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Let's ask three people to help us with our answer (and if you're interested, I'll give you my answer at the very bottom).
Daniel Webster's answer
Here's what I would like you to do, my young inquisitor:
Now, before I continue with the rest of my explanation, I would like you to think about your question, and base your answer on what you found in your dictionary:
What came first? The chicken or the egg?
Oh, you're done thinking already. Okay. You say you want my answer? I feel so proud that you'd ask me, one of the biggest experts on words, for my answer.
Well, since I found "chicken" on page 387, and I found "egg" on page 726, and since 387 comes before 726, I have to say, without a moment of doubt, that "the chicken" comes before "the egg". Does your dictionary tell you the same thing?
Pope John 23 and his answer
(translated from the Latin)
Ah, another visitor. I enjoy it when young students asketh me questions. Would you please doeth something for me?
Charles Darwin's answer
Hello, budding young scientist. I'm glad you decided to talk to me also. So many people ignore my opinions. Before I answer your question, let me tell you a little bit about Evolution. The Theory of Evolution states that various animals and plants evolved from ancestors that were not that exact animal or plant. Successive generations gained differences and eventually, a less-developed animal or plant evolved into the more-developed organism. In other words, evolution means that life might have started out with very small animals called amoebas, then grown bigger and bigger, and more and more complex, from eon to eon, and from generation to generation, starting out in the oceans and the primordial soup, then eventually, life evolved into the land animals.
Let's look at a set of assumptions that follow a somewhat logical set of arguments. This set of assumptions will lead us to what, I believe, is the correct answer. This may get a bit complicated, so feel free to discuss this with your parent, teacher, or another friend.
First assumption: For the sake of argument, lets assume that evolution is a scientific fact. Most science teachers agree with this statement. Some ministers, rabbis, priests and teachers disagree.
Second assumption: If we go back many thousands of years, we will find an ancestor of the chicken that was not a chicken. (For example, many people believe that one ancestor of the human beings might have been a greatly-developed relative of the chimpanzee.)
Third assumption: This "not-chicken" ancestor was probably the ancestor of more than one of the current sets of animals that lay eggs, so we can assume that this "not-chicken" ancestor laid eggs. Perhaps this "not-chicken" animal was also a great-great-ancestor of the duck, the chicken and a few other animals that laid eggs. For lack of a better name, let's call this ancestor a KcudneKcihc.
Fourth Assumption: Life goes on. Generation after Generation, these creatures keep getting closer and closer to what we now call a chicken, but we don't know when one creature changed from being a "KcudneKcihc" to a "Chicken".
The <www.MAZES.com> proof: Let's make a timeline that shows the period of time a few years before the first chicken, when the great-great-great-grandfather of the first chicken was still known as a "KcudneKcihc."
great-great-great-grandmother KcudneKcihc
Egg
great-great-grandmother KcudneKcihc
Egg
great-grandmother KcudneKcihc
Egg
grandmother KcudneKcihc
Egg
mother KcudneKcihc
Egg
first Chicken
Egg
second Chicken
Egg
Etcetera
So, as you can see, at some point in the deep past, we had an animal that was definitely NOT a chicken that laid an egg. In the more recent past, we had a chicken that was hatched out of an egg. We don't know when, but at some point, we had a mother, that was not a chicken, that laid an egg, from which a chicken hatched.
So, what came first? The chicken or the egg.
We can't point to when it happened, but, if chickens evolved from another earlier animal, then at some point in the past, an animal that wasn't a chicken laid an egg, and out of that egg, we got a chicken. So, the egg came first.
My Answer
For the record, yes, I do believe in God, and I believe that he created the world, somewhat as related in the Bible and other ancient religious sources. But I also believe that God used evolution as part of his creation. In other words, one "day" of creation could have been millions of years long. Look up "day" in your dictionary, and you will see that some of the definitions of "day" cover periods that are NOT 24 hours long.
I also read recently that Roman Catholic Pope John Paul 2 released an encyclical acknowledging that God might have used evolution as part of his creation process. Leaders from other religions have earlier released similar statements.
This "God used evolution" opinion certainly appears to be covered by the verses quoteth above, where it says, "Let the waters bring forth abundantly the moving creature ..." The evolutionists do believe that life evolved FIRST in the ocean, and then slowly developed into the land creatures that we have today, and the Bible sort of says that the moving creatures did come from the water.
So, based on both the Bible and based on the Theory of Evolution, I believe that the egg came before the chicken. If we call today's chicken an example of an animal that is 100% a chicken, and call some very-distant ancestor an animal that was 0% chicken, then at some point in the in-between-past, we had an animal that was something like 49.999% a chicken, that laid an egg, that hatched an animal that was maybe 50.002% a chicken. But every egg was 100% an egg, I'd guess, so the egg came first.
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