Students at one university in the Middle East have suddenly stopped attending informal Bible studies, even though there had been steady interest and good attendance. It appears that pressure from university or government officials has made them afraid to participate.
Pray that such leaders will instead allow genuine intellectual and religious freedom.
(from a Christian prayer bulletin, July 2011)
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Monday, July 25, 2011
Sunday, July 24, 2011
Baptism makes waves in Ireland
God made history last September in Youghal, Ireland, a mostly Catholic city. Citizens in boats lined the river's beach to watch, loudspeakers broadcast to the city, two national newspapers reported the event - the first submersion baptism that ever occurred in Youghal.
No fewer than five people were involved in the chain of events that led to the baptism of this Irish believer. A teenager visited a youth group, and then invited her mom to attend the evangelical church. Then the mom invited her son, who brought his friend who was about to go to jail for repeated incidents of drunken violence. This son invited his father, Philip, to go with him.
Philip has heart problems, his wife has health problem, his other son has a learning disability. Life felt overwhelmingly hopeless, and Philip didn't know where to turn. He went to the CrossWorld church plant in Youghal (pronounced "y'all"). Philip listened intently to the sermon on 1st John. It was the first Bible teaching he had heard in his life.
"I have to go back and see what happens next," Philip thought.
He made friends with a Cross World worker who gave him a 30-day Daily Bread devotional. At the end of it, he read, "Is there any reson why you wouldn't believe in Jesus?" Philip felt God telling him to believe, so he prayed the prayer on the back of the pamphlet, surrendering his life to Jesus.
That surrender marked the start of a new life. The CrossWorld worker led Philip through the booklet Growing in Christ, and Philip raced through it, finishing all13 lessons in a few weeks. Philip also volunteered with the church to hand out Christian literature at a local festival. While there, he fearlessly shared his newfound truth with friends and neighbors. Five months after Philip's first visit, he was baptized: the first immersion baptism ever recorded in Youghal.
Although Philip's life situation is the same - he and his wife still have health problems and both of his sons still struggle - he sees life differently. He has a new sense of peace and hope, as well as resources and a supportive church to help him handle the hardships.
Those around him have noticed the change. Although at first his neighbors criticized Philip for leaving the Catholic church, they have now started asking him for prayer! They recognize that he has something they don't. Likewise, Philip's wife has asked him to do a Bible study with her because she wants the same hope she sees in him.
Praise God for planting new life in Philip, and pray that Philip's neighbors and family will find his same hope.
(based on Annika Bergen, Same Circumstances, New Life - An Irish man finds hope despite trials, CrossWorld Currents, July 2011)
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No fewer than five people were involved in the chain of events that led to the baptism of this Irish believer. A teenager visited a youth group, and then invited her mom to attend the evangelical church. Then the mom invited her son, who brought his friend who was about to go to jail for repeated incidents of drunken violence. This son invited his father, Philip, to go with him.
Philip has heart problems, his wife has health problem, his other son has a learning disability. Life felt overwhelmingly hopeless, and Philip didn't know where to turn. He went to the CrossWorld church plant in Youghal (pronounced "y'all"). Philip listened intently to the sermon on 1st John. It was the first Bible teaching he had heard in his life.
"I have to go back and see what happens next," Philip thought.
He made friends with a Cross World worker who gave him a 30-day Daily Bread devotional. At the end of it, he read, "Is there any reson why you wouldn't believe in Jesus?" Philip felt God telling him to believe, so he prayed the prayer on the back of the pamphlet, surrendering his life to Jesus.
That surrender marked the start of a new life. The CrossWorld worker led Philip through the booklet Growing in Christ, and Philip raced through it, finishing all13 lessons in a few weeks. Philip also volunteered with the church to hand out Christian literature at a local festival. While there, he fearlessly shared his newfound truth with friends and neighbors. Five months after Philip's first visit, he was baptized: the first immersion baptism ever recorded in Youghal.
Although Philip's life situation is the same - he and his wife still have health problems and both of his sons still struggle - he sees life differently. He has a new sense of peace and hope, as well as resources and a supportive church to help him handle the hardships.
Those around him have noticed the change. Although at first his neighbors criticized Philip for leaving the Catholic church, they have now started asking him for prayer! They recognize that he has something they don't. Likewise, Philip's wife has asked him to do a Bible study with her because she wants the same hope she sees in him.
Praise God for planting new life in Philip, and pray that Philip's neighbors and family will find his same hope.
