The Missing Microbes of Mars
Secularists are still gnawing on that bone of extraterrestrial life, and they have not given up on Martian life. Most naturalists know that there is no chance for abiogenesis on Earth, so they look for it elsewhere, wasting our tax money in their efforts to show that the Creator is unnecessary — or does not even exist.
Apparently nobody is holding out hope for finding signs of complex life forms or an advanced civilization in the distant past; they seem to think it would make Earth unremarkable. Microbes are a different matter.
Mars, NASA / JPL-Caltech (usage does not imply endorsement of site contents) |
But those holding to a naturalistic worldview continue to have hope—even faith—that the Red Planet was at one time thriving with life. Such a conviction is based on the strange hypothesis that organic life can spring spontaneously from inorganic non-life. This theory is called spontaneous abiogenesis. Here on Earth, evolutionists are still at square one in their vain attempt to show how a life-from-non-life event could have occurred more than 3.5 billion years ago.
Recently, a discovery has been made that throws a wet blanket on the theory that Mars was once a lush planet:
Finish reading at "No Microbes on Mars." You may also like, "Scientists Believe Water was on Mars Despite Evidence."