The Basic Unit Of LIfe

by Dr. S.H. Tow

Darwin's hypothesis of "spontaneous generation" of life was founded on

the belief that at that time a cell (the basic unit of life) was a

simple structure and lifeless chemicals coming together, "when

conditions were just right" could form a tiny one-celled organism, a

protozoa or amoeba. From this one-cell organism all life forms have

evolved, so goes the evolutionary make-believe.

The National Geographic Society of America has published a "geography

of the living cell," showing it to be an immensely complex and

exquisitely organized system, something hidden from human view until

the invention of the electron microscope. The cell membrane alone was

a marvel of creation and function, acting like a city wall or sentinel

guardpost, screening all comers with uncanny selectivity.

Within the cell are elaborate systems for power production,

communications, garbage disposal, and life sustaining processes. The

nucleus of the cell or the "brain" is in the DNA with encoded genetic

information which when decoded would fill a hundred volumes of an

encyclopedia, each of ten thousand pages. This genetic information is

passed on unerringly from one generation to the next, determining a

hundred thousand features and characters in the offspring.

Evolutionists would like us to believe that all this happened by

chance, and not by design; that every human being and his sixty

trillion cells organised into dozens of marvellously efficient systems

came by chance. Let them ponder the Psalmist's words, "for I am

fearfully and wonderfully made: marvellous are thy works, and that my

soul knoweth right well . . . in thy book all my members were written,

which in continuance were fashioned .... "

---RPG Pubs., Singapore