(based on Annika Bergen, Same Circumstances, New Life - An Irish man finds hope despite trials, CrossWorld Currents, July 2011)
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Saturday, July 23, 2011
Muslim pirates have attacked 200 ships so far in 2011
Every month, some 1,300 ships heading to or from the Suez Canal must pass through the lawless waters off the coast of Somalia. Pirate attacks are at an all-time high - more than 200 have already been reported this year. As of May, pirates were holding more than 500 hostages and 26 hijacked ships, and companies are losing up to $8.3 billion a year.
Cargo ships are easy prey, and with an area the size of the continental U.S. to patrol, even NATO and navy teams from several coastal countries can't protect every vessel. Bypassing the canal means a journey of thousands more miles around the Horn of Africa. The United Nations International Maritime Organization advises ships t speed up through high-risk areas, add more lookouts, and try other low-tech solutions that are not always effective against pirates with AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades. Arming merchant ships with lethal weapons might solve the pirate problem, but that approach would never gain international acceptance.
New nonlethal defenses, however, offer an alternative. BAE Systems is developing an onboard laser that could target unidentified vessels from more than a mile away. If the pirates continued to approach, the beam's intensity would disorient and temporarily lind them to the point that they couldn't aim and fire their own weapons. BAE tested a prototype of the laser in January.
Mace Security International, meanwhile, is testing a ship-mounted spraying system to keep pirates from boarding vessels. Three sets of 18-gallon pressurized tanks filled with oleoresin capsicum, a pepper derivative that is neither corrosive or flammable, would line the ship's perimeter. Attackers who ventured too close would be doused and immediately incapacitated for up to an hour by intensely burning eyes, skin and throat.
(reposted from Pirate Pushback, by Rena Marie Pacella, Popular Science, August 2011)
Marko comments: most people say that these Muslim pirates are lawless. But are they following Sharia law?
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Cargo ships are easy prey, and with an area the size of the continental U.S. to patrol, even NATO and navy teams from several coastal countries can't protect every vessel. Bypassing the canal means a journey of thousands more miles around the Horn of Africa. The United Nations International Maritime Organization advises ships t speed up through high-risk areas, add more lookouts, and try other low-tech solutions that are not always effective against pirates with AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades. Arming merchant ships with lethal weapons might solve the pirate problem, but that approach would never gain international acceptance.
New nonlethal defenses, however, offer an alternative. BAE Systems is developing an onboard laser that could target unidentified vessels from more than a mile away. If the pirates continued to approach, the beam's intensity would disorient and temporarily lind them to the point that they couldn't aim and fire their own weapons. BAE tested a prototype of the laser in January.
Mace Security International, meanwhile, is testing a ship-mounted spraying system to keep pirates from boarding vessels. Three sets of 18-gallon pressurized tanks filled with oleoresin capsicum, a pepper derivative that is neither corrosive or flammable, would line the ship's perimeter. Attackers who ventured too close would be doused and immediately incapacitated for up to an hour by intensely burning eyes, skin and throat.
(reposted from Pirate Pushback, by Rena Marie Pacella, Popular Science, August 2011)
Marko comments: most people say that these Muslim pirates are lawless. But are they following Sharia law?
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Friday, July 22, 2011
Evolution's "Tree of Life" doesn't work for Trees!
Tom Hennigan and Jerry Bergman explain how the story of trees evolving from single-cell ancestors is not supported by the fossil evidence. In fact, ancient tree fossils and even their seeds are nearly identical to modern trees. Many polystrate tree fossils have been found that span across up to twelve different rock layers, how could that be if the rock layers were millions of years apart? The best theory that explains the origin of trees is what God himself tells us in the Bible, that He created trees on Day 3 of the creation week!
Selections from The Origin of Trees, by Tom Hennigan and Jerry Bergman
(These selections by Marko Malyj are of the article published in Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal, Volume 47, Number 4, Spring 2011)
The Genesis account suggests that trees are discontinuous from other vegetational growth forms and did not originate from simpler precursors. Trees were created on Day 3 according to their kinds, or baramin (Gen. 1:11–12; 1:29; 2:9; 2:16), and Genesis chapters 6–9 revealed a historic worldwide Flood that helps explain the world’s massive graveyards. It is upon this foundation that creationists can develop scientific models of the origin of trees and fossil strata.
