Heavens Declare, The

The Microscope & DNA -part 2

Three Angels Broadcasting Network

Program transcript

Participants: Jim Burr

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Series Code: HDS

Program Code: HDS000003A


00:25 I'm Jim Burr, thanks for watching
00:27 Heaven's Declare.
00:29 And well, we have queued up some
00:34 300, over 300 graphics
00:35 of the heavens through the Hubble telescope,
00:38 we're doing a few programs on the microscope
00:41 and looking at how life was supposed
00:44 to evolve according to evolution.
00:45 But bible says,
00:47 "By the word of the Lord were the heavens made,
00:49 and God spoke, and it was so, He commanded and stood fast."
00:52 On a previous program, we were talking about the DNA
00:55 we were talking about your code that makes,
00:58 it has, it's basically a blueprint for, for you.
01:02 The letter codes in your DNA, six billion letters
01:05 that tell every cell in your body
01:08 what they're going to be, what they're going to do,
01:10 and how they're going to work.
01:11 And we kind of ran out of time, but it is so incredible,
01:16 this the complexity of the genetic code
01:20 and how every cell has to copy this information
01:23 that makes you who you are,
01:25 that makes every person a special person.
01:27 And in your body are billions of little motors,
01:32 they're called ATP motors.
01:34 And it's like this little motor right here,
01:36 these things,
01:39 your automobile
01:41 probably red, and mine is red lines out of the box,
01:42 5,000 revolutions a minute.
01:44 You know, you have the tachometer, you get...
01:45 Some of them six.
01:47 Unless you got a formula car,
01:49 this little motor in your body,
01:52 this micro miniature motor in your body
01:55 is turning at 10,000 RPM.
01:58 If you put the floorboard on your car,
02:00 took it out of gear and floorboard,
02:01 you'd blow the engine up at 10,000 RPM.
02:04 This little thing goes at 10,000 RPM
02:07 and it's a motor generator.
02:10 And it runs on instructions it gets from the DNA.
02:14 And I think we have just found a perpetual motion,
02:17 the only perpetual motion thing on the planet.
02:20 Because what is so interesting, the...
02:22 in the DNA is instructions for making these little motors.
02:27 But the motors produce the energy that run the DNA.
02:32 And it's the most efficient motor ever conceived,
02:35 it has everything.
02:37 We're familiar with the motors on our vacuum cleaners
02:39 and our blenders and you know, you have a stator and a rotor.
02:43 And it has...
02:45 it's actually a motor generator,
02:47 chemical motor generator
02:49 that produces the energy to keep your DNA going,
02:52 and your DNA actually
02:54 has to read the information,
02:59 the instructions.
03:01 So the instructions to make these motors in the DNA
03:04 but it can't be read unless you got the energy
03:07 from the ATP Motors to run it.
03:10 It is just, the numbers, in your body
03:13 are just as astronomical
03:16 of how many of these little millions,
03:17 these little motors in every cell,
03:19 every cell in your body.
03:20 The cell's so tiny you can't even see the cell.
03:23 And we need our electron microscopes
03:25 to see the cell, to see what's going on.
03:27 And what a God that could create something like this.
03:31 It seems to me as perpet...
03:33 as I read, as I study, as I learned
03:35 it looks to me like we see perpetual motion here
03:38 because it takes all three to work:
03:41 the energy, it takes the DNA
03:43 to give instructions how to make the motor,
03:44 the motors are replaced every day.
03:46 It's just beyond belief.
03:48 Today, we're going to talk about,
03:50 you know, where did we come from.
03:53 You know, what does evolution say we come from.
03:55 Bible says that in the beginning
03:57 God created the heavens and the earth.
04:00 Evolution says, well, you know, we had the Big Bang,
04:04 can't tell where the Big Bang came,
04:05 can't tell you how the Big Bang started,
04:07 what caused the Big Bang, you know, what started it,
04:10 what was there before.
