06 March 2025

Consider God's Creation

When we are awe-inspired by seeing something beautiful, majestic and breathtaking, in that moment we have no complaints or criticisms.  I have been on walks with windswept trees, waterfalls and amazing rock formations which cannot be adequately captured with panoramic photos.  The cry of birds prompted me to stop walking to observe them soaring high overhead.  The wonders of God's creation reveal themselves in the bush as well as near home.  In the latter weeks of summer, every day I awakened to find several fresh cicada exoskeletons perched on the bricks of our house and garage.  It is fascinating how these insects remain silent underground for years, crawl to a vertical surface, emerge from their exoskeleton, fly away and make their noisy summer music in the trees.  One can only marvel over the design and behaviour of living things--and God who created them.

Today I read part of God's words to Job which involved a string of questions that immediately went beyond Job's understanding.  The implication is God not only knew what Job did not and could not know, but God can do everything Job could never do and imagine doing.  There are innumerable creatures God has made which are capable of doing thing humans cannot do, and thus we marvel over them.  We are amazed by their beauty, behaviour, instincts and will to survive.  Documentaries are made to reveal unique traits of plants and animals we never dreamed possible because they are foreign to our experience.  We are captivated by the power of an ox, the speed of a cheetah, and fear the venom of asps.  Observing living things in this world survive, grow, communicate, seek a mate and care for their young inspires and impresses us.  We marvel how creatures could be so perfectly and wonderfully made without criticism of them.

God asked Job, "Gavest thou the goodly wings unto the peacocks? or wings and feathers unto the ostrich?...19 Hast thou given the horse strength? hast thou clothed his neck with thunder?...26 Doth the hawk fly by thy wisdom, and stretch her wings toward the south?"  (Job 39:13, 19, 26 KJV)  God mentioned animals to Job children can identify, and as a child it would be thrilling to see a peacock in person.  To find a peacock's feather would be special treasure for a kid because of its bright colour, large size and lightness.  Many a valiant man has fled from galloping horses that charged him due to their size and strength.  During my last visit to the States I was impressed by the size of a hawk perched on a power pole which was much larger than doves or pigeons commonly seen in the area.  No child criticises a peacock for not being orange; no one scoffs that thoroughbreds are slow or pathetic and claims we can see better or fly higher than a hawk--that we could somehow improve of God's designs.  These are creatures that far excel us in plumage, size and speed, and we praise them without complaint.

Man who does not fault birds for bright plumage or mocks horses for being heavily muscled ironically finds it easy to fault, criticise and mock God who made them.  Job had seen peacocks, horses and hawks, but it was God how gave peacocks wings, horses strength and hawks wisdom to soar in the heaves.  The logic is unescapable:  since Job could never do what God does wonderfully and perfectly, who was he to think God was ignorant of anything or incapable of doing everything?  The wisdom and glory of God seen in nature and the animal kingdom is plainly seen by mankind, and even tiny ants can instruct us in how to live well.  All that we love and marvel over in nature and take pleasure in, all of creation that stuns us with beauty that leaves us speechless without complaint or critique ought to be ascribed to God who is perfect in all His ways.  Who is man to question God or accuse Him of wrong when He has given us life, is wisdom for us and does all well? 

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