The Capybara

Narrator: Chris Genthree
 •  3 min. read  •  grade level: 9
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"All things were made by Him; and without Him was not anything made that was made." John 1:3.
You may never have heard of the capybara, but it's possible that in the near future you may be adding the meat from this animal to your dinner table, as is now done in parts of its Central and South American homeland.
This animal is the largest of all the rodents and looks like a small pig or an overgrown guinea pig, covered in dark, coarse hair. Its hind legs are longer than its front legs, and webbed feet help make it a swift swimmer. It is a sociable animal, living in a group of 20 or more at the edge of a grassy plain adjoining a river, swamp or lake. Its happiest occupation seems to be standing up to its stomach in a muddy swamp, busily eating the plants growing there.
It does not have many enemies, but if a capybara is pursued by some beast out of the forest, its best means of escape is to plunge into the nearest water, leaving only its eyes, ears and nostrils exposed until the enemy goes away. However, it is not so easy to get away from angry farmers, when raiding a melon patch or field of corn. Perhaps it was first discovered that capybaras represent a tasty meal when one was shot and taken home for this purpose.
A mother raises four or five two-pound babies each year, born with a fair coat of hair and immediately able to open their eyes. Their front teeth start growing at once and never stop. If it were not for constantly biting and chewing plants and other foods, this could become a real problem, but the Creator has arranged that their eating habits and growth of teeth are in balance.
Strangely, the young ones have no interest in going into water until the parents coax them in. Then, like some children who are slow to take their parents' advice, they find that it is very pleasant. From then on they spend more of their waking hours in water than out of it.
Having discovered how tasty the meat of the capybara is, many South American ranchers now raise them in fenced areas. So it appears that this animal, once scarcely known even in its homeland, will become a well-known food supply even in far away places.
These unusual animals have followed their pattern of life ever since the day they were created and God declared, "Let the earth bring forth the living creature after his kind." Gen. 1:24. It is well to remember that the Bible, God's Word, is always true, and God's way is always perfect. Believing in the Bible's account of creation is the only safe ground on which to stand. Any other teaching is incorrect.
"Seek the Lord and His strength, seek His face continually. Remember His marvelous works that He hath done, His wonders, and the judgments of His mouth." 1 Chron. 16:11,12.