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What Makes You Unique
It's easy to think of the genetic code as like an alphabet making up words which describe your characteristics. These chemical letters can be put together in countless different ways. Although there is only one ‘genetic code-alphabet' for all living things on earth, it can produce canaries, carrots or children. Every living cell has the molecule DNA in it. If unravelled, the DNA blueprint in every one of your cells would stretch for almost two metres. DNA is responsible for all the instructions that determine your physical characteristics. The total genetic code of an organism is called its genome. The human genome is made up of about three billion chemical pairs. However, we get our human characteristics from a surprisingly small proportion of these pairs. About 30% of our genome is more or less the same as spinach, and over 98% of it is the same as chimpanzees. What makes you unique is that your arrangement of DNA letters is different from everyone else's. So next time you look in the mirror, remember that, unless you happen to be an identical twin, there is no other person who looks exactly like you.
Most of us enjoy the idea that we are one-of-a-kind. It boosts our self-esteem to think that we have a part to play in the universe that no one else can play. Biochemically, we know that our uniqueness comes from the DNA that we carry around in our cells. It is a marvellously complex molecule. It is big enough to ensure that each human being ever born will have his or her own special physical and psychological qualities. Yet, it is not just the differences between us that amaze us, the
similarities do, too. Only about .02% of our DNA accounts for the
differences. The other 99.98% is shared. We actually have a
lot more in common with eachother than we might think. Several Bible passages indicate that God knows us all by name. Though God knows us by name, His acquaintance with us runs much deeper. The Bible indicates that God knows at the genetic level. In Luke 12, Jesus talks to His followers about how much personal interest God takes in them. The detail he mentions is that "the very hairs of your head are all numbered." On this occasion Jesus also indicates that each of us has a personal choice to make. Just as God is personally acquainted with us, we need to become personally acquainted with Him. Knowing God involves more, much more, than a mere acknowledgement that He exists. It's a matter of having a relationship with Him. And that's something we can do because of what His Son, the Lord Jesus Christ, has already done for us when He gave His life to pay the price of our weakness; our failure; our sin.
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