Problems with Naturalistic Explanations for Tree Evolution
One classic text on tree evolution included illustrations of a large number of ancient trees are nearly identical to fully modern trees, and none indicate evidence for tree evolution (Berry, 1923). Even the seeds of ancient trees are virtually indistinguishable from their modern counterparts. Professor Berry wrote that his large collection of pinecones from the Lower Cretaceous are morphologically “almost exactly like those of the existing redwood [trees that are]… found in abundance in the coulees of the present arid badlands of Western Dakota” (Berry, 1923, p. 41).
Another example, the Wollemi pine, was thought to have gone extinct with the dinosaurs until it was discovered several years ago in Australia (Bardell, 2006; Wieland, 2003, pp 8–9). The Wollemi pine was long thought to be extinct for 200 million years. Scientists concluded that it is marvelous it is marvelous that the Wollemi pine has survived unchanged for 200 million years, but in fact it is only one of thousands of so-called living fossils known today.
For the above reasons, the “evolution of trees can only be diagrammatically represented in the most tentative way” (Johnson, 1971, pp. 24–25). Although taxonomy and phylogeny have both progressed since Darwin’s day, continuity of trees arising from single-cell precursors through evolutionary processes has not been supported by the fossil evidence (e.g., Johnson, 1973, p. 24).
Tree Origins and the Fossil Record
Instead of interpreting the rock strata as moving through billions of years of time, creationists interpret them an effect of a global Flood (Genesis 6–9). If a great Flood occurred, then billions of fossils would have been produced and evidence of vast continental sedimentation and upheaval would be common (Snelling, 2008).
Rather than being interpreted as an early primitive tree, lycopod anatomy is better understood as an arboreal plant designed to thrive in an aquatic ecosystem. Scheven further hypothesized that at the outset of the Flood, this large biome was torn apart and left to drift. As the Flood receded, these massive mats were buried under large amounts of sediment, producing much of the Carboniferous strata observed today. The burial of these massive log mats was also consistent with a creationist explanation for coal formation on a global scale(Austin, 1979).
Polystrate tree and animal fossils have been found erect and at various angles with fossils varying 6–9 meters long and intersecting two to twelve different strata (Rupke, 1966). These trees are commonly just as well preserved at the bottom as they are at the top and their internal microscopic structure is often well preserved, indicating that they were buried quickly and sealed off from decay organisms. Two of the many global example locations are the Joggins formation in Nova Scotia and Gingko Petrified Forest State Park in Washington.
In general, creationists predict that all major tree families were present in their respective environments since the beginning and that evidence such as the polystrate trees found in Washington will continue to be found.
Complex Biochemical Systems
Many evolutionists have been forced to conclude that trees have evolved several times from many ancestors through convergent evolution (Ennos, 2001, p.5).
Consider the photosynthetic system in the chloroplasts that trees depend on daily (Figure 11). This system breaks up water molecules into hydrogen and oxygen (Sarfati, 2008, p. 125).This irreducibly complex photosynthesis process will not function unless the entire system is in place. Such a system could not be produced in stages by neo-Darwinian processes once, let alone several times through the many common ancestors of the variety of plants existing today.
Conclusions
The first trees existing in the fossil record were clearly trees. Furthermore, an enormous gap exists between trees and all other plant forms. When the fossil record is critically examined, the origin of trees is consistent with the Biblical record. Building our scientific understanding helps us to better understand our world and the one who created it.
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References (selected)
Austin, S.A. 1979. Depositional environment of the Kentucky no. 12 coal bed (middle Pennsylvanian) of western Kentucky, with special reference to the origin of coal lithophytes. Ph.D. Diss., Pennsylvania State University, Pittsburgh, PA.
Bardell, D. 2006. The biologists forum: the discovery of a tree (Wollemia nobilis) from the age of the dinosaurs. BioOne 77:20–23.
Berry, E. W. 1923. Tree Ancestors. Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, MD.
Ennos, R. 2001. Trees. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.
Johnson, H. 1973. The International Book of Trees. Simon and Schuster, New York, NY.
Rupke, N.A. 1966. Prolegomena to a study of cataclysmal sedimentation. CRSQ 3:21–25.
Sarfati, J. 2008. By Design: Evidence for Nature’s Designer—The God of the Bible. Creation Book Publishers, Powder Springs, GA.
Snelling, A. 2008. The world’s a graveyard.(accessed July 14, 2010).
Wieland, Carl. 2005. Dino tree planted in London. Creation 27:8–9.
Williams, A. 2004. Bristlecone pine growth rings. TJ 18:60–61.