04:12 And they say, well, we can't, you know...
04:15 They say actually the Big Bang
04:16 doesn't really tell you how the universe started.
04:19 You see the Big Bang would violate
04:21 the laws of First Law of Thermodynamics,
04:24 actually the Second Law of Thermodynamics.
04:26 The First Law of Thermodynamics,
04:29 you know, we learned about that
04:30 in The Sound of Music, the musical.
04:32 Remember the song,
04:34 "Nothing comes from nothing,"
04:36 nothing, you get nothing.
04:37 If you have nothing, you get nothing.
04:39 Nothing comes from...
04:40 the first law of thermodynamics says that
04:42 energy can never be created or destroyed,
04:44 it's only changing form.
04:47 And so, people say, well,
04:48 but the big bang came from nothing.
04:51 In fact, Dr. Picone who wrote a book,
04:53 it was on his radio program on Los Angeles
04:55 and it's Adam's Einstein And The Universe,
04:59 was kind of the title of the book.
05:02 And in his book he says,
05:03 "In the very beginning of the universe,
05:07 when the Big Bang happened it may have been
05:09 as small as a millionth of a millionth of a millionth
05:11 a millionth the size of the smallest Atom."
05:15 Now here's, how you get the Universe without a creator,
05:17 okay, Dr. Picone.
05:21 And it may have been a million,
05:23 million, million, million degrees.
05:25 Those, this millionth of a millionth of a millionth
05:29 the size of the smallest atom and it may have been very hot,
05:31 the million, million, million degrees.
05:34 And he goes on to say
05:35 that there is a tremendous potential energy.
05:41 You know we see the sun giving off,
05:42 and the sun is fusing 640 metric tons
05:46 of hydrogen every second.
05:48 Where the energy come from?
05:49 And so here's how you get, he says, well,
05:51 there's tremendous energy in the universe
05:54 but there's also tremendous
05:57 negative potential gravity energy in the universe.
06:01 So, we have all this energy, all this negative energy,
06:04 therefore, they cancel, therefore,
06:06 the universe could create itself
06:09 out of practically nothing.
06:10 Even Stephen Hawking
06:12 who was supposed to be one the most brilliant man
06:14 on the planet says the same thing,
06:16 the universe can create itself,
06:18 the universe would create itself.
06:20 So, but it all started from nothing,
06:22 a billion millionth of a millionth of a millionth
06:25 the size of the smallest atom, that's pretty small.
06:27 And a million, million, million, million degrees,
06:29 that's pretty hot.
06:32 And so we have all this energy in the universe,
06:35 we've all this potential negative gravitational
06:37 and so they cancel themselves and therefore,
06:40 universe could be created out of practically nothing.
06:42 What does the Bible say?
06:43 Professing themselves to be wise, they became fools.
06:47 So how does evolution say?
06:49 Well, okay, so it says,
06:52 evolution... they don't even want to talk,
06:54 they don't even want to talk about how life got start...
06:58 how could life get started on earth,
07:00 how could life that can reproduce itself,
07:02 replicate itself, copy itself, how could that get started?
07:06 And so their Exhibit A,
07:09 the best the best one they have is this 1950's Miller and Urey,
07:13 Stanley Miller and Urey,
07:16 in a lab in Chicago made this device.
07:21 Okay, there is a picture of the device they made.
07:24 And on the right, the lower right
07:25 they put in chemicals, they put in you know,
07:27 hydrogen, ammonia, they put in methane, hydrogen ammonia,
07:32 water in that little globe on the right.
07:35 And then they applied some heat,
07:36 212 degrees to that little circle there on the right.
07:40 And so the water evaporated and then it went over through
07:43 this tube up through the top, and came down.
07:46 And in that globe on the left was spark...
07:51 electrodes in there, they put electrodes in there,
07:53 they put 60,000 volts of electricity to spark it.
