Page 121 - Not by Chance
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                            he theory of evolution's claims are too obviously illog-
            T               ical to need discussion. They are as nonsensical as the


                            assertion that skyscrapers in the middle of a city came
                            about by chance, arising from the stones and other de-
            bris left by a rainstorm.
                To state the matter briefly, evolutionists believe that if given
            enough time, lifeless matter comes to life and forms cells. As a result

            of rivalry among cells and the mutations that happen within them,
            they bring into being a Stephen Hawking, an Albert Einstein, a Frank
            Sinatra and a Marie Curie, not to mention elephants, butterflies, fish,
            hyacinths, lemons and acacia trees.
                Because their claims are based on no scientific evidence, one of
            the most difficult things their proponents must explain is the unique

            character of the human spirit. They cannot explain in the least how it
            happens that lifeless matter can, by chance, bring about a thinking
            human being able to enjoy himself and laugh; one able to experience
            sorrow and excitement; one who can produce works of art, create

            fashions, compose music and poetry, feel pleasure at hearing a fa-
            vorite song played, enjoy the smell of pizza and the taste of yogurt;
            someone who has longings, who can be a good friend, make discov-
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