and use cells over there.
09:41 You're going to be fingerprints,
09:43 you know, we have seven million people on,
09:44 seven billion on earth.
09:46 Every person has a different fingerprint.
09:48 Oh, my God!
09:50 That's in the genetic code.
09:52 And so the fingerprints, you know,
09:53 the tattoos are getting real popular,
09:54 I think, it'd be cool to have a tattoo right here,
09:57 my fingerprint right here on my nose, right?
09:59 No.
10:01 Since genetic codes, you know,
10:02 you need them on the bottom of your hands,
10:03 and you need the fingernails on the top.
10:05 If you have finger nails on the bottom,
10:06 you'd slip off everything.
10:07 So you see the instructions,
10:09 the instructions in the genetic code
10:13 tell each cell what it's gonna do.
10:17 Your hair, your liver, your lungs, everything
10:20 is programmed there.
10:23 And the Bible tells us that,
10:25 "We're knit together in our mother's womb.
10:27 I will praise thee
10:29 for I'm fearfully and wonderfully made.
10:30 Marvelous are thy works that my soul knows right well."
10:36 Could you read that code that was on the screen?
10:38 Could you read that?
10:40 Six billion letters, could you read that?
10:42 There is 100 trillion cells in your body
10:46 that depend on that for instructions of what to do.
10:52 So there's 100 billion and 3.
10:57 It's been called The Language of God,
10:59 those letter codes.
11:00 If you were going to sit,
11:01 you're going to sit at a keyboard and type out
11:05 two million pages of those codes,
11:07 two million letters, it would take you a lifetime.
11:10 They tell us it would take you a lifetime 50,
11:13 start when you're 16, 18 years old, get a job,
11:15 when you're retiring,
11:17 you have just finished typing the code that makes you,
11:20 the instructions that tells your body to make you.
11:23 And yet, the DNA can,
11:26 you see, every cell in your body
11:27 has to copy that.
11:29 And it can copy that in less than a day.
11:33 If you're sitting at a keyboard,
11:35 would you be making mistakes
11:36 typing those letter codes out for your whole life time?
11:39 Yes, you'd be making mistakes, wouldn't you?
11:42 And the DNA,
11:44 the replication of your code actually makes mistakes.
11:48 There's errors that are introduced.
11:51 Why are the errors introduced
11:52 because we live in a world of sin,
11:54 because we're running downhill,
11:55 because we have carcinogenic genesis.
11:58 Well, there's carcinogenic stuff we take in,
12:00 there's environmental pollution,
12:03 and there are free radicals and all of these things.
12:06 And so, where you'd make a lot of mistakes at a keyboard
12:09 typing that out,
12:12 the genetic code is replicated
12:16 and six billion letters when they're copied
12:20 by every cell in your body
12:22 before it dies has to copy your code.
12:26 And the mistakes that it makes
12:28 will depend upon your lifestyle.
12:30 Now if you're watching 3ABN and you are into healthy living
12:33 and the eight rules of health,
12:35 you're not going to have as many mistakes
12:36 if you've had a hangover last night
12:39 or if you're up all night watching a movie,
12:41 how well are you going to type out your code?
12:43 You're going to be making more mistakes,
12:45 but in the process of copying your genetic code,
12:50 replicating that code,
12:51 your cells make mistakes about 100,000 to a 1,000,000
12:57 depending on your environment, your lifestyle,
13:01 and things like this.
13:02 So don't push it.
13:04 By living a good life, you can, you know, through epigenetics
13:08 you can slow down this process of going downhill.
13:13 But they've now discovered
13:15 that the epigenetics actually influences
13:17 that you are what you eat,
13:19 but you are what your mother ate,
13:20 you are what your grandmother ate,
13:23 it's passed on down through our children.
13:28 And so where you would miss,
13:32 you know, your DNA would make
13:37 100,000 to 1,000,000 mistakes,
13:40 lo and behold, there is a proofreader.
13:44 God has installed a spellchecker
13:47 like your computer,
13:48 did you ever notice you sit at a computer
13:50 and you type in a word wrong,
13:52 but you'll never see at the speed of light,
13:55 at the speed of light that spellchecker
13:56 puts the apostrophe in or puts the right letters in,
13:59 did you ever notice that?
14:01 "Wow, I typed it wrong, but it came out right."
