Dragonfly Gospel
Here's another one evolutionists can't explain.
Dragonflies show up in spring and summer. But their lives are fleeting.
They begin life underwater as larvae, wingless, bug-like. Their diet is crustaceans, worms, snails, tadpoles and small fish.
After a year or two, a biological timer goes off. The "nymph" climbs out of the water and breathes air.
Then it attaches itself to a reed, splits its skin and unfolds a new thorax (chest) - twice the length of the old one. Next, the nymph pushes out a dragonfly head and dragonfly legs and two wings.
About 30 minutes later, it launches on its maiden flight. This entire process takes just three hours.
Unlike the butterfly, there is no pupal (inactive) stage. No extended, secret process.
How do evolutionists say this process evolved? What sequence of unintelligent, "beneficial" mutations can explain this?
Dragonflies mate and make more nymphs, which live underwater for years. Dragonflies live for weeks. Where's "survival of the fittest" in this picture?
Evolutionists have only long words to substitute for "we don't know."
But God knows. It is his handiwork.
From article by Lynn Vincent, WORLD magazine
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