07:57 Okay, and they said, "Well, now that represents,
08:01 that represents lighting."
08:05 And so they think this is what was on earth.
08:08 There's no oxygen there,
08:09 oxygen would have oxidized if they had any oxygen.
08:12 So they had, you know, methane, ammonia, hydrogen,
08:15 212 degrees heating at...
08:17 evaporated spark to... to spark it.
08:21 And then we had to cool it.
08:23 So down on the left side they actually use dry ice,
08:29 actually, a liquid nitrogen, 400 below zero to condense it.
08:33 And then it comes down at the bottom
08:34 and at the bottom we have this tar.
08:38 Okay, what the textbooks don't tell you,
08:40 what they made would kill you.
08:44 Tar, that's how we make highways
08:45 out of them, okay, out of tar.
08:47 And so they got tar.
08:48 But they got some amino acids out there.
08:49 What they probably didn't tell you in biology lab
08:52 and I am going to share with you now
08:53 a whole bunch of things they didn't tell you
08:56 in biology.
08:58 That it made left handed and right handed amino acids.
09:02 Well, all of the DNA... excuse me,
09:05 all of the amino acids
09:08 are left handed amino acids.
09:10 Okay?
09:11 Every amino acid that's builds life is left handed.
09:15 And one, even one right handed amino acid
09:18 would destroy what you're trying to do,
09:19 and that is create life.
09:22 And so if you look at what they did,
09:26 it is it is a joke, folks.
09:30 And this is the best they have.
09:32 If you look in the textbooks, you'll find the textbooks
09:35 in college's university,
09:37 Dr. Kent Hovind has done research on this,
09:39 he probably owns every science book in every,
09:41 in the last 50-60 years.
09:44 And in a survey
09:46 what you see for abiogenesis,
09:49 how life got started would be,
09:52 this is the best example Miller and Urey.
09:55 And I want to share with you some amazing stuff
09:57 of what they did.
09:58 If you look at what they did to get this to work.
10:02 And so first, they...
10:06 it was not random, okay,
10:07 they selected the chemicals, okay?
10:10 They selected the chemicals they thought,
10:12 they use biotechnical know-how
10:15 to select chemicals for this process.
10:18 Use methane, ammonia, hydrogen, and heated to 212 degrees.
10:21 They got left handed and right handed amino acids
10:24 which don't work.
10:25 The chemicals were measured and added at the correct time,
10:29 the electric spark was administered at the right time,
10:32 the scientists mix chemicals.
10:35 The experiment was carefully supervised by scientists.
10:37 You see intelligence here, you see intelligence?
10:39 You see, evolution...
10:40 We don't want intelligent design,
10:42 we don't want intelligence, we don't want creation,
10:45 intelligent design.
10:46 You see intelligence in this process.
10:49 They took liquid nitrogen at 300 below zero
10:54 to condense it.
10:57 And they use a cold trap at the bottom
11:00 to freeze the amino acids.
11:03 They were created and remove from their apparatus
11:06 through a vacuum.
11:08 It's the only way the amino acids could be saved
11:10 was to remove them through a vacuum.
11:12 The reaction was stopped by adding barium hydroxide
11:18 and sulphuric acid,
11:20 the chemical they used to stop the reaction.
11:23 And they...
11:25 it was it was evaporated to improve...
11:28 to remove the impurities.
11:30 And each one of the 20 of varieties,
11:32 amino acids and protein structures must be left handed.
11:35 Okay?
11:37 So as I looked at the chemicals,
11:38 looked at the thing they did.
11:41 Now what do they use?
11:42 They use liquid nitrogen,
11:44 they use sulphuric acid,
11:46 barium hydroxide, they use ammonia,
11:49 and they use methane and hydrogen,
11:53 212 degrees, okay.
11:55 This is the best,
11:57 this is the best they've got for evolution, okay.
12:00 You could go in your garage
12:04 and you could make sulphuric acid,
12:06 you go on the internet and find out.
