| The Planned Activity
of Cells which Gives Shape to The Body: How Does It
Happen?
Now the cluster of cells has become an embryo, which
means to "teem within." If we could watch the cells
during this period, we would encounter much activity.
Cells similar to one another divide and multiply at
a certain time and some of these cells begin to take
on a different structure from the others. This process
is not evident at first, but with every passing day,
it becomes clear that the purpose of this activity is
to bring into being, quickly and according to a program,
the functions indispensable for the construction of
the human body. All the cells, very much like workers
dispatched to a job, go to work in groups. Later, the
groups of cells which are to form the same organ join
one another to form one mass and prepare to form the
organs. As a result of this intense activity, some cells
will become bone cells, while others will become skin
and muscle cells.24
The bone cells gather at the places where the bones
must be. The muscle cells congregate at the places where
the muscles must be. Some cells go to even deeper places
and begin to form the internal organs. Some form the
brain, some the eyes and others the blood vessels. In
time, new processes are added; for example, the movement
of the cells to their destined places and the construction
of some organs by the programmed death of certain cells,
etc. In short, in the course of this differentiation,
a perfect strategy is employed in which the cells perform
their activity according to a definite plan.
The inspiration as to how this preparation is to be
made is introduced separately into every group of cells.
The information written in the DNA of every cell is
the same. But only when every cell group uses this information
in the program which has been placed within the ambit
of its own instinct, can they form the special structures
needed for the organs to perform their functions. Besides
this kind of differentiation, constant division causes
their numbers to increase. This perfect organization
never falls into anarchy. Because of these preparations
made for the formation of the heart, eye, brain, arm,
leg and other organs,the body slowly takes shape.25

Above we see a few of
the various cells of the body. As a result of
the multiplication of the initially identical
cells, the approximately 200 kinds of cells
in the body are formed. Despite the fact that
the information written in their DNA is the
same, every kind of cell uses only the information
appropriate to itself. No confusion arises.
Bone cells never try to form an eye or any other
organ; the nerve cells do not interfere with
the red blood cells. Each one knows very well
where and how it will function. It is Almighty
God, the Ruler of all, Who ensures this flawless
organization and inspires the cells of the body
as to what they have to do. |
So far so good, but who gives the command to these
cells which all arise out of one single essence? How
can cells, which have no intelligence, awareness or
feeling, understand this command and put it into effect?
Scientists have determined that the plan which dictates
the differentiation of the cells and their lodging in
the appropriate place in the body is written in the
DNA. But this raises the question: Who wrote this magnificent
plan so perfectly in this microscopic information bank
hidden in the nucleus of cells?
Furthermore, who causes the cells to read this plan
written in the DNA and to apply it without error? How
is it that millions of different cells can find the
information relevant to themselves in an immense information
bank in the DNA and change their structure according
to it?
It
is God Who created the seven heavens and of
the earth the same number, His Command descending
through all of them, so that you might know
that God has power over all things and that
God encompasses all things in His knowledge.
(Qur'an, 65: 12) |
For example, consider the cells which form the eyes:
How can they know when the pupil is fully formed? How
can they know how to structure the retina, the eye muscles,
and the lens and how to give them their appropriate
size? And how do they know at what point to stop these
processes?
Or, how do cells which have never seen a liver, kidneys
or a pancreas know the particularities of these organs
and change their structure in accordance with this knowledge?
Moreover, when these cells change their structure according
to the organs that they are going to form, they take
many factors into consideration. For example, a cell
which changes to become a brain cell must take account
of the nervous system, the nourishment of the brain,
the oxygen supply, the necessity of establishing a connection
among all the nerves in the body; it must also distinguish
the parts of the brain that see, hear and feel. Other
cells take into consideration the possibility that the
brain might be damaged and surround it; they evaluate
the negative factors that could occur in the birth process
and form structure according to these considerations.
This is all very well, but how can cells display such
"prescience" in their behaviour?
All these questions show that human birth is a great
miracle, and the theory of evolution has at this point
reached an impasse. No evolutionist can explain the
extraordinary cooperation that occurs among the genes
in the DNA as the cells form the organs and give shape
to the body. The fact that genes, which we may define
as a collection of unconscious atoms, cannot organize
by chance such a conscious harmony is so evident that
evolutionists generally prefer not to broach this subject
at all.
