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00:00The clock ticks, slowly the cogwheels tug on the future and the past.
00:18Did time make the clock?
00:21Did the cogwheels make the clock?
00:30The clock ticks, slowly the cogwheels tug on the future and the past.
00:43The clock ticks, slowly the cogwheels tug on the future and the past.
01:13Life of all sorts exists on our planet.
01:17Some forms are so small they can swim through the holes in the ice.
01:23Yet even these single-cell creatures are incredibly complex.
01:28Modern science has shown that they are composed of millions of atoms in a intricate arrangement.
01:34But what makes them alive, able to move and behave?
01:41A human being consists of at least 10 trillion cells.
01:46This conglomeration of atoms and cells has amazing abilities.
01:51It is alive, feels joy and suffering as well.
01:55It discriminates between beauty and ugliness and distinguishes between good and evil.
02:02How has this come about?
02:04How can a mere conglomeration of atoms accomplish such amazing things?
02:11Let's delve deeper into the most elementary part of our body, the living cells.
02:18This model shows us the nucleus, the most important part.
02:21We'll be talking more about it later.
02:24Every living creature on our planet is made up of complex living cells.
02:36Modern science has revealed some amazing inner workings.
02:40We can now watch a process of one cell dividing into two.
02:45Incredible, isn't it?
02:53Especially when you realize that the cells are made up of atoms and atoms without life.
02:59What makes them live?
03:01What is life exactly?
03:04What is life?
03:07Life lies on matter.
03:12Matter has to be highly organized to carry life.
03:16But there is a minimum of chemical organization which is necessary to bear life.
03:27The materialists say that life, since it is made up of atoms, molecules and chemical reactions,
03:36is simply chemical and nothing else.
03:40Now, we must look at this issue carefully,
03:44because life certainly works with chemistry and chemical reactions.
03:50But can we say that just because this is a fact,
03:54life is therefore nothing but chemistry?
03:58And why does chemistry happen by chance?
04:01Did life originate by chance from chemical reactions?
04:08Here is the core of the mystery of life.
04:11The living cell.
04:13By dividing it into two, our bodies were built step by step.
04:18Incredibly, the complicated diversification of the trillions of cells in our human body
04:23is produced by a single cell.
04:25The fertilized egg.
04:27The growth of the embryo is something wonderful.
04:32Apparently it comes from nowhere.
04:34Complex nervous cells, skin, muscles, blood and bones are formed
04:39using the copy of the project stored in the fertilized egg.
04:48The moment of birth has arrived.
04:51A fantastic series of complicated events happens.
04:55Each perfectly timed to produce the most fascinating of all the achievements.
05:01A new human being.
05:12We are born.
05:13Incredibly complicated.
05:15Technically precise.
05:17A marvel of parts in growth.
05:19Alive and integrated.
05:25So how can someone say that life is purely a matter of chemistry?
05:40Well, if life is purely a matter of chemistry
05:44and nothing but chemistry,
05:46the best way to understand its real potentials
05:51is to look at some of the chemical substances of life.
05:56Then we will see that it is not merely a matter of chemistry.
06:01Now, the most important chemical substance in the cell is the DNA molecule.
06:11The DNA molecule is a very long chemical molecule
06:17and it contains all the information that makes life what it is.
06:23The DNA determines the color of your skin.
06:28It determines whether you are a crocodile or a cauliflower.
06:33It determines whether you are a hare or an ape.
06:37It determines the species
06:41and it determines the properties of species,
06:45whether you invent yourself, whatever that may be.
06:48Now, how does it do it?
06:51It has sufficient information only in the human being
06:57to fill with information 1,000 books,
07:042,600 pages,
07:07full of information on how to make you and how to maintain you.
07:15Now, look, this is rather complicated.
07:19So let's see something rather more simple
07:23to explain just how the DNA molecule does work.
07:27You all know the Morse Code.
07:30Now, the Morse Code is capable of writing two letters,
07:35a dot and a dash,
07:37plus the interval between the two.
07:40It is capable of writing down all the information in the Bible
07:44or any other book if you know the Morse Code.
