from strength for the journey
Jan. 15, 2012
“I praise you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made; your works are wonderful, I know that full well” Psalm 139:14
The November 13, 2006, issue of Time
magazine highlighted the “Best Inventions of 2006.” Topping the list
was the online video-sharing service, YouTube. Other technological
marvels included a 130 mph electric roadster, a mattress that uses
magnets to levitate 16 inches above the floor, a battery-powered
inflatable pool-lounger, and a wall-mounted “magic” mirror. When
connected to the electronic gadgets in your home, an ethereal face
appears in this mirror to announce that your hot tub is ready or that
someone has pulled into your driveway. I am not personally interested
in the newly bred hypo-allergenic cat, but a new vending machine that
actually mixes, freezes, and dispenses fresh ice cream in 45 seconds
definitely has my attention!
Bill Gates, whose Microsoft
Corporation just unveiled their new “Vista” operating system, puts all
of this engineering and innovation into perspective. In the book The Road Ahead,
he stated: “Human DNA is like a computer program but far, far more
advanced than any software ever created.” Your DNA has been there since
the moment you were conceived, stipulating your hair color, your
height, and the shape of your nose. It uniquely marks you and provides
a clearly traceable link back through your family heritage. God has
endowed the very building blocks of our genetic material with a level
of sophistication and complexity that is infinitely beyond the
imaginations of science’s best and brightest minds. God’s attention to
detail and intriguing creativity is so powerful that it can even
silence the most skeptical heart.
Millennia before the discovery
of DNA, the psalmist praised God for His detailed design in our lives.
Numerous psalms sing the praises of God’s handiwork in
creation—magnificent oceans, star-streaked heavens, and majestic
mountains. But in Psalm 139:1-24
the writer exults in the intimate work of God in creating human life.
His praise is personal: “I praise you because I am fearfully and
wonderfully made.” He is aware that God’s creation is not only grand
and vast, it is infinitely, wonderfully specific.
That encourages
me in so many ways. It reminds me that I am not a random, accidental
meeting of genetic material. God knew me, orchestrated the details of
my DNA, and is carrying out His plans for my life. You are not an
accident either. Like the psalmist, you were “fearfully and wonderfully
made.” Your life has the full attention of the Creator of the universe,
and you are precious to Him.
I am also encouraged to realize that
God has given this much attention to not only you and me, but, think
about it, to every single one of the six billion people on
this planet. He wrote everyone’s genetic code. He knows everyone’s
parents’ names, their families, their hurts, their joys, and their
needs. He has a specific love for each human who walks this planet and
sent Jesus to die for his or her sins, just as Christ died for yours
and mine. All of us are “fearfully and wonderfully made.”
So even
as we eagerly anticipate and enjoy the latest in technology, the real
marvel and wonder in our lives should be reserved for the Master
Creator and Designer and the One who knitted us together and gave us
life. Quite honestly, no technological advance no matter how
spectacular it may be can even come close to that. And even if it did,
it wouldn’t care for you and love you. I’ll be forever grateful that
God’s amazing design for us is not only high tech but high touch as
well!
YOUR JOURNEY…
- How does your awareness of the complexity of your DNA change your view of God’s intimate interest in your life?
- What difference does it make in your perspective on yourself and God knowing that God’s creative power put together the very DNA that shapes who you are?
- How is your perspective on the needs of the people of the world shaped by the knowledge that God intimately knows each one of them?
- Read through Psalm 139:1-24. Pray back to God the prayer that David said to close the psalm.
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