"How Does
the Butterfly Get Out?" by Walter L. Wilson, M.D. |
The theory
of evolution has permeated our schools and colleges to such an extent that it
is time that we Christians deliver such messages as will counteract this
false teaching. The opportunity of addressing the students of one of our
colleges was given me, and I learned that the hypothesis of evolution had
permeated this school, until there were very few evidences that any Christian
faith was left. |
My address
concerned the origin of things. I stated that no one could produce a
plausible theory for the origin of odor, color, taste, shape or power. My argument
was that none of these were the product of development, but were the result
of a definite decision on the part of the living God. I called the students'
attention to the fact that strawberries always have the same odor, no matter
where they are grown, and that their odor is never confused with the odor of
any other thing in all the world. Every fruit has
its own odor and so does every animal. The odor of the one is never like the
odor of the other. |
I reminded
them that the taste of vegetables, fruits, nuts, grains,
meats, etc., always remain the same in each case, and that one is
never mistaken for another. I stated that only the living God could give
peaches their peculiar taste and fish their peculiar flavor; that colors
could not have happened by themselves; that bananas are yellow because God
made them so, and plums are blue or red because God made them so. I stressed
the fact that an intelligent God designed each of these by His own sovereign
power and will. I mentioned that each plant and animal has its own shape.
Chickens do not grow as large as ostriches, neither
do bananas grow as long as broomsticks. There are no square apples and no
oblong pumpkins with square edges. Everything has its own peculiar shape from
God. |
Again, I
reminded them that the origin of power is a great mystery. Who knows how the
sun was first placed in the heavens, or when the first gallon of water ran
over |
While developing
the subject, I made reference to the resurrection, saying, "Every corn
field is a grave yard. A grain of corn is planted in the spring, and while it
is dying tender shoots are formed which force their way up through the hard
soil to emerge into the sunshine and to grow into a stalk. Every living plant
comes out of a grave. We do not understand the power of life, nor how it is
that a soft, tender leaf can force its way through the hard ground, break the
topsoil, push up a heavy clod and emerge. Every spring we see it done and we
rejoice that it is so. The sun above us has the power to dispel the darkness
about us, and draw latent life into the light." |
At the
close of my address, a young man came to me with the air of one whose intelligence
had been insulted. He said, "Surely you do not mean to tell me that you
believe in the resurrection?" I replied, "Certainly, I do. A
resurrection of the human body will take place in God's good time, just as
there is a resurrection of seeds in their appointed time." He looked at
me in astonishment, as though he thought I had very poor sense and really
needed someone to look after my affairs. Then he said to me, "Do you
mean to tell me that you believe that Lazarus came out of the grave when Jesus
spoke to him?" "Yes," I replied, "certainly and
positively; there is no question about it. Jesus had given him his life.
Jesus had allowed it to be taken from him, and then Jesus could give it back
to him again, and He did so." Again my young friend expressed his
disdain for my foolish belief, and said, "You look intelligent. How is
it that one who is intelligent would believe such foolishness?" |
By this
time I thought it fitting that I should check up on this wise young man and
see how much he really knew, so I said to him, "I suppose you reject the
record of the resurrection because you cannot understand it. Am I correct in
this?" "Yes," he replied, "you are! Tell me, how did
Lazarus come out of the grave?" I said to him, "Now you have
changed the question. First, you inquired as to whether Lazarus did come out,
and I replied that he certainly did. Now you ask me how he came out, and I
must reply that I do not know." |
The young
man seemed to think that he had gained a signal victory, so I said to him,
"Do you reject the truth of the resurrection simply because you cannot
understand it?" He answered most emphatically, "Yes sir; I will
believe nothing that I cannot understand." |
I thought it was only fair that I should
take him at his word and so I said, "Do you believe that butterflies
come out of cocoons?" He replied that he did. I then asked, "How
does the butterfly get out?" This question baffled him. The other
students standing around had a hearty laugh, while he was seeking to find
some answer that would reveal his marvellous knowledge and his wonderful
understanding of nature. |
After a
few moments he replied rather officiously, "It bites its way out, of
course." |
"How
many teeth does a butterfly have?" I asked. |
He hardly knew
what to say to this simple question, so he replied, "I do not know. How
many teeth does it have? |
"Well,
you see there is at least one thing that you do not know," was my reply.
"As a matter of fact a butterfly does not have any teeth at all, not even
a mouth, but only a long, slender proboscis." Again I asked him,
"How does the butterfly get out?" |
He
replied, "I suppose it emits a sort of acid which burns a hole through
the cocoon." |
To the great
amusement of the other students, I asked him if he did not think it would be
a strange paradox if a butterfly could emit an acid strong enough to burn
through the tough cocoon and yet would not burn the butterfly. He admitted
that this was true and that he must be wrong. |
"That
is right," I said, "So there are two things that you do not know.
Tell me, how does it get out?" |
By this
time other students had gathered around in large numbers to see the young man
who would believe nothing he could not understand. His reply to my third
question was, "I suppose it must swell up and burst its way out." |
Quickly I
answered, "Now there are three things that you do not know, for the
cocoon is waterproof, air proof, light proof and heat proof. How could it swell
up when there is no air with which to expand? Did you ever try to tear a
cocoon with your hands?" (I noticed that he had large, strong hands like
a blacksmith's.) He replied that he had often tried to do it, but had never
succeeded. |
Then I
said to him, "You cannot tear a cocoon with your big, strong hands, but
you are so wise and well informed that you are confident that the soft,
tender butterfly could tear it by swelling up with air which it does not
have." |
By this time
the students standing around were saying various and sundry things about this
young man who knew so much. |
Again I
asked him, "How does the butterfly get out? He began to color and reveal his discomfort. His guessing was at an end. He had
to admit that he did not know. I then asked him, "Does the butterfly
come out of the cocoon?" |
"Yes,
certainly it does," he answered. |
"So
did Lazarus come out of the tomb when Jesus spoke," I replied, "but
I cannot tell you how he did it." |
This argument
ended the hostile attitude of the young man. He retreated from the room
defeated. I did not have the opportunity of presenting the Gospel to him.
However, that evening a number of those who listened to him and realized the
foolishness of his argument attended the services at the church. Their
curiosity had been aroused, their hostility removed, and a few of them
accepted Christ as Saviour and Lord in subsequent meetings. |
We do not
always win those with whom we converse, but we should always explain the
things of God in such a way that those who are "of the contrary part may
be ashamed, having no evil thing to say of us." |
|
From Remarkable New Stories: Told by the Doctor
by Walter L. Wilson. 1940. |
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