WARNING:
If you are on our mailing list
for the printed
Does
God
Exist? bulletin and have not let us know you want to remain
on our mailing list and “Renew” is in your address, the
January/February 2010 issue will be your last issue.
CANYON LANDS FIELD TOUR 2010. This year, as
in past years,
Does God Exist?
will offer a field trip designed to help Christians learn to be more
effective in using apologetics to build faith and answer questions. Our
Canyon Lands Trip goes to Zion Canyon, Bryce Canyon, and the Grand
Canyon as well as the Painted Desert, Petrified Forest, Meteor Crater,
and Sunset Crater. John Clayton will be your host and teacher along
with Alan Doty. Mark Story and QueensLander Tours will handle the
travel arrangements. The date for this year’s trip will be September
20–24, 2010 and it will begin and end in Flagstaff, Arizona. The cost
will be $797 per person for double occupancy, $898 for singles, or $549
per person for triples/quads. The price includes transportation from
Flagstaff and back, motels, park fees, and some meals. For more
information contact
Does God Exist?
at the address inside the front cover, or Mark Story, Mark@QLTours.com,
or phone 877-865-6711. See this
page for more
information on this trip.
NEANDERTHAL
FLUTE. The evidence of spiritual characteristics unique to
humans can come from several directions when archeological digs are
being conducted—worship items, the burial of the dead with artifacts
from their life or things to be used in the next life, art work, and
sometimes musical equipment. In the June 24, 2009, issue of
Nature is a report on the Hohle
Fels bone flute. This flute is from the earliest finds of humans, and
shows finger holes that were carefully prepared. Skeptics had
maintained that animal punctures could explain the finger holes, but
the research team has shown clearly that was not the case. Music is a
part of culture, and apparently the Neanderthals had it. Our contention
is that this is a racial division of man, not a new species of man and
this find would support that view.
EUTHANASIA
GOES
BIG
TIME. Sir Edward Downs was known by many people
as the former director of Britain’s Royal Opera. He recently got
attention because of the mutual suicide of him and his wife in a Zurich
clinic. Downs was in good health, but was 85 with weak hearing and
limited vision. His 74-year-old wife Joan was dying of pancreatic and
liver cancer. The two of them paid $7,000 each to a clinic that
facilitates suicide. They drank a lethal barbiturate, laid down beside
each other and died together. Their death has stirred a great deal of
controversy, being called highly romantic, highly civilized, and
“typically brave and courageous.” This event has stirred all kinds of
reports and claims. One study in the Netherlands found that one in four
doctors said they had killed patients without an explicit request. The
growing costs of medical care and the desire not to bankrupt their
families is at the basis of much of this. We would suggest the need for
an understanding of the value of human life, at all stages, is a major
issue in our world today. Source:
Time,
August
3,
2009,
page 64.
ATHEISM
CONTINUES
TO
GAIN. The American Religious Identification
Survey released data in September 2009 showing that the total number of
people calling themselves Christians in the United States has dropped
12 percent since 1990 while those claiming no religion has grown to 15
percent. Twenty-five percent of people in their 20s claim to have no
religious belief and Protestant church membership has dropped 20
percent in the last 20 years. What is interesting about these numbers
is that a
Reader’s Digest
(November 2009) survey shows that 91 percent of all Americans hope to
go to heaven. That survey also shows that in England 72 percent of all
women believe in heaven but only 55 percent of all men believe.
DOWNS
AND
CANCER. Scientific
American (August 2009, page 27) reports that people who have
Downs syndrome almost never get tumors. The reasons for this are being
studied by researchers who believe there is a genetic answer which
might provide a clue for stopping cancer.
DINOSAUR
DNA. Reports in both creationist literature and national
media about dinosaur DNA being found, are generating a great deal of
misinformation. DNA degrades with time unless it is constantly repaired
inside a living cell. While proteins have been discovered in some
fossil remains, you cannot extract DNA and experts do not believe it
will ever be possible to do so. Fossils more than 100,000 years old
have virtually no DNA left in them. Source:
Science Illustrated,
September/October 2009, page 28.
