Wednesday, August 7, 2013

Intricately Designed

A popular question I'm sure many of you have contemplated for yourself is "chance or design?"  Are we here by random chance or was our planet/universe designed by a creator?  Both sides of this argument, at their core, boil down to theory.  There isn't any "evidence" that exists which points to an answer about our creation.  It simply comes down to one's preference of science or faith.

For me, that choice seems fairly easy.  As I look at the world around me, I see a world full of things that have been designed.  An engine, watch, cell phone, computer, television, houses, works of art... the list could go on forever.  Each of these named things have been carefully designed and given a purpose by a designer; man.  I use that same form of logic when I look around at the world and how it works.  Our planet is like a carefully designed machine: different parts of all sizes working together with specific purposes in order to keep the whole part running.  To me, that doesn't seem to be something that is likely to happen merely by chance, but only by our Creator's hand.   Let's look at a few examples of how our world operates together to enhance our chance of survival (I am no scientist, these are VERY basic examples):

Honeybees:  the honey bee is very under-appreciated by us.  Honeybees pollinate 80 percent of our flowering crops (1/3 of everything we eat).  Without these bees, our diet would be very limited at best.  Not only are crops such as soybeans, broccoli, celery, nuts, and many fruits dependent on bees, but they also pollinate the majority of alfalfa, which is crucial to our cattle's diet.  The honeybee is one of the most important factors in our food supply.  What would we do without them?  Probably eat grains and drink water.

Marine Algae:  many of us have been brought to believe that rainforests are the main producer of the oxygen we desperately need to survive, but that isn't the case (although they are important, producing roughly 1/3 of the oxygen).  Marine algae, yes that nasty looking green stuff, produces 70 percent of the oxygen we breathe daily.  The plants produce the gas as a byproduct photosynthesis.  We literally would not survive without single celled, photosynthetic algae.  Crazy thought, huh?

Termites and Cockroaches:  as I read those bold letters, my first thought is, "ew."  Not so much when you realize what these little critters do for us though.  Termites recycle tons of cellulose-containing materials (such as dead trees and plants), returning them to the soil as nutrient-rich mulch.  For those of you who have been doing your landscaping this spring, you understand the importance of good mulch.  Cockroaches are even more important to humans than termites.  These roaches, like termites, also break down dead plant and animal material.  Without the existence of the cockroach through time (about 250 million years), scientists suggest that our rainforests would be smothered in decaying material.

It seems to me that our world is analogous to an intricately designed machine;  gears turning, notch in notch, helping the next one turn respectively.  Earth's ecosystem is full of checks and balances that work together to keep it operating efficiently.  Is this all by chance?  Sure, it could be, but that's not what I choose to believe and choice is exactly what answers this question for each of us.

 (A precursor to my next blog:  People with a Purpose)  Behind everything designed, there's a purpose.  Even things we don't fully understand (yet) have purpose.  I'll leave you with one hypothetical situation:

Imagine something so tiny that we can only view it through a microscope.  We don't understand its purpose, but we notice the even smaller parts of it kind of bouncing back and forth in interaction with one another.  Do you think it could have purpose?  If you answered "no," do you also think we have no purpose?  To put it into perspective, that's exactly what we are.  In the scale of the universe, we are merely a microscopic spec of dust... if that.



Until next time...

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