

 
From Caterpillar to Butterfly
If you had
450-500 eggs and if you had to preserve them outside, what
would you do? The wisest course for you would be to take precautions
to prevent them from being scattered around, say, by the wind,
or other environmental factors. Being one of the animals that
lay the most eggs at one time (450-500), the silkworms use
a very intelligent way to protect their eggs: they unite the
eggs with a viscous substance (thread) they secrete to prevent
them from being scattered around.
The caterpillars that pop out of their eggs firstly find a safe branch for themselves and then get tied to this branch with the same thread. Later, to promote their own development, they start to spin a cocoon for themselves with the thread they secrete. It takes 3-4 days for a caterpillar that has opened its eyes very recently to life to complete this process. During this period, the caterpillar makes thousands of turns and produces a thread an average of 900-1,500 meters long. At the end of this process, it starts a new task through which it undergoes a metamorphosis to become an elegant butterfly.
Neither the action taken by
the mother silkworm to protect its eggs, nor the behavior
of a tiny caterpillar devoid of any awareness, education or
knowledge can be explained by evolution. First of all, the
ability of the mother to produce the thread it uses to secure
its eggs is miraculous. The newly-born caterpillar's knowing
the most suitable environment for itself, its spinning a cocoon
in accordance with it, its undergoing a metamorphosis, and
its coming through this metamorphosis without any problem
are beyond human comprehension. Hence, we can simply say that
each caterpillar is born into the world with a foreknowledge
of what to do, which means that it was 'taught' all of these
things before it was born.
Let us explain this with an example. What would you think if you saw a new-born baby standing up a few hours after his birth, getting together the things he needs to make his bed (like quilt, pillow, mattress), and later putting all these together neatly, making his bed and lying down on it? After you recover from the shock of the event, you would probably think that the baby must have been taught in an extraordinary way in his mother's womb to perform such a process. The case of the caterpillars is no different from the baby in this example.
This again leads us to the same conclusions: these living creatures come into
life, behave and live in the way determined by God Who has
created them. The Qur'anic verse stating that God has inspired
the honeybee and commanded it to make honey (Qur'an, 16:68-69)
provides an example of the great secret of the world of living
beings. This secret is that all living beings have bowed to
God's will and follow the fate determined by Him. This is
why the honeybee makes honey and the silkworm produces silk.
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