14:04 If the spellchecker would go there,
14:05 "We've got a problem here, but I can fix it."
14:07 With the speed of light, it's going to fix that.
14:08 Well, the same thing is happening in your code,
14:10 in your genetic code...
14:16 Sometimes, a spell-check goes like,
14:18 "We got a problem, we got a problem there."
14:20 Do you ever see that?
14:21 The spellchecker says,
14:23 "I don't know what the problem is
14:24 but I'll give you five choices.
14:25 There's a problem here. I can tell there's a problem."
14:27 Okay, and you'll have to decide is it this spelling,
14:30 is that this is what you meant, this is what meant,
14:32 this is what you meant, this is what you meant.
14:33 Well, you know something,
14:35 there are 50 genes that are going to correct for the error
14:40 in your replication process of those six million,
14:46 excuse me, six billion letter codes.
14:49 There are 50 genes,
14:52 I want to show you those a minute but...
14:56 there's--
14:58 It took me months and months to research this
15:00 but I've discovered, there's actually 20
15:01 that make corrections for cancer.
15:04 Now it can't make all the problems,
15:07 you can go on and see, you know,
15:12 things that are used to be in sideshows, the freaks,
15:16 you know, turtles with two heads,
15:18 and snakes with two heads, and people with six fingers,
15:21 and all this kind of stuff.
15:22 It can't fix every problem
15:24 particularly, if you get an error on--
15:26 Where you get an error from Mom and Dad.
15:29 Now so the spell-check,
15:30 initially, the spell-check goes like,
15:32 "We've got a problem here, okay."
15:34 And it looks at, we have A, C, Ts and Gs,
15:36 these letters have to match,
15:37 they fit like a key, they fit like a key.
15:40 And if they don't, you have a T when you should have a G,
15:44 there's a little bump there,
15:46 and that DNA, we get the bump in the DNA.
15:48 And the spellchecker goes, "Oh, we've got a problem here.
15:50 Well, here's a 23 chromosomes from Mom, 23 from Dad,"
15:54 it looks over here and it goes like, "Oh, okay.
15:56 That should be-- I see from Mom's had the right one,
15:59 Dad had the wrong one."
16:00 And it puts and splices it in.
16:02 Sometimes, the DNA breaks just like this one
16:04 just broke on me over the strand breaks.
16:07 And it's amazing because it will repair that.
16:11 It looks at a break,
16:13 sometime we have a double-strand break,
16:14 sometime, we have a single-strand break.
16:16 And it has the ability to go over
16:18 and it attaches a filament to the broken part,
16:21 and then it looks around to find the other end
16:24 and it will have to go to the A, C, Ts and Gs,
16:26 it goes like, "Oh, that doesn't match,
16:28 that doesn't match, oh, here it is."
16:29 And it'll find the other proper broken end
16:32 and splice them together.
16:34 Sometimes, we get these letter codes
16:37 where we have a covalence bond
16:39 where the two of them are bond together.
16:40 Sometimes, we have mismatch like this,
16:43 sometime, we have missing letters.
16:45 But the body is trying to correct for that,
16:47 I mean, it is so amazing
16:49 to think that the body can do that.
16:51 There's 50 genes that can make that correction
16:54 where you start out,
16:55 you may have 100,000 to 1,000,000 mistakes
16:59 in the copy, and the cells do this.
17:01 Every cell before it dies has to make a copy.
17:06 And...
17:10 But it is said that DNA is the language of God,
17:13 the language of God,
17:15 23 chromosomes from Mom, 23 from Dad.
17:19 It's been said God wrote a picture of you
17:21 never before seen in the history of the universe.
17:24 Do you realize every person, every one of you,
17:27 viewers, are different?
17:29 You all watch 3ABN,
17:30 is there anyone like Shelley in the world?
17:34 There are not two stars alike, every star is different.
17:36 We now know
17:37 there are not two stars alike in the universe,
17:39 everyone is different, every person is different.
17:41 I had an employee that worked for me
17:43 and he left off for another job,
17:45 and he said, you know, he said,
17:49 wrote on a letter that said a lot of nice things.
17:51 He said, "I'll speak highly of you."
17:53 And then he said,
17:55 "This world would be incomplete without you,"
17:58 and I thought, when I was cool,
17:59 and then I thought, "What a creator!"
18:02 Because Heaven is going to be incomplete if you're not there.