12:08 This...internet will tell you can make sulphuric acid,
12:11 which you'll do.
12:12 To make sulphuric acid, you need magnesium sulphate.
12:16 I don't know where that came from
12:17 in the primordial soup, this was...
12:19 You know, they say, well, okay,
12:20 so in the beginning there the Big Bang,
12:21 and then Earth formed, the planets formed,
12:24 then it rained on the rocks for millions of years,
12:27 we had this warm little pond.
12:28 Well, if its 212 degrees,
12:30 and you going to get a rain at 212 degrees,
12:32 you get steam at 212 degrees.
12:35 But they say, no, it rained on the rocks,
12:36 we had this warm little pond, you know,
12:38 and that's where your life got started.
12:42 And so you can make sulphuric acid,
12:44 you need to add oxalic acid, magnesium sulphate,
12:50 the filtering equipment.
12:51 You need a garage,
12:53 a water beaker, a rod, and a glass jar,
12:55 that's how you make sulphuric acid.
12:57 And this is part of evolution, this is how life got started.
13:00 And how do you make ammonia?
13:02 You remove the sulpher from the natural gas
13:04 with hydrogen to produce
13:07 hydrogen sulfide as a byproduct.
13:10 Then you remove the hydrogen sulfide
13:11 by passing the gas room mixture of zinc oxide.
13:16 The zinc oxide will react with the hydrogen sulfide
13:19 to form zinc sulfide and water.
13:22 This is a fairy tale.
13:23 They say that evolution is a fairy tale for adults.
13:26 I mean, you could make this.
13:29 How do you make liquid nitrogen?
13:31 Okay.
13:32 You take, you need to get make a liquid hydrogen
13:34 you need a cryogenic refrigerator.
13:36 Okay.
13:38 You need a turbo expander and a machine shop,
13:41 and you happened to be a good mechanic
13:42 to do all kinds of plumbing and pipes and stuff like this.
13:45 So all this stuff in order to try to get life
13:49 to start on earth, there some little evidence
13:51 of how life could have started from nothing.
13:53 Life that will reproduce itself,
13:54 life that will replicate itself.
13:56 You know, I got one telescope binoculars
13:58 I've been working on for a couple of years.
14:02 And I built one, but it doesn't reproduce itself, you see.
14:06 And so they say, here we have all these, these chemicals,
14:09 liquid nitrogen, sulphuric acid,
14:11 barium hydroxide, ammonia,
14:15 methane, hydrogen, 212 degrees, you know.
14:19 And we put this all together
14:21 and we got some tar,
14:24 and that's how life could have got started.
14:26 Folks, folks, when they say evolution is a fairy tale
14:29 for adults, I think it's right.
14:31 You see, they cannot tell you how life got started.
14:34 That, they don't even want to talk about it.
14:36 That idea is... they avoid that abiogenesis.
14:40 How could life have...
14:42 beginning of life possibly get started?
14:44 Once they get an amino, they say, oh,
14:46 there was a mutations, there were copy,
14:48 and the copying process of replicating this DNA
14:52 it makes mistakes, and every once in awhile
14:55 it makes a mistake, and it's a beneficial mistake.
14:57 And then natural selection comes along and selects that,
15:00 and that's how we got here.
15:02 Folks, natural selections does not add
15:06 creatures to the planet.
15:07 Natural selection actually...
15:10 natural selection to survival of the fittest eliminates,
15:14 it eliminates species.
15:17 Okay, here, let me give you an example.
15:18 We'll take a...
15:21 take a litter of pups.
15:24 I mean, you see all the varieties of dogs we have
15:27 bred, you know, it's just amazing, you know all...
15:30 And the problem is when they get more highly specialized
15:36 and bred, they're more fragile, they don't live so long.
15:40 Highly, you know, highly bred horses and so forth.
15:42 They're very fragile.
