Skip to content

Today's Creation Moment

May
22
Could Creationism Correct Science?
Job 42:1-2
"Then Job answered the LORD, and said, I know that thou canst do every [thing], and [that] no thought can be withholden from thee."
In the secular media we often hear spokespersons for evolution say that creationism would ruin science. But several years ago an evolutionist suggested in his paper that creationism may actually help...
RSS

More About Amazing Aspirin

Psalm 147:3
He heals the broken hearted and binds up their wounds.

A few years ago we aired a "Creation Moments" program about how plants seem to have pain and alarm responses similar to humans and animals. Of course, we don't know if plants have feelings as we know them. But when a plant is injured, it produces a chemical called jasmonic acid. This acid produces a vapor, similar to the jasmine in commercial perfumes, that is sensed by surrounding plants. They, in turn respond to the signal.

When humans feel pain it is due to chemicals totally unrelated to jasmonic acids. As we all know, aspirin is important to pain management for many people. Aspirin works by disabling the chemicals that cause our pain. Now scientists have discovered that aspirin also works to shut down a plant's response to injury. Aspirin shuts off the plant's production of jasmonic acid, even though jasmonic acid is not at all similar to human pain causing chemicals. More amazingly, aspirin's chemical reaction is of the same kind in plants and humans. So the next time you accidentally injure your favorite house plant, it might appreciate a small dose of aspirin!

While we can be thankful that God placed substances in the creation which help us manage pain, we should never forget that nothing in this creation can deal with the underlying cause of pain. Only Jesus Christ can bring healing from our sinful condition that results in both spiritual and physical pain.

Prayer: 
Lord, I thank You because You have loved me enough to endure the pain of the cross to remove my spiritual pain. Amen.
Notes: 
S.M., Aspirin works on plants, too, Science News, v.154, p.106.