Aren’t baby chickens cute? They are so tiny, with bright eyes, little beaks, soft, yellow fuzz and dainty legs and feet! The Lord Jesus looks happily on these little creatures, too, for they are part of His marvelous creation.
Where do they come from?
“Oh,” you say, “they come from an egg.”
Right, but where did the egg come from?
“It came from a hen,” you reply.
Both answers are correct, but let’s see just how the Creator arranged for this to happen.
Most eggs laid by hens are “infertile” and end up on the breakfast table or in a cooking recipe. Baby chicks never come from these, but there are times when the hen produces fertile eggs which are the beginnings of baby chicks. Fertile eggs begin inside the hen’s body as a single cell too small to see. This single cell is a little white spot smaller than a pinhead.
A microscope would show the white spot resting on the yolk, which is formed first and is made of six separate rings. Albumen (the white of an egg) forms around this cell in another series of layers. The first layer is just a thin covering. Next to it a tough, flexible film grows which is strong enough to protect the inside of the egg when it later drops into a nest. Then a third, almost liquid layer develops against the yolk, enabling it to float and keeping it safe from everything except very rough treatment. All this time the original cell is resting on top of the yolk, awaiting the right moment to start becoming a living chick.
Over all this two more sheets of white film form to become a lining under the four-layered shell. In every egg a small chamber is left vacant at the rounded end—right where the baby chick’s head will lie when developing. Later we will see why this is necessary. Now the cell is ready, in God’s marvelous programming, to develop into a living chick. We will outline in the next issue just how that takes place.
Of course, in addition to chickens, there are millions of birds hatching each year in all kinds of sizes, shapes and colors. However, all of them begin life in the same way except that some take longer to hatch than others.
As the verse at the beginning of this article reminds us, the birds (and chickens) have nests in which to lay their eggs, but when the Lord Jesus was on earth He had “not where to lay His head.” What a long Saviour He is. “For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though He was rich, yet for your sakes He became poor, that ye through His poverty might be rich.” 2 Corinthians 8:99For ye know the grace of our Lord Jesus Christ, that, though he was rich, yet for your sakes he became poor, that ye through his poverty might be rich. (2 Corinthians 8:9).
The riches He gives bring everlasting life and glory in heaven for all who will accept Him as their Saviour. Do you have these riches?
ML-07/04/1982