SHARE Magazine October 2016 | Page 9

friend. We notice white spots on Bambi’s brown back and sides, which look like blotches of sunlight shining through bushes. When he was a little younger, he did not have the muscle strength or the longer legs that would have allowed him to escape from predators such as bears, coyotes, and bobcats. Those spots are a camouflage, much like what fighting men wear in the jungle, and together with his ability to lie still, they make him very hard to see, and helps him to escape predators. At this point, let us not rush to judgment against our friends, the evolutionists. Let us hold our human tendency to be prejudiced in check before hearing all the evidence placed on a table before us. Let us talk to Bambi’s father When we ask him about the spots on his son, he tells us the whole story. “Oh!” he says, “He won’t have those for very long. When he is about 5 months old, he will start losing his spots. He won’t need them, because by then he can run fast enough to escape most of his enemies. Funny thing is, the spots then miraculously disappear. Don’t ask me what happens to them! The Indians around here say, ‘The Great Spirit’ gave them to him to protect him when he was young, but will take them away when he can run fast enough to protect himself. Another thing is that baby deer have no scent, so predators that may depend on their sense of smell have difficulty finding the young deer. All I know is, it’s a jolly smart arrangement, and has worked for every deer as long as I can remember! Besides, our history tells us that we’ve always been like that from all the generations past!” What do you think? The skillful arrangement of spots on Bambi, the fawn, happened to turn up just when he needed to protect himself from a predator? Was it random occurrence of chance, left to the slow process of time over millions of years, or the concern of a Wise Creator, Who not only cares when a sparrow falls to the ground injured, but designs ways in which all of His creatures may protect themselves? Perhaps, we should now ask the question, “Could evolution have provided this protection on a temporary basis? Or could the Creator have given spots to the fawn through natural law, especially for a time when By C Richard McCaw he would be vulnerable and author, music teacher would need it the most?” p and many years as a Bible teacher October - December 2016 SHARE|MAGAZINE | 9