JUPITER
COMET
COLLISION
AGAIN. The earth is protected by a number
of carefully designed shields. Our magnetic field around the earth
shields us from charged particles coming to us from the nuclear power
of the sun and other stars in outer space. Our atmosphere burns up
small bits of rock and dust that could pulverize us. Bigger objects
roaming through space that are produced by a variety of processes are
more difficult to defend against. Asteroids are large chunks of rock,
and comets are very large remnants of the formation of solar systems
and contain rocks and gases. Our shield against these larger objects is
the Jovian planets—Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune, and Uranus. These four
planets are very large, and their gravitational fields catch any
objects invading the solar system and destroy them. On July 19, 2009,
astronomers observed Jupiter getting hit by a very large object which
left a scar on the planet the size of the Pacific Ocean. While it was
not as large as the Shoemaker-Levy 9 comet of 1994, it was a reminder
of how beautifully God’s system of design functions to keep us free of
astronomical catastrophes. Source:
Astronomy,
November
2009,
page
20. (On page 26 of that same issue is an
explanation of why comets do not hit the earth.)
THE
COST OF PORNOGRAPHY. Revenue from pornography in the
United States was $13 billion in 2008. The legal problems of pedophile
behavior, sexual abuse, and rape are very obvious, but even when
pornography does not express itself in violence, its effect is
devastating. A report on Christian men in
Pulpit Helps magazine (October
2009, page 8) gives some sobering statistics. Fifty-nine percent admit
to fantasizing about having sex with someone other than their wives, 61
percent admit they masturbate regularly with 16 percent saying they use
pornography to do so. Twenty-five percent admit to having an affair
since their conversion to Christ and 15 percent have had inappropriate
physical contact with women other than their wives. Suggesting that
pornography is only destructive when it is in the hands of
emotionally-ill people does not work. There is no excuse for allowing
pornography to exist in our homes or on any of our computers. The
numbers in this report are just the tip of the iceberg, and in the
general population the numbers are certainly much higher.
VACCINES
AND
AUTISM. There are very few families that have not had
autism affect them in one way or another (including your author). The
cause of autism is still being debated and is likely to be a
combination of factors, but the question of vaccines causing autism has
been a major bone of contention and a very dangerous one. Some of us
can remember plagues that struck when there were no vaccines. In your
author’s case it was polio. In 1998 a British doctor named Andrew
Wakefield reported that he had found evidence that the MMR (measles,
mumps, and rubella) vaccine had caused autism in children. Wakefield
has published more reports on his claims and Jenny McCarthy (an
actress, not a scientist) has been on a one-woman campaign against
vaccines. Recent studies have discredited Wakefield’s work, and while
people can have reactions to any vaccine or shot, there is no
widespread evidence that vaccines cause any more problems than any
other man-made medicine. The dangers of not vaccinating are huge, and
can cause damage to a child for life. Source:
Skeptic magazine, Volume 15, Number
2, 2009, page 26.
2012
NONSENSE
CONTINUES. Doomsday predictions sell. It does not
matter whether you talk about books or movies or tabloids, if you
predict the destruction of the earth, someone will buy it. There are
175 books listed on amazon.com as of November 1, 2009, dealing with the
2012 doomsday, and all of them are nonsense. The Mayan calendar does
end in 2012, but so does my 2011 calendar. Nostradamus’ writings are
more often wrong than right, and frequently are the rewrites of his
followers and not his original material. The Bible does not indicate
2012 in any of its prophecies. The planets are not aligned in 2012, and
even if they were it would not have any effect on the earth. There is
no planet Nibiru and planet X is not a planet but a designation NASA
gives to any object that has not been identified clearly. Names are
given when identification is positively made. There is no “dark rift”
in the Milky Way—just dust clouds in the inner arm of the galaxy. The
solar maximum of 2012 is when the normal solar storms peak on the sun.
It has happened every 11 years for as long as man has had telescopes to
look at the sun, and nothing unusual is expected. The FOX News report
that a “Solar Storm Could Shut Down the U.S. for Months” is a
worst-case report of what could happen if a solar storm like one
observed in 1859 happened today. It is a wild conjecture at best. There
is a lot of nonsense being circulated in the tabloids and by the
hucksters. (For more on the Mayan 2012 hoax see our
September/October
2009 issue, page 8.)
YEAR
END
REPORTS
AVAILABLE. Every year we prepare a report of
the
Does God Exist? work for
the previous year. The year 2009 was a difficult year financially for
everyone, including this ministry—but we have ended in the black. If
you would like a copy of the report, just let us know. If you are one
of our financial supporters on a regular basis, a copy will be sent to
you automatically.