Can We Really See God in Creation?
The question of God's existence has echoed through human history, from ancient philosophers to modern scientists launching rockets toward the moon. It's a question that deserves honest exploration, not just comfortable assumptions. What if we could discover evidence of God simply by looking at the world around us? What if creation itself testifies to a Creator?
This isn't about winning arguments or proving points. It's about opening our eyes to what has been plainly visible all along—if we're willing to see it.
The Problem We Must Face
Before we can appreciate any good news, we must first acknowledge the bad news. Until we recognize our condition, we cannot fully understand the remedy offered to us. It's like ignoring the warning signs in your home—the crack in the foundation, the leak in the ceiling. Avoiding the problem doesn't make it disappear; it only allows the damage to worsen.
Romans 1:18 presents us with a sobering reality: "The wrath of God is being revealed from heaven against all godlessness and wickedness of people who suppress the truth by their wickedness."
God's wrath isn't capricious anger. It's righteous response—the kind of indignation that rises in us when we witness injustice. Because God is perfectly good, perfectly right, perfectly holy, He cannot ignore what opposes His nature. His righteousness demands a response to godlessness and wickedness.
But notice something crucial: we suppress the truth. Like pushing a beach ball underwater, we actively work to keep truth submerged beneath the surface of our consciousness. The longer we suppress it, the less aware we become of what we're doing. Our perception shifts. What once seemed clearly wrong becomes acceptable, even celebrated.
Three Invitations to End Your Year Well
As the calendar year draws to a close, we find ourselves bombarded with year-in-review notifications. Spotify tells us which songs we played on repeat. Social media platforms compile our photos into tidy videos. Everything gets wrapped up in a neat digital bow, showing us a carefully curated version of our lives.
But here's the question worth asking: When was the last time you paused to consider what God has done in your life over the past twelve months?
The difference between an algorithm's summary and genuine spiritual reflection is profound. One shows us data points and highlights. The other invites us into transformation.
When Generosity Changes Everything: Stories of Faith and Finances
There's something profoundly uncomfortable about talking about money in church. Hearts race. Palms sweat. Eyes dart toward the exits. Yet within this discomfort lies one of the most transformative invitations God extends to us: the invitation to trust Him with everything—including our wallets.
The question isn't whether God needs our money. He owns the cattle on a thousand hills, after all. The real question is whether our hearts are fully His, or whether they're still choked by the deceitfulness of wealth and the grip of fear.