If you want to experience New Testament times simply go out and teach God's Word to our
culture. It will happen!
We are commanded to speak the truth in love. That we did Tuesday evening at the speaking event
hosted by What's the Evidence? Some mocked and others said we will hear you again!
I want to thank you all for praying for this event. We saw the Lord working. Here's a short
recap:
We were at the posted capacity of 35, plus the 5 of us from the team. It was a diverse crowd
of Christians, college age, older folks, a current school board member, 3
former school board members, a friend who brought a young Muslim woman, 2 men who seemed to
come just to be disruptive, and the local LGBTQ representation.
Randy did an excellent job laying the foundation of Genesis. He used lots of Scripture about
creation, mankind (male and female) made in God's image, marriage, sin and the fall, the promised
Savior, Noah's flood and Babel. He put some science into the topics, and brought up racism,
Darwinism and Darwin's ideas about women and the "savages", Margaret Sanger, evolution taught
in schools and the icons of evolution and the hope that we can get back to teaching just science in
school. He ended by comparing worldviews, Biblical vs Secular and how each affects how people
live. We experienced that during the Q and A time!
A lot to cover but it was very good!!
Friday, November 30, 2018
Wednesday, November 28, 2018
Yes, humans are fearfully and wonderfully made in God's image.
Unique Human Neuron Discovered
BY BRIAN THOMAS, M.S. * | TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 06, 2018
With a new addition to the category of “uniquely human features,” MIT neuroscientists discovered a feature of human—not animal—brain cells. Certain human brain cells have much longer extensions called dendrites, and this research team found a uniquely human reason for it.
The cerebrum lies just beneath the skull. It has folds and bends. This largest part of the brain manages all kinds of information, and lots of it—even more than the entire internet.1 It interprets sight, sound, temperature, taste, and touch inputs. It initiates muscle movements. It stores and retrieves memories, helps perform reasoning, and stores intelligence and personality. Clearly, it does more than animal brains, but how?
The cerebrum lies just beneath the skull. It has folds and bends. This largest part of the brain manages all kinds of information, and lots of it—even more than the entire internet.1 It interprets sight, sound, temperature, taste, and touch inputs. It initiates muscle movements. It stores and retrieves memories, helps perform reasoning, and stores intelligence and personality. Clearly, it does more than animal brains, but how?
This largest part of the brain manages all kinds of information, and lots of it—even more than the entire internet.
Just last month a separate team reported the discovery of a whole new class of neuron unique to humans. They called them rosehip cells based on their shapes.2 We don’t yet know what they do, but since they make up 10 percent of our neurons, future research will surely reveal their important function.
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