07:48Now, if you take a simple message in the Morse Code,
07:53such as SOS dot, dot, dot,
07:59dash, dash, dash,
08:03dot, dot, dot,
08:06there you have the message of a person that is in distress.
08:10Now, the genetic code, the chromosomes and the DNA molecule
08:16use exactly the same method
08:20of storing information on this basis.
08:23Here I have a rope,
08:26and on this rope I've got here
08:29dot, dot, dot,
08:32dash, dash, dash,
08:36dot, dot, dot.
08:39And I always have in front of you,
08:41anybody who knows the convention of the Morse Code
08:48will say, ah, he's trying to tell me that he's in distress.
08:53SOS.
09:02Now, I could use any other sequence I make,
09:06and I could use lots more rope
09:09to put in sequences to describe, say, the 23rd Psalm.
09:14Let's say the 23rd Psalm.
09:16You are my shepherd,
09:18and you could all write it all up on just the basis of a rope like this.
09:24Now, the DNA does not consist of a single rope,
09:31but it consists of two ropes,
09:34and the two ropes run parallel in a spiral,
09:39and between the two ropes are four letters of the genetic code.
09:48And those four letters of the genetic code are simple chemical substances.
09:55You've got there a very small molecule of DNA,
10:10all duplicated and connected to one another by hydrogen bonds,
10:16which are very weak chemical bonds.
10:19When a cell divides, it simply opens up,
10:22like a zipper.
10:24One half goes to one cell, one half goes to the other.
10:28Now, that's a wonderful mechanism to look at,
10:32because it means that you can actually hear
10:35the information of 1,000 books with 500 pages of information
10:42on a 9-bit system in about 20 minutes.
10:49Imagine typing the information of 1,000 books,
10:52each one with 500 pages within it, without making mistakes.
11:10The second most important thing
11:14with respect to this mentioned in the book of life
11:18is that the molecules have the ability to read themselves.
11:26Now, when we write a book, we need someone to read it,
11:30but not the cell.
11:32The cell, in the first place, creates what is known as ribosomes,
11:38and these ribosomes are complicated proteins
11:42that build this double shell that we call DNA molecules.
11:48They are the ones that build it.
11:50And when they build the second spiral,
11:53they feel the information.
11:57We can read it with our eyes,
12:00and we can feel it with our fingers.
12:03So we have two ways to read this book,
12:07but in the cell, the ribosome builds the second structure,
12:13and while it feels where it is,
12:16it throws out the proteins written in the chemical language
12:21to form you.
12:25Now, the information contained in the DNA
12:29is not written in the molecules that make up that cord.
12:34You can believe it.
12:41Biochemists have discovered that there are 10 to 87 ways
12:46to group the atoms in the human DNA molecule.
12:52According to the theory of evolution,
12:54this fantastically complicated molecule,
12:56which is just a small part of the human cell,
12:59came into existence by chance, by trial and error.
13:06Could this feasibly happen?
13:11The problem is that there is only one combination
13:14of the 10 to 87 ways that would work for reproduction.
13:19Remember, 10 to 87 means 10 to 87 zeros.
13:26Most evolutionists say that the universe
13:28is about 4.5 billion years old.
13:32Do you know how many seconds there are in 4.5 billion years?
13:37Only about 10 to 18 seconds.
13:41So, even if by an error-matter of a try,
13:44once every second for 20 billion years,
13:46there would not be nearly enough time
13:48to put together even one molecule
13:50in the time which evolutionists say the universe has.
13:56The cell, containing so much chemistry,
14:00like this one, was not created by the pure chemistry
14:03of the molecules that make it.
14:06Therefore, I firmly believe that there is an author
14:10who transcends the material of the matter
14:13from which these cords were formed,
14:16who first created the necessary information
14:19to form a cell, then wrote in it,
14:22then imposed in it a mechanism of reading and execution
14:26that the cell itself builds from the information
14:30that the author in it stored in creation.
14:35So, I remain, as a scientist,
14:38convinced that the pure chemistry of a cell
14:41is not enough to explain the activities of a cell,
14:45even if its activities are chemical.