Hoimar von Ditfurth, A German evolutionist scientist,
has this to say about the miraculous development that
happens in the mother's womb:
How a single egg cell divides to form so numerous differentiated
cells, and the perfect natural communication and the
cooperation between these cells top the events that
amaze scientists.26
And G. Flanagan, the author of Beginning Life writes:
How is such far-reaching organization achieved? What
makes the cells act as if they know where to go, and
what to be, and what to do when they get there? And
also act in such harmony with their fellow cells?27
In the answer he has tried to give to these questions,
Flanagan is far from being able to explain these wondrous
occurrences.
These big questions take us into the world of the almost
infinitesimally small molecules within the cells, primarily
those that compose the genes and make up the genetic
programme. Since the advent of molecular biology, it
is for the first time becoming possible to detect and
describe some of these processes. "Life's book, it seemed,
was suddenly laid open…", although only some fascinating
pages of it. We are still far from understanding the
whole story.
It is clear that cells work together so well because
there is a continual molecular dialogue between them
and they adapt their intrinsic genetic instructions
accordingly. The instructions are held in the genes
in the form of the so-called genetic-code, spelled out
in the arrangement of molecules, like letters of a special
alphabet. The genetic programme for the baby, spelled
out in that code, was achieved on the first day in the
union of parent cells. From then on, every time any
cell divided and gave rise to two new cells, a precise
replica of all the genes was made and passed along to
each new cell. Therefore every cell of the body carries
exactly the same genes, and holds the full genetic programme.
Every cell might simply go on to produce clones of
itself, all with the same destination and function,
if the full programme were to be active all the time.
What makes for the great variety of cells produced,
and for their dispersal to all their different destinations,
is the fact that genes can switch on and switch off.
Not all of them are operative all the time. This happens
in response to signals from fellow cells as they all
fit themselves into the elaborate programme of development.
These events may be visualized as an exacting building
task requiring close co-operation. Each knows the grand
plan, each gives out signals, and in turn sensitively
responds to the signals from others to become integrated
into the whole project. The cells of the embryo work
in a comparable way, in companionable agreement, with
genes switched on and off as required.28
As can be understood from the above explanations, the
fact that the cells differentiate from one another and
take on completely different functions is said to indicate
that there is a "genetic program" which causes them
to act within a determined plan. It is true that a perfect
program is implanted in every cell, but the important
thing is this: Who created this program and implanted
it in the cells? The program we speak of here is not
like an ordinary computer program. By applying this
program, the cells bring into being a human person who
has within himself millions of interrelated complex
organic structures: a person who can hear, see, feel,
think, make decisions, experience joy, appreciate beauty
and who can study his own cells and DNA, and draw conclusions
from his investigations. Moreover, it is certainly a
miracle that the masses of protein which we call cells
can understand such a program, act according to it,
become aware of what is required and complete every
stage perfectly.
| Cells
Shape the Body… |
| |
| The
stages in the formation of a human being constitute
a chain of wonders. Cells uniting according to
a certain order give shape to the body. They construct
the hands, the eyes, the ears, the blood vessels,
the legs, the heart, the brain and the nerve cells.
In the DNA of every cell is contained an enormous
amount of information relative to every detail
of the human body. But the cells in the embryo
find and read among all this information only
that which pertains to their particular organ.
According to this information, cells build the
organs and the tissues. How a cell can interpret
the information in the DNA is certainly something
worth thinking about. Who wrote the information
contained in the DNA in the nucleus of the cell?
Who programmed cells so that they can read this
information just like a human being and act according
to it? There is only one answer to this question:
God created human beings perfectly. It is He Who
inspires in cells what they are to do. |
Richard Dawkins, a well-known modern evolutionist,
is at a loss to explain how, in the formation of a human
being, the genes which contain the human genetic program
act together with such a degree of cooperation.