15:44 But you see, in the gene pool is all the information
15:46 for making long hair, short hair, fat dogs, big dog,
15:49 ugly dogs, cute dog, long hairs, you know.
15:51 And so you get a litter of dogs from the street, the pups,
15:54 just a litter of much.
15:56 And if you look over carefully,
15:59 you look the layer over carefully you see there's...
16:01 usually there's a runt of the litter, little guy,
16:04 and there's one that's kind of all legs and all bones
16:06 and, and some, they have longer hair and shorter hair.
16:09 So you select, want to select four dogs.
16:12 Okay?
16:13 So you select the little cute one,
16:17 and you mate to of those together.
16:19 And you get the big guy with the long legs
16:21 and you mate them together, you keep mating them together.
16:24 Pretty soon you end up with Great Danes and Chihuahuas.
16:27 Okay.
16:28 But then you also select,
16:29 you pick out the longer hair dogs,
16:31 you start breeding the longer hair dogs
16:33 and the shorter hair dogs.
16:35 Now eventually, when you keep on breeding them,
16:38 when they get highly bred you'll find that
16:41 the Chihuahua doesn't have...
16:45 it ran out all the genes that make big bones,
16:48 all the genes that make short hair and long hair.
16:51 The Chihuahua is so highly bred,
16:53 there's no... there's nothing in the gene pool
16:55 that will allow them to have the variety you started with.
17:00 Now you'll never be able to breed a dog small as a mouse
17:03 or big as a horse.
17:05 There's a limitation in the gene pool of...
17:09 the range, okay.
17:10 But you can end up with a little Chihuahua,
17:13 nuisance dog if there was one.
17:16 And you end up, as you go through this process,
17:18 now we've got all the long hair,
17:20 we got some dogs they're just long, long,
17:22 long, long hair and we got some with short hair.
17:24 And then we got the Great Dane, we got the Chihuahua.
17:26 So we got four dogs.
17:27 Okay, here's how natural selection,
17:29 survival of the fittest was going to eliminate
17:32 three of those four dogs.
17:34 They're going to not survive.
17:35 You put them in the mountains of Colorado
17:36 where I live, at 7,000 foot,
17:39 higher where it's cold.
17:41 Now, those Chihuahua,
17:42 he's gonna get eaten by the coyotes,
17:45 the Great Dane is going... because he got long legs
17:47 and his body gives off the heat.
17:49 When we get 20 below zero, I guess,
17:51 sometimes even colder than that,
17:54 the guy without the short hair is going to die off.
17:58 And the Great Dane is going to die out
18:00 because his body expose and radiate so much heat
18:02 because he's got all these long legs
18:03 and long ears, and all that.
18:05 The only guy that survives is the guy with the long hair.
18:08 So you see, natural selection doesn't add any new species.
18:12 And that's how, that is the whole theory
18:14 about evolution, it's every once in a while
18:16 in the copying process there are mistakes made,
18:19 there are mistakes that are beneficial,
18:20 and then natural selection breeds
18:23 and feeds on those mistakes.
18:26 But you see natural selection doesn't add
18:29 anything to the species.
18:32 And yet, evolution, that's the whole basis of evolution,
18:36 the whole basis is...
18:37 We can't tell you how life started,
18:40 we can't tell you how it started
18:42 in this warm little pond.
18:43 The Miller and Urey
18:44 experimented the best they have.
18:47 And what they made would kill you.
18:52 The only answer, folks, is the Bible.
18:56 By the word of the Lord were the heavens made.
18:58 In the beginning, God created.
19:00 In the beginning, God created.
19:02 We just sees overwhelming evidence of that.
19:05 And evolution,
19:10 we could use more illustrates.
19:12 Then we get the cry we hear is we want,
19:14 you know, we want science,
19:17 we want natural science of how life arose on earth.
19:21 We don't want to create intelligent design.
