God’s Spectacular Universe
God’s Spectacular Universe
by Parrish W. Jones, Ph.D.
© 9/20/1999 all rights reserved.
(NOTE: This sermon was delivered at First Presbyterian Church, Windber, PA with the use of a video projector and manyslides. Only a few can be reproduced here.)
The Old Testament book of Genesis reads: "In the beginning God created the heavens and the earth, the earth was a formless void and darkness covered the face of the deep, while a wind from God swept over the face of the waters." In these simple words, the author/storyteller speaks of the awe of heavenly creation.

"Let there be light," says God, "And there was light." There were the starry heavens above and the sun and the moon. Little did anyone think then or even until very recently that we may one day look back from the starry landscape to appreciate the beautiful light in the heavens we call earth. Yet, that is just what happened in the 1950’s and 1960’s and continues to this day.
In those earliest days I heard people worry: "Will going to the moon take away the last speck of mystery in life? Will we lose faith because we have conquered the heavens above as we have the earth below. Yet, as Astronaut Edgar Mitchell viewed his first Earthrise, he said, "Suddenly from behind the rim of the moon in long slow motion moments of immense majesty, there emerges a sparkling blue and white jewel, a light, delicate sky-blue sphere laced with slowly swirling veils of white, rising gradually like a small pearl in a thick sea of black mystery. It takes more than a moment to fully realize this is Earth . . . Home." [Edgar Mitchell as quoted in Kevin W. Kelly, ed., The Home Planet (Reading MA: Addison Wesly, 1988), photographs 42-45)]

It seems our storyteller in Genesis was also awestruck by the oceans, rivers, lakes and streams, the majestic mountains, and expansive plains and deserts, the vast variety of flora and fauna which accompanied him at home. God spoke to the waters and turned them into lakes and streams, rivers and estuaries, seas and oceans. And God gave birth to the atmosphere that surrounds us and gave birth to the living organisms which gave balance and gave birth to the stability and sustenance of the earth and gave birth to such a teeming variety of things that despite cataclysm after cataclysm, life has gone on, renewed and regenerated by the crisis.
The more I read about biology and evolution (I just completed a book on the Microcosmos) the more I am amazed at how close the storyteller of Genesis got it. The order is almost perfect. He could never have fathomed the detail. It has been three millennia since he told these stories and perhaps as long since they were first put on anything like paper for future generations to read. But here it is. One can only be amazed that such an ancient one as this could recognize the spectacular interrelationships of the things on earth.
We too have been entranced by this bounty. All of us have gone and been amazed and intrigued by the wild animals in the woods, the exotic animals of the zoos, and occasionally, we take time to contemplate the wonders of the plants and animals which surround us at our home within this home.
Yet, the things which we can see are only a superficial glance at God’s spectacular whole. There are things beneath the surface, unavailable to the human eye without the aid of microscope which make our life possible. So dependent on these little microscopic things are we that God gave birth to literally zillions of different ones.

They make it possible for plants to absorb nutrients into their systems so plants can
■produce food for other animals and for us;
■provide shelter for all manner of animals and other plants;
■hold the soil so it does not run off;
■provide the materials for our homes, businesses, and recreation.
They are the foundation of digestion in all animals. Without bacteria and other micro-organisms we could put food into our bodies, but we could not absorb the nutrients. Bacteria live in our mouths, our stomachs, our lungs, our intestines. Just as our bodies are largely made of water, the vacuous cavities of our bodies are filled with micro-organisms. In fact, nearly every cell structure in our bodies can be linked to micro-organisms which have existed millions of years prior to the birth of humanity.
We are given to not paying much attention anymore to the intricate webs of life because for most of us, food is given by supermarkets. Our fears are not that farmers will quit growing food but that our local grocer will close her or his doors. Then where will the food come from. Where it always has—the hand of God through the vitality of nature and the labor of farmers and farm hands.

God,
brilliant Lord,
yours is a household name.
Nursing infants gurgle choruses about you;
toddlers shout the songs
That drown out enemy talk
and silence the atheist babble.


God, brilliant Lord,
your name echoes around the world.