14:48The chemical activities of a cell
14:50are controlled by the information
14:53that does not reside in the atoms and molecules of that cell.
15:06Genesis says,
15:08in the beginning God created.
15:13He created matter out of nothing.
15:17He took that matter and formed
15:20various types and forms of different shapes.
15:25Living cells, small creatures of one single cell or more.
15:33He created insects, like these ants,
15:36always busy in their daily life.
15:39And, of course, the flying birds, like this little seagull.
15:46The Bible says that an external intelligence
15:49created matter and created life.
16:04During the Middle Ages,
16:06some people thought that living beings
16:09often came from dead and lifeless matter.
16:12For example, they thought that frogs came from mud and mud in a well,
16:16and that worms came from meat in decomposition.
16:21This fairy tale idea was called spontaneous generation.
16:26People believed that worms, insects,
16:29and many other creatures
16:31had been formed by the materials in which they lived.
16:34A 17th century scientist had a recipe
16:37to create rats by spontaneous generation.
16:42He said to take a dirty, sweaty shirt
16:45and then add wheat.
16:50Then, after letting this combination
16:53simmer for 21 days,
16:55you would find that the sweat and the wheat
16:58created rats.
17:04In 1668, an Italian named Red
17:07wanted to know if the meat was really
17:09the source of the worms found in rotten meat.
17:13He did some experiments in which he proved
17:16that rotten meat had no worms,
17:18unless the flies landed on it.
17:20But few people paid attention to it.
17:25It was the famous scientist Francis Pasteur
17:28who later proved conclusively
17:30that living beings never appear
17:32from dead and sterilized matter.
17:35In other words,
17:36life always comes from life.
17:40Scientists are so convinced of this
17:42that they have already instituted it
17:44in the form of scientific law,
17:46the law of biogenesis.
17:48However, naturalistic evolutionism
17:50is based on the idea that life
17:52had a spontaneous origin of matter without life.
17:55This is believed,
17:56even when no example has ever been observed
17:59since the birth of scientific observations.
18:07Evolutionists think that life
18:10came spontaneously from a primitive soup.
18:15They believe that the atmosphere of the Earth
18:18at the time life came
18:20was a reduced atmosphere
18:22and that it was a system
18:24that was created by nature.
18:27The evolutionists believe
18:29that life came spontaneously
18:31from a primitive soup.
18:33It was a reduced atmosphere
18:35and it consisted of ammonia,
18:38water vapor,
18:40and methane gas.
18:42They believed that if a lightning bolt
18:45passed through a mixture of this sort,
18:48the basic building blocks of life
18:51would arise spontaneously.
18:55In Chicago,
18:56Miller and Fox,
18:57in the series of experiments
18:59they carried out
19:01at the age of 20 or 30,
19:03tried to repeat this
19:05to prove it experimentally.
19:08So they took a mixture of
19:10methane gas,
19:11ammonia,
19:12and water vapor,
19:14and passed an electric current through it
19:17and got a number of amino acids
19:20which are the building blocks of life.
19:25Now,
19:26they thought that these amino acids
19:29would show that life,
19:31or the precursors of life,
19:33would arise spontaneously
19:36under such conditions.
19:38And so they proclaimed,
19:40and the scientific world
19:42to this day believes,
19:44that they had experimentally
19:47taken the first steps
19:49in the spontaneous production of life.
19:52Now, is this the case?
19:54Well, there is no doubt
19:56that they produced amino acids
19:58but are they the amino acids
20:01that could be used for life?
20:05The answer is a notable no.
20:08Because life needs amino acids
20:11which are of the left-handed form
20:15exclusively,
20:17and not of the right-handed form
20:20to produce its proteins.
20:23Similar considerations apply
20:26to the production of DNA molecules
20:29which need to have exclusively
20:31right-handed molecules,
20:33and not left-handed ones.
20:35Now, life could not use these mixtures
20:37because stereo chemistry is not correct.
20:40Notably, this is the case
20:42because as they produced a racemic mixture,
20:45life could not arise spontaneously
20:48in a primitive soup like this.
20:50Stereo chemistry is wrong.