Embryonic development is controlled by an interlocking
web of relationships so complex that we had best not
contemplate it.29
Dawkins has understood that the relations among the
genes responsible for the miraculous creation of a human
being and the extraordinary abilities demonstrated by
these genes could not have come about by chance, that
it is not possible to account for such a complex system
by the mechanisms of evolution, and has thus made such
a confession. But he still misses a very important point:
In the same way, it is impossible that, in the chain
of miracles that produces a baby, not one bit of what
is required to make this baby, not one single cell,
has come into being by chance. Within a period of nine
months, one cell formed in the mother's reproductive
organs turns into a seeing, hearing, feeling, breathing,
thinking human being, and this transformation occurs
according to a plan perfect in its every detail. Moreover,
this miracle has gone on continuously with the same
perfection for countless numbers of years.
According to the claims of evolutionists, this is all
due to chance; for them, this miracle comes about as
a result of the decision of unconscious atoms which
produce the human cells. They claim that one day, the
atoms suddenly decide to come together and produce organs
that they had never seen or known before. They cling
so blindly to their illogical claims that they believe
that each of these unconscious atoms decides which part
it will form and goes to the appropriate places according
to this decision. They believe that everything happens
as a work of chance without intervention; that the cells
and the atoms determine by their own wills the best
action to take, and perfectly construct a human body.
Even if they do not want to accept what is being said
here, this is exactly the substance of what they claim.
At this point it is clear in what an enormous logical
impasse evolutionists find themselves. Every detail
that has been explained up to now and in what will be
dealt with later shows that, contrary to the evolutionists'
claims, the stages that occur in the formation of a
human being cannot have happened by chance. These extraordinary
occurrences happened not by the work of cells or the
organelles that brought them into being; not by the
activity of molecules or atoms, but by the word of Almighty
God, "Be":
It is He Who created you from earth,
then from a drop of sperm, then from an alaq (embryo),
then He brings you infants into the world; you reach
manhood, then you decline into old age though some of
you may die young so that you may reach a predetermined
age and so that hopefully you will grow in wisdom. It
is He Who ordains life and death. When He decides on
something, He need only say: "Be!" and it is. (Qur'an,
40: 67-68)
| Awareness
Demonstrated by the Egg Cell
The cells which make preparations
to lodge in the walls of the uterus are genetically
different from those of the mother. Why they are
not rejected like an organ or a tissue transplanted
to the mother's body has been for a long time
an unsolved mystery. R. Flanagan explains it this
way:
...The cell cluster suppresses
its genetic markers and instead gives out special
signals that can be compared to a universal password.
This password is the same for all people and is
the same one that the mother's cells expressed
when she herself was just such a cluster. Therefore,
her cells do not now mobilize defences against
the new arrivals, because they biologically recognize
the nesting cluster as universal friend, not foe.1
Attention must be drawn here
to a very important point. As Flanagan says, it
is a very great mystery how a group of cells sends
a "universal message" to another group of cells
which receives this message and "understands"
that they are meeting not an enemy but a friend.
It must be remembered that we are not talking
here about a group of human beings, but a mass
made up of cells too small to be seen with the
naked eye; a mass which has no hands, eyes, ears
or brain, composed of unconscious atoms, molecules
and proteins. Surely to expect such a demonstration
of awareness from cells is extremely illogical.
The truth confronting us is clear:
What ensures that the embryo lodges easily in
the mother's womb and survives there is the mercy
of God, Who created the embryo, the mother and
the mother's defensive system.
Truly, God has knowledge of the
Hour and sends down abundant rain and knows what
is in the womb. And no soul knows what it will
earn tomorrow and no soul knows in what land it
will die. God is All-Knowing, All-Aware. (Qur'an,
31: 34)
1-Geraldine Lux Flanagan, Beginning
Life, Dorling Kindersley, London, 1996, p. 34
2- Immune cells of the mother approach to destroy
the embryo. (above) However, a perfect design in
the body does not let them cause harm to the egg. |
24. Geraldine
Lux Flanagan, Beginning Life, Dorling Kindersley, London,
1996, p. 38
25. Science et Vie, Gérard Couly, March
1995, No.190, pp. 48-50
26. Hoimar
von Ditfurth, Im Anfang War Der Wasserstoff (In the
Beginning was Hydrogen), p. 126
27. Geraldine Lux Flanagan,
Beginning Life, Dorling Kindersley, London, 1996, p.
42
28. Geraldine Lux Flanagan, Beginning
Life, Dorling Kindersley, London, 1996, pp. 42-43
29. Richard Dawkins,
The Selfish Gene, Oxford University Press, New York,
1976, p. 37
|