Divinely
designed DNA?
When
the cell of a bacterium divides, it becomes two bacteria, not two amoebae.
Apple trees bear apples, not oranges. A smooth-coated Siamese cat cannot give
birth to thick-furred Persian kittens, although they belong to the same feline
family. All living species, as well as varieties within them, stay the same
from one generation to the next.
The
Creator had apparently intended it to be that way from the very beginning: “And God said, Let the earth bring forth the
living creature after his kind, cattle, and creeping thing, and beast of the
earth after his kind: and it was so” (Gen
Physically
responsible for this biological order is a chemical molecule called deoxyribonucleic
acid (DNA), which forms part of threadlike chromosomes inside all living cells (except
red blood cells and some viruses). In the form of two intertwined chains in a
double helix (spiral), like a twisted ladder, each DNA comprises thousands of
encoded genes that govern heredity, the transmission of physical
characteristics from parent to offspring.
Proteins
depend on DNA for their formation. Yet, DNA cannot form without pre-existing
protein. Which came first?
Chemistry
lecturer John C. Walton further lamented: “The origin of the genetic code
presents formidable unsolved problems. The coded information in the nucleotide
sequence is meaningless without the translation machinery, but the
specification for this machinery is itself coded in the DNA. Thus without the
machinery the information is meaningless, but without the coded information the
machinery cannot be produced! This presents a paradox of the ‘chicken and egg’
variety, and attempts to solve it have so far been sterile.”94
Stored genetic information.
DNA is stored information written in a
genetic language with a four-letter (nucleotide) alphabet and grammatical
rules, telling the cells how to function and reproduce. Despite having only
four letters, through their various combinations DNA is able to maintain the
distinctions not only among all species, but also between individuals of each
species. The language components in the human gene are identical to that of
other organisms, say, a snail. Only the sequence is different.95
One of the tiniest one-celled organisms
is the bacterium R. coli. Scientists
estimate it has about 2,000 genes, with some 1,000 enzymes each. Every enzyme
contains roughly one billion nucleotides or letters of the chemical alphabet,
comparable to bytes in computer language.
Physicist Jonathan Sarfati reckons that the “amount of
information that could be stored in a pinhead’s volume of DNA is equivalent to
a pile of paperback books 500 times as high as the distance from Earth to the
moon, each with a different, yet specific content. Putting it another way,
while we think that our new 40 gigabyte hard drives are advanced technology, a
pinhead of DNA could hold 100 million times more information.”96
Information from intelligence.
Information is nonmaterial and, therefore, could not have
originated from matter. Information can only come from intelligence. Co-authors
L. Lester and R. Bohlin tell us: “Intelligence is a necessity in the origin of
any informational code, including the genetic code…”97 The vast
amounts of information in the DNA can only have come from an intelligent
source.
1962 Nobel Prize winner Francis Crick,
co-discoverer of the DNA structure, had said that the more he studied the DNA
double-helix, the more he became convinced that it could not have evolved by
chance. In his book Life Itself, he
wrote: “An honest man, armed with all the knowledge available to us now, could
only state that, in some sense, the origins of life appears at the moment to be
almost a miracle.”98
On
Designed on purpose. Biochemist Michael
Behe of
Natural
processes, such as mutation, cannot alter the DNA. I.L. Cohen
says that “any physical change of any size, shape or form is strictly the
result of purposeful alignment of billions of nucleotides (in the DNA). Nature
or species do not have the capacity to rearrange them nor to add to them… The
only way we know for a DNA to be altered is through a meaningful intervention
from an outside source of intelligence – one who knows what it is doing, such
as our genetic engineers are now performing in the laboratories…”101
Every
living cell (except a few highly specialized ones) carries in its DNA all the
information needed reproduce a new, identical organism. To clone an entire
human being, the scientist needs just one cell.
94John
C. Walton, “Organization and the Origin of Life,” Origins, 1977, pp. 30–31
95Dawkins,
op. cit.,
96Jonathan
Sarfati, DNA: Marvelous Messages or
Mostly Mess?, March 2003, Internet
97L.
Lester and R. Bohlin, The Natural Limits
to Biological Change, 1989, p. 157
98Francis
Crick, Life Itself, p. 88; quoted by
Gary Stearman, “Rael, Inc., “Cloning for Life,” Prophecy in the News, February 2003, p. 12
99Jan
Marcussen, Newsletter, Mid-January Y2K+11, p. 2
100Michael
Behe, Darwin’s Black Box: The Biochemical
Challenge to Evolution, 1996, p. 193
101Cohen,
loc. cit.
(Excerpted from
Chapter 5, Early Earth Enigmas, THE DEEP THINGS OF GOD: A Primer on the
Secrets of Heaven and Earth by M.M. Tauson, Amazon.com)