Readers Respond AIG
“My 5-year-old says, ‘Now that’s what I’m talking about! Let’s read this right now!’ And that comment was not about the kids section! Love it!” Stephanie, Facebook
Many thanks, especially for the report on BioLogos. I have always been suspicious of the compromising nature of the entire “Intelligent Design” movement, but found it hard to put my uneasiness into words. Many thanks, AiG, for helping to protect believers from the type of savage “wolf attacks” the Bible warns us about!
Laura M., Mountain Grove, Montana
I just want to agree how true it is that we must not compromise for the sake of science. For a recently saved Christian (6 months ago), the theory of evolution was a major barrier for me in regard to believing the Bible. I will continue to use [your magazine] to teach a biblically sound young earth creation by our amazing Creator!
Ryan B., Lawrence, Kansas
I enjoyed the special article about “Noah’s World.” The idea that he had the same diversity of land types (desert, rain forest, etc.) is so obvious; and yet I had bought into the idea that there was only one type. I was amazed at how I still have to learn so much to remove the indoctrination that I have grown up with.
Kevin D., Facebook
I subscribed to the Answers magazine for my daughter who is in prison. She was thrilled almost beyond words when she received her first issue. She read it from cover to cover the first night she got it and has allowed others to read, including an atheist friend there. Did you ever think you’d have a prison ministry? You do now.
Audrey D., Franklin Furnace, Ohio
In “A Closer Look at T. rex” you say that “most theropod teeth are thin blades, often possessing serrations, like the edge of a steak knife.” This language makes it sound as if they were designed to eat meat. Your error is in assuming that only meatcutting tools have serrated edges. Nothing could be farther from the truth. There are many tools for cutting vegetation that have serrated edges, a saw being the most obvious example. Also the blades of the combine to harvest wheat and similar crops have many serrated and replaceable teeth, and they are even referred to as teeth. If someone already believes in evolution, the steak knife analogy creates another hurdle for them to get over, but the saw analogy makes the eating of vegetation seem as natural for the theropod as it actually was.
Dale F., Colorado Springs, Colorado
I was thoroughly disappointed to read the following statement in Melinda Christian’s “When Sloth Is Not Sin” article: “In fact, the sloth’s remarkable adaptations—including the metabolism that has made it the slowest living mammal—are necessary for its survival.” As a graduate from a secular university with a B.S. in geology, I can say with experience and authority that this usage/context of the word adaptations was frequently employed by my professors as a catch-all explanation for the intricate design of creatures. I suggest being clear on God’s role in the specific design and equipping of creatures to adapt to their environment, not using the term in anonymity.
Lydia M., Woburn, Massachusetts
http://www.answersingenesis.org/articles/am/v7/n1/readers-respond