“A very skillful Watchmaker”?

“A very skillful Watchmaker”? February 8, 2022

 

Undaunted
Cover art for the forthcoming Interpreter Foundation docudrama “Undaunted: Witnesses of the Book of Mormon” (created by Ryan Knowlton).  “Undaunted” will go beyond David Whitmer, Oliver Cowdery, and Martin Harris (shown above, from left to right) to look at the Eight Witnesses and the additional five or six people whom I like to call “informal witnesses” or “unofficial witnesses.”  (Incidentally, a friend seems to have discovered an additional informal witnesses of whom I was previously completely unaware.)

 

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I have no idea whether or not any tickets are left for the 4 March 2021 premiere of the new Interpreter Foundation docudrama Undaunted: Witnesses of the Book of Mormon, or, if there are, how many of them might remain.  So, if you’re interested in attending the premiere, which will take place as part of the LDS Film Festival, you shouldn’t delay any longer.  Tickets are available, if they’re available, through this website:

 

LDS Film Festival

 

We would love to have you there.

 

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Come, Follow Me — Old Testament Study and Teaching Helps: Lesson 8, February 14-February 20: Genesis 18–23 — “Is Any Thing Too Hard for the Lord?”

Once again, Jonn Claybaugh has provided some brief but helpful notes for the Church’s “Come, Follow Me” lessons.

 

Nibley Lectures: Pearl of Great Price Lecture Series: Joseph Smith—Matthew and Joseph Smith

During the Winter Semester of 1986 at Brigham Young University, Dr. Hugh W. Nibley, professor emeritus of ancient scriptures, presented a series of 26 lectures to an Honors class on The Pearl of Great Price. This class was videotaped in the Maeser Building and made available by FARMS as both video and audio recordings. The text was then transcribed and included in Ancient Documents and the Pearl of Great Price, published by Deseret Book.

 

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Here are some reading notes that I wrote up at least fifteen years ago.  I share them in case one or two folks out there might be interested:

 

In 150 years of controversy, battle lines have too often been drawn between agnostic evolutionists, on the one hand, and biblical literalists on the other.  The debate is actually far more complex, and much more interesting.

Israeli-American physicist Gerald Schroeder trained at the Massachusetts Institute of Technology.  His 1997 book, The Science of God, not only seeks to harmonize science and biblical religion but to do so without expecting either side to yield much territory.

Schroeder contends that science itself refutes extreme evolutionists’ faith in an aimless universe. Did life emerge from random, undirected processes?  Not a chance, he says.  The game has been rigged.  “To this observer of nature, our universe looks like a put-up job.” 

He points, for example, to the astonishing commonness of carbon, the indispensable basis of all known life.  Given the way it forms, it should be extraordinarily rare.  Furthermore, if one of the “constants” involved in the energy of the “big bang” that began our universe were different by one part in 10 to the 120th power—that is, by a fraction with a numerator of 1 over a denominator of 1 followed by 120 zeroes, no life would exist anywhere.  As University of Chicago astrophysicist Michael Turner says, “The precision is as if one could throw a dart across the entire universe and hit a bulls-eye one millimeter in diameter on the other side.”  Oxford mathematician Roger Penrose studies the seconds immediately following the big bang.  The laws of nature are so perfectly tuned for life, he says, that they must have been chosen by an intelligent Creator.

Schroeder does not dispute evolution.  And unlike Richard Milton, the British science writer whose fascinating Shattering the Myths of Darwinism insists that we really don’t know how old the earth is, he accepts planetary and cosmic ages in the billions of years.  But here is where his most original argument surfaces.

Using Einstein’s relativity theory and its predictions of the compression and dilation of time, Schroeder says that everything depends on whether our perspective is from the earth or that of the cosmos as a whole.  “When one asks if six days or fifteen billion years passed before the appearance of humankind,” he declares, “the correct answer is ‘yes.’”  And he is able to correlate the six days of Genesis with the sequence of events accepted by contemporary science.

For many years, advocates of “purposeless chance” took vague refuge in “lots and lots of time.”  Whatever seemed mysterious, impossible to explain or to demonstrate, simply must have happened over billions and billions of years.  In particular, they said, life gradually emerged from random processes in a primordial inorganic soup.  Yet we know now that single-celled life began almost instantly after the earth cooled and water appeared, 3.8 billion years ago.  There simply wasn’t time for amino acids to combine randomly.

But then, unexpectedly, 3.2 billion years passed, during which life remained confined to single-cell organisms.  Nothing suggests the gradual development that Darwin imagined.  One is reminded, instead, of the way one soldier described war:  “long periods of boredom, punctuated by brief moments of sheer terror.”

The basic anatomies common to all living creatures appeared only 530 million years ago, simultaneously, with no hint from earlier fossils.  (The evidence for this so-called “Cambrian explosion” was found in 1909, but effectively suppressed and forgotten until the 1980s.)  Since then, no new phyla or basic anatomical structures have appeared.  Even developments within phyla occur without warning.  Wingless creatures suddenly disappear from the fossil record, and are replaced by creatures with fully developed large wings—in some cases, 30 centimeters across.  The Jurassic marine reptile ichthyosaurus appears completely formed, with a fish-like body, fins, paddles, and bill.  After a hundred million years, at its extinction, it is identical.

Current theories suggest that our ancestors were separated from their ape kin by the tectonic shift that created the Afro-Syrian rift eight million years ago. Did humans really originate thereafter by random genetic mutations?  Impossible, says Schroeder, who calculates that such changes would require at least forty million generations.

“Our universe,” he says, “tuned so accurately for the needs of intelligent life, indeed ticks to the beat of a very skillful Watchmaker.”

 

Posted from Honolulu, Oahu, Hawaii

 


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