Selections from The Origin of Trees, by Tom Hennigan and Jerry Bergman
(These selections by Marko Malyj are of the article published in Creation Research Society Quarterly Journal, Volume 47, Number 4, Spring 2011)
The Genesis account suggests that trees are discontinuous from other vegetational growth forms and did not originate from simpler precursors. Trees were created on Day 3 according to their kinds, or baramin (Gen. 1:11–12; 1:29; 2:9; 2:16), and Genesis chapters 6–9 revealed a historic worldwide Flood that helps explain the world’s massive graveyards. It is upon this foundation that creationists can develop scientific models of the origin of trees and fossil strata.
Problems with Naturalistic Explanations for Tree Evolution
![]() |
| Cretaceous Pinecones are just like modern ones. |
![]() |
| The Wollemi Pine, a so-called "living fossil," does not support evolutionary fossil predictions. |
| Do you prefer the Traditional or Modern "Tree of Life" for Trees? |
Tree Origins and the Fossil Record
Instead of interpreting the rock strata as moving through billions of years of time, creationists interpret them an effect of a global Flood (Genesis 6–9). If a great Flood occurred, then billions of fossils would have been produced and evidence of vast continental sedimentation and upheaval would be common (Snelling, 2008).
Rather than being interpreted as an early primitive tree, lycopod anatomy is better understood as an arboreal plant designed to thrive in an aquatic ecosystem. Scheven further hypothesized that at the outset of the Flood, this large biome was torn apart and left to drift. As the Flood receded, these massive mats were buried under large amounts of sediment, producing much of the Carboniferous strata observed today. The burial of these massive log mats was also consistent with a creationist explanation for coal formation on a global scale(Austin, 1979).
![]() |
| A Polystrate fossil tree. |
In general, creationists predict that all major tree families were present in their respective environments since the beginning and that evidence such as the polystrate trees found in Washington will continue to be found.
Complex Biochemical Systems
Many evolutionists have been forced to conclude that trees have evolved several times from many ancestors through convergent evolution (Ennos, 2001, p.5).
![]() |
| Cell Chloroplasts are beyond human ingenuity, they require an intelligent designer! |
Conclusions
The first trees existing in the fossil record were clearly trees. Furthermore, an enormous gap exists between trees and all other plant forms. When the fossil record is critically examined, the origin of trees is consistent with the Biblical record. Building our scientific understanding helps us to better understand our world and the one who created it.
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References (selected)
Austin, S.A. 1979. Depositional environment of the Kentucky no. 12 coal bed (middle Pennsylvanian) of western Kentucky, with special reference to the origin of coal lithophytes. Ph.D. Diss., Pennsylvania State University, Pittsburgh, PA.
Bardell, D. 2006. The biologists forum: the discovery of a tree (Wollemia nobilis) from the age of the dinosaurs. BioOne 77:20–23.
Berry, E. W. 1923. Tree Ancestors. Williams and Wilkins, Baltimore, MD.
Ennos, R. 2001. Trees. Smithsonian Institution Press, Washington, DC.
Johnson, H. 1973. The International Book of Trees. Simon and Schuster, New York, NY.
Rupke, N.A. 1966. Prolegomena to a study of cataclysmal sedimentation. CRSQ 3:21–25.
Sarfati, J. 2008. By Design: Evidence for Nature’s Designer—The God of the Bible. Creation Book Publishers, Powder Springs, GA.
Snelling, A. 2008. The world’s a graveyard.
Wieland, Carl. 2005. Dino tree planted in London. Creation 27:8–9.
Williams, A. 2004. Bristlecone pine growth rings. TJ 18:60–61.
Thursday, July 21, 2011
Are any of you soldiers not a Muslim?
During his basic training in the Turkish army, the young man's commander addressed all the troops and asked if anyone was not a Muslim. This young brother raised his hand in front of them all. Before recently entering military service in Turkey, he had his ID card changed from Muslim to Christian. Of course the officer knew his status beforehand, but this put it out in the open.
Ask the Lord to protect this young brother from harassment and abuse during his 15 months of mandatory service. Pray that instead of being targeted he'll be favored by others and will have numerous opportunities to share his love for Christ.
(from a Christian prayer letter, July 2011)
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Ask the Lord to protect this young brother from harassment and abuse during his 15 months of mandatory service. Pray that instead of being targeted he'll be favored by others and will have numerous opportunities to share his love for Christ.
(from a Christian prayer letter, July 2011)
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