
Origins 23(2):66-67 (1996).
EDITORIAL
In the old days, when one finished a writing task it was appropriate
to use the climactic cliché: "Laying down the pen." That was the end. The
modern equivalent would be: Turning off the computer. However that does not seem as final
to me. We turn off our computers every time we have to reboot to get out of a malfunction.
Clichés aside, this is the last issue of Origins that I will be
editing. Producing Origins has been stimulating, satisfying, and
challenging. It is a joy to see every issue published. However, I have carried this
responsibility for 23 years, and the time has come for a change. It is with a mixture of
regrets, relief, and anticipation that I turn to other activities.
Origins could not exist without the help of
many. I am most grateful to the authors who have provided a high quality of writing that
which has permitted the journal to gain the degree of respectability which it has. These
authors have not only produced original scholarly material, but they have been very
patient with suggested changes as manuscripts were processed towards publication. Their
dedication has facilitated the sometimes painful surgery suggested by reviewers and
editors. The reviewers themselves, who are the unsung heroes of the editorial process,
have been invaluable, and I want to thank them for their long hours of unselfish work.
They have been the silent guardians of quality.
A few individuals have made very special contributions to Origins.
I especially wish to thank Bob Brown and Leonard Brand for their careful criticism of
practically everything that was published. Kathy Ching has put every issue together into a
rational whole, and Jim Gibson has prepared most of the scientific-literature reviews in
the recent years of publication. All of these and many others have my profound gratitude.
I also wish to thank the readers, particularly for their feedback, much of it more
generous than we deserve.
I well remember writing the first editorial for Origins.
It was in 1973 on a flight to Hawaii as I was headed for Enewetak Atoll to continue my
research on coral reefs. I mused about how to start a new journal, its success or failure,
and especially its purpose. In that editorial I expressed my hope that Origins
would help give a correct view of the Creator by the study of both His creation and His
revelation. Many of the questions that have been discussed in Origins
could have been purely academic, but their implications were not. This is where all those
who have helped with the journal have made a contribution far and above normal
journalistic activity. They have contributed towards a correct image of the nature of the
Creator and His activities. In this age of relativism, agnosticism, skepticism, and
pluralism, such information is much needed. As I bid you farewell, I wish to thank all of
you for your special contribution, and I want to encourage you to continue your highly
meaningful activities of witnessing for the truth about our Creator. May God bless each of
you.
All contents copyright
Geoscience Research Institute. All rights reserved.
| Home
| About Us
| Contact Us
|
Send comments and questions to
webmaster@grisda.org
| What's New
| Resources
| Search
| Links
|