18:06 Every one of you such a special creation of God,
18:08 every one of you is a special creation of God.
18:12 And God wrote a picture of you on your DNA,
18:17 it all came from the DNA.
18:19 God wrote a picture of you never before
18:21 and seen in the history of the universe,
18:22 seven billion people,
18:24 every person has different fingerprints,
18:26 different DNA, RNA, voiceprints.
18:29 So this is incredible.
18:35 The storage capacity of the DNA we have the DNA, your DNA,
18:40 every cell has DNA that's six foot long.
18:43 Okay, the cord, the strand of DNA is six foot long,
18:47 and this six foot has six billion letter codes,
18:52 three billion pairs, they come in pairs.
18:54 This has got three billion pairs
18:55 but six billion letter codes and this has to be copied,
19:00 this would take months to copy this,
19:02 but it chops it every like every inch,
19:04 it'll take that 6 foot 72 inches,
19:07 and it's going to cover approximately every inch
19:09 it has a copy machine, a copier.
19:11 It's going to copy your DNA
19:13 and then it splices it all back together.
19:15 Our God is an awesome God that can do that.
19:19 The raw storage capacity,
19:21 in fact, I was telling my wife,
19:27 "You have 100 trillion cells, each cell has six foot of DNA."
19:32 They tell, I mean, I can't tell you how long this is.
19:37 I said to my wife,
19:38 "If I tell them what the science says,
19:40 they'll never believe anything else I say."
19:42 They tell you, I'm gonna tell you this
19:44 that it will reach to the sun.
19:45 You go on the internet and find out
19:46 how many times it will reach the sun.
19:48 In your body, 100 trillion cells,
19:51 all you mathematicians can,
19:53 you mathematicians multiply 100 billion,
19:59 excuse me, 100 trillion times 6 foot
20:03 you'll find out how long your DNA is,
20:06 but that's you, folks, that's you.
20:08 Every cell,
20:10 every cell in your body has six foot of DNA in it
20:14 that has the code for you, that is a special,
20:18 it makes you a special person like nobody on earth.
20:20 Yes, God wrote a picture of you,
20:23 never before and seen in the history of the universe,
20:26 seven billion people, every one different,
20:27 every fingerprint different, every personality different,
20:31 what a God.
20:33 I was--
20:34 Something written on the internet last week
20:35 and I don't have it in front of me,
20:37 but it was saying, you know,
20:38 "After God made big galaxies, the universe,
20:42 after He made the mountains, and the rivers,
20:44 and the flowers, and the children
20:45 and everything,
20:46 he realized the world needed you,
20:48 the special creation of the Lord."
20:52 Well, it's interesting now, this just broke on me
20:55 but it's interesting that the DNA
20:57 in order to copy this,
20:59 you see there, they're bound together here
21:01 where you can-- How do you copy that?
21:03 They copy end to end, it comes in,
21:05 the RNA comes in and copies that,
21:07 and it copies three at a time,
21:10 and it converts that to proteins
21:11 which tell your body what to do, what to make.
21:15 And as I looked at that,
21:16 and I thought, "The language of God."
21:21 The three letter codes are copied to time.
21:23 Could that be the Father, the Son, the Holy Spirit?
21:28 The language of God.
21:31 And so, in order to copy this, it has to split it apart,
21:36 it has to take the DNA and split it apart.
21:39 And it goes up one side
21:41 and it copies up one side and down the other.
21:43 And in this process a lot of times,
21:45 these get broken, and it fixes that.
21:48 Fifty genes can fix the problems
21:52 in the copying, and it can't fix all problem.
21:55 We live in a sinful world, we're getting old,
21:57 you know, as we get older, our genes don't do so well
22:01 and copying this, they get tired
22:04 and the telomere, the T cells shorten
22:07 and in that process, that's why we die,
22:08 we get cancer and our cells don't do as well as they did
22:12 when we're young, actually.
22:16 But the cell, you know, you can put trillions of cells
22:21 on the head of a pin.
22:22 The biggest cell is actually the ovum, the human ovum
22:24 which is about the size of a head of a pin.
22:27 And I mean what a miracle that is,
22:29 but so it unzips this thing goes up copies one side
22:34 and come back down
22:35 and maybe we will play in the future program,
22:38 we will be able to show you
22:39 the process of actually how it copies this.
22:42 It is just incredible to see how it copies that.