19:23 And so here is a test, if you want to test, they say,
19:26 we want something we can test in our classrooms,
19:28 we want to teach our kids science.
19:30 We want something we can test.
19:32 And so,
19:34 give me an egg from a cat a sperm from a dog,
19:36 I've got, everything for life here.
19:39 And egg, in the egg is the DNA,
19:42 the RNA, is the mitochondria,
19:46 is the, you know the polymers,
19:50 the amino acids, everything for life,
19:53 an egg and a sperm.
19:55 And evolution just happen,
19:56 this just gonna happen, it happens.
19:57 We have what, 10 million species on the plant,
20:00 15 million species on the planet.
20:02 It just going to happen.
20:04 If you just give it time it's going to happen
20:06 over and over and over again,
20:08 it's called cross species evolution,
20:13 from one species to another.
20:15 How could we get 12 million?
20:16 How could we go from an amoeba and end up with a mango?
20:21 You know, an amoeba to an elephant
20:23 or to a hummingbird?
20:26 There is no across spices evolution,
20:29 there is no cross species evolution.
20:30 It will not work.
20:32 And here's the proof, you want to test evolution,
20:33 test to prove it.
20:35 Because here I have a egg and a sperm,
20:36 everything I need for life.
20:38 You can test the Bible.
20:39 Well test the Bible with this because the Bible says,
20:42 after their kind, they reproduce after their kind.
20:44 I've got everything from life and evolution, it should work.
20:47 You should be able to put all this together
20:48 and get a new species.
20:51 But it will not work.
20:54 And the Bible says 10 times,
20:56 they reproduce after their kind.
20:59 And so we can test it, if you want to test it
21:02 we can test it.
21:03 So, there was an exhibit in the New Mexico Museum
21:07 of Natural History.
21:11 It says, okay, volcanic gases, that's how life got started.
21:14 We had volcanic gases, warm little ponds,
21:16 and evaporation, volcanic.
21:18 This is in a museum in New Mexico.
21:22 Volcanic gases plus lightning equals DNA,
21:27 which equals life.
21:29 They claim, yes, they've been able to make DNA.
21:33 And you know...
21:38 Why does evolution, the evolutions,
21:41 why is there so much deception in this area?
21:46 Why is there so much deception in this area?
21:48 They are so intent on promoting their theory
21:54 that they're prepared to bend their observations.
21:56 In fact, in an upcoming program I'll show you a statement
21:59 says that, there's an article on the newsstand right now
22:03 from Science News that did some research.
22:06 A doctor, a guy wrote a book on researching scientists
22:10 how they're prepared to bend their observations
22:15 to match like, evolution.
22:18 One article in Sky and Telescope magazine
22:20 said that by tweaking
22:24 the parameters we can make the model fit what we observe.
22:30 And from Uppsala, Sweden, a doctor said that
22:34 evolution is like a faith
22:39 and many scientists are prepared
22:42 to change their observations
22:45 to make it all work out.
22:46 I'll try to pick those up.
22:49 I can actually read those...
22:50 those quotations would be good.
22:53 Few college textbooks mention any of the problems
22:57 with the Miller- Urey experiment.
22:59 Most imply that the research has conclusively shown
23:03 how the building blocks of life spontaneously generate.
23:07 Yes, go to the internet and look up Miller and Urey,
23:09 you'll read this all over the place
23:11 that this was the building blocks of life.
23:14 And when they did this,
23:16 world headlines claimed that
23:17 they had accomplished the first steps
23:20 toward creating life in a test tube.
23:23 Why the deception, why do we see so much deception
23:25 in the theory of evolution?
23:27 We have, you know, they discovered a tooth
23:29 in a gravel pit in Nebraska.
23:32 Harold Cook discovered a tooth.
23:35 And from that was created, you could go
23:39 to I think it was at London Times,
23:41 had a picture of this whole human family of extinct humans
23:47 that lived in Nebraska millions of years ago.
