Why
Bother?
The
next time you scratch your finger and raise a tiny drop of
blood, dont just wipe it off and forget about it. Pause for
a moment and reflect. That red blob the size of a pin head
is one of the wonders of the world.
Floating
around in it like a shoal of microscopic jellyfish are some
five million red cells. Every one of them is a distinct living
creature. It is born, it lives and works for about four months,
and then grows old and dies.
Scattered
thinly among the red cells are about ten thousand white cells.
There are five different types of these, and their average
life span is only a few days. Then there are another quarter
of a million floating specks called platelets, and hundreds
of different chemicals in solution, all mixed up in an apparently
hopeless confusion-and all contained in a spot no bigger than
a pins head.
Yet
in the midst of this seeming chaos there is order and purpose.
The blood surging ceaselessly round your body provides a better
transport system than all the worlds postal services put together.
Those red cells are like miniature gas cylinders. They collect
oxygen from your lungs and deliver it to practically all your
cells - and there are far more cells in your body than there
are people on earth.
Almost
every one of the vast array of chemicals in your bloodstream
is on its way to one of a myriad destinations. Some of the
sugar and glucose derived from your last meal is heading for
your muscles, there to be consumed as fuel. If you ate too
much of that chocolate cake, the excess sugar is being sent
to your liver, to be stored until your muscles need it.
Other
kinds of food products are needed for body-building; they
are speeding in all directions to the organs that will make
use of them. Iodine is destined for the thyroid, phosphorus
for the teeth, calcium for the bones, amino acids for the
tissues.
Carbon
dioxide is travelling to the lungs to be breathed out. Urea
and other waste products are making for the kidneys to be
excreted. Millions of red blood cells die every minute, but
although their work is finished they are not expelled from
the body. They contain an element - iron - that the body does
not acquire very easily. It is too precious to be thrown away.
So most of these cells are consigned to one of the bodys chemical
factories to be broken up. There the molecules of iron are
carefully preserved, to be used again in the manufacture of
new red cells.
A
wide variety of hormones travels along the red river carrying
messages. Created in one part of the body, they instruct some
other part of the body how to behave. A youths voice breaks,
for instance, and his beard begins to grow, when the hormones
from his sex glands tell his throat and his face that it is
time for him to sound and to look like a man.
Other
components of the blood are there just to keep us from harm.
It carries its own puncture repair kit. Its watery base, the
plasma, contains a protein called fibrinogen. Aided by the
suspended platelets this forms a leak-plugging clot whenever
it comes into contact with the air. Without fibrinogen we
should bleed to death from a cut finger.
The
most common type of white blood cell provides a mobile defence
force. When infection strikes one part of the body, millions
of these white warriors converge on the scene and slaughter
the invading bacteria. Other defenders, the antibodies, have
a more limited role. Each antibody spells death to only one
kind of deadly organism. Fortunately for us the blood contains
many different kinds of antibody, so that between them they
protect us from a multitude of diseases.
Facts
Worth Finding Out
Just
a tiny bloodstain on a handkerchief. Something so commonplace
that you would not normally give it a second glance. Yet when
you examine it more closely, it has a fascinating tale to
tell.
The
Bible is rather like that. It is so well known that everybody
takes it for granted. Yet very few people really
know what it is like inside. One purpose of this book is to
open up the Bible, and show how interesting it is to those
who look beneath its surface.
But
there is an even better reason for looking into the Bible.
Unlike ordinary books the Bible makes an astonishing claim.
"Read me, believe me, and do what I say," says the
Bible, in effect, "and the Creator of this wonderful
universe will give you a priceless reward."
In
these days of slick salesmen and confidence tricksters, this
seems altogether too good to be true. Many people take the
easy way out. They dismiss the Bibles claims out of hand,
without giving them a second thought.
Others
behave more thoughtfully. Perhaps they are motivated by a
sense of fair play, and do not wish to condemn anything without
first giving it a hearing. Perhaps they are moved by that
powerful urge, the spirit of curiosity which lies behind all
research and discovery. Whatever the reason, they are prepared
to examine a few facts about the Bible. This book is for people
like them.
Discovering
facts and weighing their implications is always a worthwhile
job. But it is not always an easy one. Facts can be such awkward
things at times.
For
example, if the postman comes one morning with an electricity
bill for thirty pounds and a statement from the bank indicating
that you have a credit balance of eleven pounds and fourpence,
you naturally feel rather uncomfortable. Here are some unpleasant
facts demanding to be faced. Whats to be done about it?
People
react differently in a situation like that. Some people would
push the two letters out of sight, go off to work, and forget
all about it. They seem to think that if they ignore the problem
it will go away.
Others
might get hot under the collar about it. Whos to blame, they
wonder. Did that stupid man from the Electricity Board read
the meter wrongly? Have the boys secretly been keeping the
electric fire in their bedroom burning all night? Or has that
computer system at the bank slipped up?