22:46 Let's go down to picture here that we have a chart.
22:49 I told you, there's 50 genes
22:51 that are designed to make the corrections.
22:55 There's a list of the genes that make corrections,
22:59 the top part are the damaging agents
23:02 X-rays, you know, ultraviolet light,
23:05 smoking cigarettes, and alcohol,
23:07 one of the worst for causing problems.
23:09 And then part way down the screen,
23:11 it says repair process and so they are listed.
23:14 All the different genes that base repair genes,
23:17 there are 11 there that do the base repairs
23:19 that would be the besides of the DNA code.
23:23 And we got nucleotide repairs and we got,
23:25 and God has built 50 genes that repair.
23:32 We got on the screen an amoeba,
23:34 evolution says that we all came from some microorganism
23:39 like that, like an amoeba.
23:41 Some little micro--
23:42 And they can't tell you
23:44 how that microorganisms started.
23:45 They don't even want to talk about it,
23:46 evolution does not want to talk about a biogenesis
23:49 the origin of life on earth.
23:52 They say,
23:54 "Well, evolution doesn't deal with how life got started,
23:57 evolution deals with
23:58 how it has evolved through mutations."
24:01 So we had the, the little amoeba there,
24:04 and, you know,
24:05 the amoeba decides he wants to see.
24:07 He's sitting in this little pond,
24:09 and it's boring, and he decides he wants to see,
24:12 well, I have discovered three genes
24:13 that have to do with eyesight and the ATF6, the BPM7,
24:19 and the RPE65,
24:22 you got that mutation, you born, you're born blind.
24:25 So this amoeba decides that he wants to see
24:28 and so he wants to evolve eyesight.
24:32 Well to--
24:34 You see have a mutation in this copying process,
24:36 mistakes are made
24:38 but the mistakes are bad mistakes.
24:41 Try to find a good mistake.
24:42 You can't find a good mistake.
24:44 They say, "Well, sickle cell anemia."
24:46 You know, they go like, "Oh, we can take fruit flies
24:49 and we can mess with their genes
24:51 and we give fruit flies four wings
24:52 instead of two wings."
24:54 But they cannot hook to the brain,
24:55 they're not hooked to the muscles,
24:57 and the fruit flies can't fly.
25:00 But evolution says, see, you know, we can,
25:05 you know, we could have--
25:06 If we given it enough time, anything can happen.
25:08 We can mutate upwards
25:10 and then natural selection survival of fittest
25:13 will take over and this is how everything--
25:15 This how we got from an amoeba to an elephant,
25:17 you know which we saw on the screen a minute ago.
25:21 To get eyesight,
25:23 this amoeba would have to have six million mistakes
25:28 that are beneficial mistakes.
25:30 Yeah, there are six million beneficial mistakes for him
25:33 to be able to see and which--
25:38 If he only gets out of 100,000 to 1,000,000 mistakes,
25:44 he can only have one in a billion,
25:47 did I tell you that--
25:49 When our copying process of our genetic code,
25:53 we get between 100,000 to 1,000,000 mistakes
25:56 depending on lifestyle.
25:57 These genes fix them, the genes will fix it.
26:01 When it's all said and done,
26:04 we get one in a billion mistakes end up
26:06 in your genetic code, one in a billion.
26:08 You start out with 100,000 and end up 1 in a 1,000,000,000
26:15 because the repair process is going to repair
26:19 the genetic errors that happened.
26:20 So in order for this amoeba, he's got to have six million,
26:24 six million mistakes
26:26 and they all have to be beneficial
26:27 if this amoeba was going to get eyesight.
26:29 And so you see how impossible it is.
26:31 To me, this proves that evolution could never happen,
26:37 you could never evolve up
26:39 or even though they will not even tell you,
26:41 how it could have gotten started,
26:42 we're going to get into that in another series
26:44 on how they think life got started
26:46 and that is a joke for folks, that is a joke.
26:50 The Bible says by the word of the Lord
26:51 of the heavens made the Bible says,
26:53 "That, he knit us together in our mother's womb."
26:56 we see the Bible.
27:00 Scientifically accurate,
27:01 we see the Bible telling us what we observe
27:03 and in science and observe through the microscope.
27:06 I want to thank you again for watching Heavens Declare,
27:09 we'll see you in another series.


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Revised 2016-06-02