Saturday, April 25, 2009

Litttle Thing #6: Little Factories


For the basic needs of food, clothing and shelter, God provided a lot of little factories. For clothing, He made little wool factories (called sheep), little cotton factories (called cotton plants), and little leather factories (various animals). For shelter, he gave us lumber factories (called trees). For food, God made all kinds of factories (plants, fruit or nut-bearing trees, animals)

It is amazing when you compare God's factories with the factories of man. For synthetic fibers, mankind has made huge factories which deal in toxic chemicals and put a lot of crap into the atmosphere. For synthetic house materials, we again have created some of the most toxic chemicals known to man.

Many people are alergic to some of these synthetic fibers and household materials, but very few are alergic to the products of God's little factories--cotton and wood.

God's little factories are pretty much self-sustaining and don't leave much of a carbon footprint. Some, like trees, actually improve the air quality. They practically run themselves, and very efficiently I may say.

It all goes to show the superiority of God in his factory creation and the love of God in his giving them to us.

Tuesday, April 14, 2009

Little Thing #5: Middle Initial


When I was a teen, I used to listen to a funny DJ on the radio. He liked to make fun of a person he called "Bozo T. Clown." So you didn't know that Bozo had a middle initial? According to this DJ, he does. The "T" stands for "The," as in Bozo THE Clown.

Well, in actuality, "Clown" is not Bozo's last name. Clown is a description of what Bozo is--a clown.

The same is true for Jesus. Christ is not his last name. It is a description of what Jesus is--the Christ, the Messiah.

In my mind, I often think of Jesus as "Jesus T. Christ." I want to remember that little middle initial. Because when I think of that initial, it reminds me that this is not just anyone, but Jesus THE Christ. I also like the little pause it makes between Jesus and Christ, so that I have to focus more of the Christ Character in his name.

Sunday, April 12, 2009

Little Thing #4: Ice


When most chemnicals move from gas to liquid to solid, the molecules come closer together. The substance becomes more dense.

This is not true of water. When water moves from liquid to solid, the molecules move further apart. Solid ice is less dense than liquid water.

Why is this important? Because it is less dense, ice floats on the surface of liquid water. However, if ice acted like normal chemicals, it would form on the bottom.

As a result, if ice had been normal, it would form every winter on the bottom of lakes. It would kill or engulf the plant life on the bottom of the lakes. Without the plant life in the lakes, you would kill off most of the animal life in the lakes.

To prevent all of this death and destruction, God created water in such a unique way that it would not behave like most other chemicals. It is another example of his great love and great concern for his creation.

Wednesday, April 8, 2009

The Senses


God has given us 5 senses: Sight, hearing, touch, taste and smell. What is remarkable to me is that some of these senses are passive and some are active.

By active, I mean we can actively control the use of that sense. For example, with sight, I can control what I look at, what I do not want to look at, and I can even shut my eyes and not look at anything.

Passive senses are just the opposite. With hearing, I hear everything, whether I want to or not...and I cannot turn it off.

The beauty is that both are special in their own way. Active senses give us the power to control what we are doing. We can focus on the task at hand and perform it more efficiently. Imagine trying to drive a car if you could not control what you were looking at.

Conversely, the passive senses let us help protect us from the unknown--the things we did not think to focus on. For example, if I were asleep in a burning house, I would be quite greatful that my hearing would passively sense the sound of the smoke detector, or my nose would smell the smoke, and I would awaken and get to safety.

So some senses help us to focus while others help to make us aware when we need to change our focus. What a brilliant set of tools God has given us.

And better yet, God did not stop with just giving us a beautifully efficient functioning sensory system. He also packed it with pleasure. Just think how wonderful it is to taste delicious food, to caress someone we love, to listen to beautiful music. God didn't have to do that. But he loved us enough that he provided all that pleasure along with the functionality.

God must enjoy the senses as well. He asks us to worship him with a joyful noise and a fragrant offering. He asks us to taste the bread and the cup. Just imagine how much greater the sensory power of God must be over ours. That's gonna be some wonderful worship in heaven.

Monday, April 6, 2009

Electrical Poles


I was once listening to a radio interview with an inventor. The man being interviewed didn't like being labeled an inventor. Instead, he prefered to be called a discoverer.

The reason? He believed that God invented everything before the beginning of time and just allowed us humans to discover them when God felt the time was appropriate.

This got me thinking. God invented electricity, but waited thousands of years before letting us discover it. God knew that we would need a means to efficiently transport that electricity. Therefore, long before He gave us electricity, He gave us a way to efficiently transport it--trees.

Trees make excellent electrical poles. They are tall, straight, sturdy, and abundant. Best of all, trees do not conduct electricity. This is incredible, given the fact that the majority of living things do conduct electricity. God made an exception with trees, because he knew they would be needed later for holding those wires. How's that for long-range planning!

Also, God knew that birds would be attracted to those wires carried by the tree poles, so in His love He made bird feet to not conduct electricity, either.

If God can prepare trees well in advance for electricity, just think of all the other details he prepares in advance for people.

Sunday, April 5, 2009

Aquifers


Water is the most essential nutrient of life and God found a simple, but clever way to get it to us--via Aquifers. Aquifers are underground bodies of water. It is so simple, but pure genius.

The water is clean and drinkable because it has been filtered through the dirt. Think of it...God uses dirt to make water clean.

By putting the water underground, there are many advantages:

1) It stays cool in the summer and won't freeze in the winter.
2) It won't waste away via evaporation (as it would if exposed to the sun).
3) It gets water near us without having to build a lot of bridges to cross over it.
4) It's protected from a lot of surface polutants.
5) The water is there all the time, not just when it rains.
6) In the old days, the wells also provided a place for people to meet--encouraging social interaction.

Genesis 7:11 would seem to imply that before Noah and the flood, all the water came from these underground sources. It was a part of God's original creative design.

Compare God's simplicty to all of the complexity we use to store up and move water--big dams, leaky plumbing, massive purification plants and so on. God knows we need water, and he put it right under our feet--close, yet protected. What a God!