23:49 And since it was discovered by Harold Cook,
23:52 they named it Hesperopithecus haroldcookii,
23:55 they discovered this tooth in a in a gravel pit.
23:57 And it turned out to be, that later research
24:00 that it was actually a pig's tooth.
24:02 And you know we look at Java Man,
24:06 we look at Piltdown Man, Java Man,
24:10 so many of these were deception, were frauds,
24:13 absolute outward fraud.
24:14 In fact, in National Geographic's, 1991,
24:17 I have the pictures of National Geographic,
24:19 they had 10 pages.
24:21 The title was, "Feathers for T. Rex"
24:25 The feathers for the dinosaur, T. Rex.
24:28 Beautiful full... artists, I mean, he's a great artist.
24:30 This beautiful pictures of T. Rex
24:32 with feathers growing out.
24:35 Ten pages.
24:37 Well, this was in November of 1999.
24:39 By April they had discovered that this fossil was doctored
24:44 and somebody had worked with the fossil
24:46 and made it appear that that dinosaur had feathers on it.
24:51 And the retraction happened in April 2000,
24:57 like it was 1999.
24:58 If you look it up on National Geographic's Feathers
25:00 for T. Rex, beautiful, beautiful.
25:02 Ten pages, they are the most beautiful color pictures,
25:05 you see.
25:06 And so we've seen this deception over and over again.
25:10 Why can't you know, why can't they be honest?
25:13 Because they don't have enough evidence,
25:14 they have to doctor, you know,
25:16 they have to doctor the evidence.
25:18 And so we see no across species evolution.
25:22 Harvard's... Stephen Jay Gould,
25:24 paleontologist for Harvard says that he is fully aware
25:28 that there simply was no fossil evidence
25:30 for evolution of one species to another.
25:34 He's a he's a paleontologist and there's no evidence
25:37 from one species to another.
25:38 The fossil record with this abrupt transitions
25:40 offers no support for gradual change.
25:44 He proposes instead, evolution occurs in jumps.
25:49 Could a bird... this is Stephen Jay Gould,
25:51 this is Harvard, folks.
25:53 Dose Harvard know this? This is a Harvard.
25:54 Stephen Jay Gould from Harvard, the paleontologist, he says,
25:57 "Instead, that evolution occurs in jumps.
26:01 Could a bird, for example, hatch from a reptile's egg?
26:06 They call that the Hopeful Monster Theory.
26:11 Punctuated Equilibrium is what they call it,
26:14 every 50,000 years something happens like that.
26:19 Punctuated Equilibrium is the only possible answer.
26:24 Entirely new species which were suddenly born
26:27 from totally different creatures.
26:31 Can we test that? We already did, didn't we?
26:33 We got the egg and the sperm, it won't work.
26:37 You know, entirely new species which were suddenly born
26:41 from totally different creatures.
26:42 It will not work because you got...
26:44 in your body you got at army of genes,
26:47 50 genes that will prevent this cross specie evolve...
26:51 And we don't see evolution today, do we?
26:54 No folks, it is so sad, it is so sad, that our schools,
26:59 our teachers look at evolution like God wasn't big enough,
27:03 God wasn't big enough to make Adam and Eve.
27:04 Folks, if God wasn't big enough for to create Adam and Eve,
27:07 you have no hope of eternal life
27:09 because you will have to evolve out of the grave.
27:12 If God was not big enough to make Adam and Eve
27:14 then He's not big enough
27:15 to bring you forth from the grave.
27:17 But actually, all God needs is one of those cells,
27:20 one of those cells that has all the information
27:23 in your genetic code.
27:25 What a God, what a God.
27:27 I weep as I understand more
27:32 about this incredible God that we worship.
27:36 What is man? What is man that are mindful of him?
27:40 Want to say thanks for watching.
27:43 We're going to be back with more on this series
27:45 of Heaven's Declare.
27:47 Thank you again.


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Revised 2016-06-09