What is the purpose of life anyway, in a naturalistic meaning? It is to eat, live, and reproduce. Even on a single cell level, cells eat, breathe, reproduce, etc. Cells are selfish and survivalists, yet in an organism they work not for themselves but for the good of the whole community. Why would a living cell bent on survival suddenly decide its purpose in life is to carry oxygen to other cells for their benefit? How about carrying potentially toxic waste away from other cells? Each step of the way is phenomenally impossible, and an even greater miracle than if God existed and just created it, and evolutionists are of no faith?
Conclusion:
Moving on I discovered a beautiful description of a Brachiasuar in the book of Job 40:15-24. I know a lot of concordances say perhaps this was an elephant or a hippo, but read the description in its truest translation, even the Hebrew if you have the resources. Some newer translations have changed the wording to make it more like something living today because many religious people have accepted the evolutionary process just as I did. Then in the next book of Job, he speaks of a Fire Breathing Dragon!!! Is this possible? Yes, look at the Bombardier Beetle, it has two chambers in it's abdomen which contain two separate gasses, and when released together they become explosive and create a chemical reaction that causes a little flash, a bang, and a puff of smoke. This is his defense mechanism. So is a fire breathing dragon possible? Yes. Is there evidence of their existence? Yes! Look at the legends of Europe, White Knights fighting fire breathing dragons. On the other side of the continent you have Oriental's which include fire breathing dragons in their parades and legends. Almost every early civilization carried forward some type of legend or myth about fire breathing creatures, all of which lived in caves by the sea or in the sea itself. Just a coincidence? Or have our ancestors carried the tale of these creatures now extinct through their legends?
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