Several weeks before the DEMA Convention, I noted
the “first annual” DEMA prayer breakfast was to be
held, sponsored by a long time dive industry professional,
Tec Clark, who has reinvented himself as the
founder of Reef Ministries, after “being transformed
into a true believer in the Spring of 2007,” he says on
his website (www.reefministries.com).
I emailed Tec to get a rundown of his beliefs and
learned that he is a creationist and believes the universe
was created 8,000 to 12,000 years ago, or thereabouts.
He has found a unique niche in the evangelical
world, praising God’s creation of the underwater world
and leading dive trips for people who were to have a
first hand look.
He has posted ten articles on his website, all of
which I read, but one entitled Cleaner Fish and Shrimp,
An Evolutionary Stumbling Block struck me as worth passing
on. Essentially, he says that:
“One of the greatest phenomena witnessed in God’s
underwater world is that of ‘cleaning stations’. These
are where predatory fish such as groupers and moray
eels go to have their mouths and even gills cleaned by
small wrasses, gobies and/or shrimp. This is a type of
symbiotic relationship called mutualism where both
parties benefit; the cleaner derives nutrition and the
cleaned has food debris and parasites removed.
“The big question is how did this relationship originate?
Evolutionists subscribing to Darwinian ‘survival
of the fittest’ maintain this relationship evolved from
time, struggle and chance. Dr. Gary Parker, a former
evolutionary professor turned creation scientist, claims
that this cleaning symbiosis is from plan, purpose,
and special acts of creation. Dr. Parker writes in his book,
Creation Facts of Life:
“The major problem is using Darwinian fitness to
explain traits with many interdependent parts when
none of the separate parts has any survival value.
There’s certainly no survival value in a small fish swimming
into a large fish’s mouth on the hope that the big
fish has somehow evolved the desire to let it back out!’”
“ . . . . God’s creation. . . is purposeful and by
design. . . . To subscribe to the belief that struggle and
chance mixed together with some magic potion called
time will ultimately lead to this symbiotic relationship,
denies the infallibility, brilliance and sanctity of the
Word of God.”
Tec invited me to his breakfast and I might have
done so had I attended the convention, though I might
have been the only Darwinist in room. I have no quarrel
with a prayer breakfast, nor prayer rugs, for that
matter. However, I’m one of those guys who believes in
the separation of church and scuba. State, too.
– Ben Davison