20:57Although Miller's experiment
20:59at the beginning seemed to have scored a goal
21:02for the theory of spontaneous life generation,
21:05careful examinations showed
21:07that it only contributed
21:09to further complicate the matter.
21:11Now, the core of the matter,
21:13who stored the original information,
21:15remains a mystery.
21:17Because in Miller's experiment,
21:19the formation of the amino acid mixture
21:21was of 50% left-handed and 50% right-handed.
21:24And when you have a mixture of the two,
21:27they simply do not form life.
21:29Even if you have combinations of molecules
21:32reflected like a mirror,
21:34and you put in a single amino acid,
21:36that one would destroy
21:38the utility of the entire chain.
21:44Man, incredibly complex.
21:48Behold the human brain.
21:51An apparently strange package
21:53for the beauties that are in there.
21:56If the electrochemical activities
21:58of the brain cells
22:00were invisible to the human eye,
22:02they would look like something
22:04like the countless stars
22:06shining in an endless universe.
22:13The brain is a complex structure
22:17The 12 brain cells,
22:1910 to 100 billion of them,
22:21form trillions of interconnections.
22:24And they are so wonderfully compact
22:26in their design,
22:28that the area of the brain that is here,
22:30being roasted,
22:32is literally smaller than a grain of sand.
22:39Every cubic centimeter of the brain
22:42contains at least 100 million nervous cells,
22:44interconnected by 15,000 kilometers of fibers.
22:53It has been said that this
22:55kilo and a half of man's brain
22:57is the most complex and organized
22:59material arrangement in the entire universe.
23:05Its potential and capacity is stunning,
23:07challenging the imagination.
23:14Could such a wonder
23:16simply evolve by chance,
23:18over time, in natural processes?
23:20The Bible says that when we look upon nature,
23:23your mind, by the simple fact of the word,
23:26can come to the conclusion
23:28that there is a God.
23:33So look,
23:35and look carefully.
23:44And God says,
24:06let the earth bring forth living creatures
24:08after its carving,
24:10creeping in,
24:12Reptiles and wild animals according to their kind, and it was so.
24:17And cattle after their kind, and everything that creepeth upon the ground according to its kind.
24:34The clock ticks, like the chemical substances that carry life.
24:38Slowly they turn the future into the present.
24:41Who made the clock?
24:43Perhaps the only logical explanation is that it was some kind of intelligence outside the clock.
24:49A watchmaker.
24:51Think about it.
24:53Now, you will remember that in the beginning of our program we looked at a model of the DNA molecule,
25:00and found out that it had to be inside the clock.
25:05And found out that it had to be in order, in a way, like a book,
25:10to store the information, and in the end to provide it again, so that life can be made.
25:17Now, this information is not inorganic.
25:21And so we believe, and we have scientific grounds for this, as we have seen,
25:27to believe that there is an injection of information in a matter to produce a structure full of information like this.
25:37That is, there is an act of creation instructing the matter on how to build a cell.
25:44Therefore, a man who believes in creation is not even a little disturbed
25:50if a biochemist manages in a laboratory to take the smallest particles of the Earth, the dust of the Earth, the chemistry of the Earth,
25:59and with his spirit organize and bring to life a virus, or who knows, with the passage of time, a primitive cell.
26:09To do this, he is injecting intelligence into a matter.
26:14Now, when we see the beauty of nature around us, here is a little flower.
26:20And when we realize that everything grew according to the information injected into the matter,
26:26according to what we have verified, all we have left is to be open-mouthed,
26:31amazed and admired by the wisdom of the Creator,
26:34who first had the good taste of creating everything so beautiful, and also had the technical ability to do so.
26:41And I am full of admiration when I contemplate nature around me,
26:46when I see how God did everything technically and showed the beauty of his own spirit in doing it.
26:54The scriptures are perfectly clear, and it fits perfectly well with my science,
27:12that one who did that called himself Logos, and that Logos was Jesus.
27:20Jesus himself called himself Creator, who made everything for him and for him.
27:26Now, if that is the case, then I am very happy and full of joy that he made the creation so beautiful,
27:35and that he also valued me so much to the point of dying for me to become my Redeemer.