I always admired the candor of Sir Francis Crick, a legendary scientist who won the Nobel Prize for his breakthrough research in DNA in the 1960's. Afterwards, Crick reached the conclusion that it was absolutely impossible for life to have randomly evolved on this planet. He argued that the complexity of life is such that no amount of time could plausibly account for its miraculous appearance. But since he was a devout atheist, the only logical explanation for him was that life had been seeded here by aliens from outer space!
Crick called his theory panspermia, and he was quickly mocked by the evolutionary community. His idea was outrageous! Every Darwinist worth his salt was sure that if the origins of the earth could be pushed back several billion years, there would be plenty of time for life to have emerged from the infamous slime pools! So the origins of the earth were conveniently pushed back another billion years, but the Eureka moment never came.
To the contrary, when researchers finally cracked the Genome Code, they found that life was infinitely more complex than we'd ever before imagined- even at the microscopic level. The result has been a growing number of researchers who insist this kind of sophisticated design requires a designer. They don't mean Christian Dior!
Recently, I had noticed a change in the tone of the debate. It seemed that there was a new "consensus" building in the scientific community. The voices of Darwinism confessed it was true, they could not explain how the first non-living cell became a living one. But who knows, maybe life was introduced here from afar! If Dr. Crick were still alive, he'd surely be smiling.
Today I smiled when I read the headline, "We May All Be From Outer Space." That's right. You've guessed it. Just at the most convenient moment researchers have taken another look at a meteorite that's been lying around for a while. And they've made a "breakthrough." Two tiny microscopic particles of life which we'd always assumed stuck to the meteorite upon impact are now theorized to have arrived onboard from outer space. Other scientists still insist the particles are earthbound, but who cares what a bunch of dissident scientists say if the community can reach consensus? Right?
Watch for the snowball effect over the next few years as more Darwinists shove the origins of life into the distance and darkness of some other galaxy. The evidence here on Earth is so inflexible that the search must either turn to God or turn to outer space. Since God is out of the question for disciples of Darwin, I expect Sir Francis Crick will soon be awarded his second Nobel Prize- posthumously.
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