You
can only feel sorry for people like that. Their prejudiced
outlook sticks out like a television aerial on a minicar.
Thats the funny thing about prejudice. The other fellows prejudices
are always so obvious, but it is often very hard indeed to
see our own.
The
Layout of this Book
That
is why this book has been divided into two main parts. There
is probably more prejudice about the Bible than about any
other subject on earth. So many fantastic untruths have been
told about the Bible that it is practically impossible for
a newcomer to approach it with an unbiased mind. The Nazi
propaganda minister, Dr. Goebbels, knew a thing or two when
he declared, "The bigger the lie, the more readily people
will swallow it," If enough mud is thrown, some of it
is bound to stick.
Consequently,
the average man starts off with the assumption that the Bible
cannot possibly be true. This puts the writer of a book like
this in a fix. What should he do? Start on the defensive,
and show how weak are the arguments used to attack the Bible?
Or plunge straight in with the positive evidence that the
Bible is true?
In
making my decision, I have been guided by the advice of a
nineteenth-century enthusiast. "Defend the Bible?"
he asked indignantly. "I'd as soon try to defend
a lion! All the Bible needs is a fair chance, and it is well
able to defend itself."
So
I decided to make Part One of this book a statement of some
remarkable facts about the Bible. To me there is only one
possible explanation of these facts: that the Bible is just
what it claims to be, a true
and
infallible message from God to mankind. But then I am biased
in favour of the Bible, and you, perhaps, are biased against
it.
I
am not going to ask you to read Part One with an open mind.
We all start with convictions of one sort or another, so that
there can be no such thing as a truly open mind. As you read
Part One, you are likely to find yourself thinking, "Yes,
this all sounds very plausible on its own - but what about
all the damning evidence against the Bible?"
To
this perfectly reasonable question there is a simple answer:
that is where Part Two comes in. Part Two attempts to deal
with all the most popular objections to the Bible, and you
may be surprised to see how unfair and how trivial most of
them are.
If
you are one of those people who cant stand the suspense of
reading a "whodunnit" from beginning to end, but
have to have a peep at the ending before you get halfway through,
you may be tempted to read Part Two first. But this is not
a good idea. You would do better to read Part One keeping
all your problems in reserve; then read Part Two, to see how
many of those problems can be disposed of; and then go back
to Part One again, to reconsider the positive evidence with
an easier mind.
And
what of Part Three? That is for people whose minds are half
made up. If, when you have read Parts One and Two, you think
there might be something in the Bible after all, Part Three
will tell you how you can settle the matter once and for all.
Not
Just for Eggheads
This
book is written for ordinary men and women. After all, it
was to such folk that Jesus Christ preached. "The common
people heard Him gladly," said Mark, with evident satisfaction1.
Jesus Himself took pleasure in the fact that "to the
poor the gospel is preached"2.
For
this reason I shall stick to simple English and try to avoid
what might be called "scholarly language". The only
places where language of that kind will occur will be in passages
quoted from other authors.
In
the parts of this book that deal with scientific matters,
the kind of language used will probably make my fellow scientists
weep. The fact is, you simply cannot talk accurately about
science without using the correct, long, scientific terms.
But then, as the foreword to an excellent non-technical book3
published by a British Government scientific laboratory says,
"it is more important to be nearly right and understandable,
than academically accurate and incomprehensible."
In
any case, I am not writing this book from the point of view
of a scientist, but as a student of the Bible. Being a scientist
might help you to spot the mistakes of other scientists when
they condemn the Bible.
But
it would not help you to decide whether the Bible is a message
from God. Studying the Bible for ourselves is the only way
we can do that. And we can study the Bible without knowing
any science, or even any of the more useful subjects like
Hebrew and Greek and ancient history. The only essential equipment
is a thoughtful, enquiring mind.
Many
of the arguments in this book, especially in Parts One and
Three, are based on the text of the Bible itself. Because
most people are more familiar with the so-called Authorised
(or King James) Version of the Bible than with any modern
version, the majority of the Bible quotations are from that
version. To make the quotations easier to read I have modernised
the punctuation in some places. Sometimes I have slipped into
the words of the English Revised Version without mentioning
it, where this gives the sense of the Scriptures more clearly.
Whenever any other translation has been used I have said so.
In
other places I have had to base arguments on facts (and opinions)
drawn from many sources. For the sake of any readers who may
wish to consult the original sources of information, details
of all the more important ones are given in the notes.
Where
a book referred to in this way is marked with a star (*),
it means that I regard it as particularly helpful-and that
it is written in language a layman can understand. Some of
these starred books were written a long time ago, and may
be out of print now. But they are worth the trouble of tracking
them down, if you can manage it.
| 1
Mark 12:37 |
2
Luke 7:22 |
| 3
Fish Handling and Processing. Published by H.M.S.O.,
London, 1965, for the Torry Research Station. |
|
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