A recently circulated video featuring Stephen Meyer has resurfaced one of the most uncomfortable truths in modern science: despite decades of research, trillions of dollars in funding, and astonishing technological advances, scientists still cannot create life from non-life.
This is not a temporary setback or a minor gap in knowledge. It is a fundamental failure that strikes at the heart of materialist assumptions about reality. And it’s the 800-lb gorilla that nearly every scientist in the field must ignore in order for their flawed worldview to persist.
Modern science excels at studying life once it already exists. We can map genomes, manipulate DNA, clone animals, and even edit genes with remarkable precision. But when it comes to the single most important biological question of all — how life began — the scientific establishment has made virtually no demonstrable progress.
That fact alone should trouble anyone who believes the official narrative that life emerged naturally through unguided chemical processes.
According to Meyer’s argument, the problem is not a lack of imagination or insufficient computing power. The problem is that life is not merely complex chemistry. Life is information. Even the simplest living cell contains coded instructions, error-correction systems, molecular machines, and integrated processes that resemble advanced engineering more than accidental chemistry.
Laboratory experiments routinely show that random chemical reactions degrade information rather than generate it. Order breaks down. Structures decay. Yet life requires the opposite: tightly specified arrangements of molecules working in coordinated harmony. No experiment has ever crossed that gap.
For decades, origin-of-life research has relied on speculative models. The primordial soup theory imagined chemicals conveniently assembling themselves into living systems. RNA-world hypotheses proposed self-replicating molecules that somehow evolved into full biological complexity. More recent theories invoke deep-sea vents, clay crystals, or exotic early-Earth environments.
None of these models has produced life. Not once.
What has been produced instead are partial components — amino acids, lipids, or short RNA strands — under highly controlled laboratory conditions that bear little resemblance to a chaotic early Earth. These are often celebrated in headlines as breakthroughs, but they stop far short of anything resembling a living organism.
This repeated failure points to a deeper issue. Biology is built on information, and information — in every other known context — comes from intelligence. Software does not write itself. Codes do not emerge spontaneously. Instruction manuals do not assemble by chance. Yet we are asked to believe that the most sophisticated information system in the known universe appeared without guidance.
That belief is not scientific certainty. It is philosophical commitment.
Meyer’s critique exposes a growing tension within science itself. On one hand, researchers continue to push the boundaries of synthetic biology, attempting to redesign or modify existing life. On the other hand, they remain unable to explain where life came from in the first place. The foundation is missing, even as the upper floors expand.
This contradiction has serious implications. If life cannot be explained purely through material processes, then materialism — the idea that physical matter is all that exists — is incomplete at best and false at worst. That realization threatens not just biology, but the entire worldview underpinning modern technocratic culture.
It also raises ethical questions. Scientists increasingly speak of creating “artificial life” or radically altered organisms. Yet if they cannot generate life’s informational core, what exactly are they manipulating? And what happens when experimentation outruns understanding?
The refusal to grapple honestly with these questions is telling. Admitting that life may point beyond blind chance and necessity would force a reckoning — not only in science, but in philosophy, theology, and culture. It would challenge the notion that humanity is a cosmic accident and that meaning itself is an illusion.
That is why the origin-of-life problem is quietly downplayed, reframed, or endlessly postponed. It is easier to promise future breakthroughs than to confront present failure.
But the failure remains.
Life has never been made in a lab. Not once. And after more than half a century of trying, that fact looks less like a temporary obstacle and more like a signpost — pointing beyond chemistry, beyond materialism, and toward a reality that modern science is reluctant to acknowledge.
References
- https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=oh5O1qY-gLc
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Abiogenesis
- https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Origin_of_life
- https://www.nature.com/articles/d41586-018-07289-x
- https://www.science.org/content/article/life-s-building-blocks-can-form-surprisingly-simple-conditions
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That’s DOCTOR Stephen Meyer please.
That’s why no matter what the do or say, they can’t be God. The Bible says “and they will seem like fools next to me.”
The best arguments and explanations of this failure to discover life in a lab are provided by Dr James Tour, organic chemist. He debates all comers convincingly. Find him on YouTube. Search “James Tour Origin of Life”. (He’s also a Christian apologist, but he generally keeps that separate from his origin debates.) He’s very smart and super interesting!
On the whole, they are trying to prove all that exists in the universe is the result of a random explosion of a speck of dust. If life, and the uniqueness of human beings, is all just a matter of natural turn of event, then the device we’re using to read this article, the eyes we use to see it, the brain we use to comprehended it … everything … would be the result of that random explosion of a spec of dust. Their own intelligence would’ve resulted from an explosion. Their ability to even conduct such research would be the result of a random explosion of a spec of dust. The very research would be the result of that random explosion.
Mankind is not mere animal. He was created with both flesh and spirit. And that spirit, is why we are able to create things like this web page and the devices to read it, where other “life” is not … the evidence is staring them right in the face …
They have far more to prove than just the origin of mere “life”. They need to prove the origin of spirit, intelligence, conscience, and all else that is readily observable, which sets mankind apart from the animals, that they have not yet begun to try to explain. .
Man is made of flesh and spirit, which were made from dust and the breath of God.
There’s no argument that we were made from dust. But the argument is how some conglomeration of dust, the result of another explosion of a speck of dust, could itself stand up and speak, saying “My dust came from another spec of dust”
For the sake of the argument, life could be entirely factored out of it. How could everything around us, even that which man has created, possibly be the result of a random explosion. Because if man is also just an accidental turn of events, what difference would it make if he were living or dead, plant or animal. None … it’s the God-breathed spirit that is the difference, and is what sets man apart …
They see that life and flesh are made of dust. They’ve figured that out. They’ve become so smart and advanced, they have successfully figured out what the Author of Genesis already told them, thousands of years ago. Plants and animals are indeed made solely of dust. But man is made of more. Man has a spirit created by the breath of God.
There used to be an analogy we all used, of the Boeing 747, and how impossible it could be for one to be just randomly produced from an explosion. But the truth is that’s not just an analogy. It’s exactly what they’re claiming to have occurred. That actually is their claim. That the Boeing 747 did result from an explosion and a random turn of events, as they claim mankind himself, and the spirit, intelligence, and conscience of mankind, is also just a mere random turn of events.
Their overall hypothesis …
Dust explodes creating more dust
Lightening strikes dust, organizing dust into life
living dust takes dead dust and creates an iphone
A spec of dust explodes … time passes … out pops an iphone
A fool says in his heart “there is no God”
DNA combined and used to create viable human zygotes, they are working on it, plus china has apparently created an artificial womb, so we getting there
I enjoyed a comparison years ago: like an explosion in a junk yard producing a 747 jetliner…