
Scripture References: John 1:1-8; Colossians 1:15-17
Christ’s Relationship to the Natural Order – Continued
In 1962 our nation was well into the space program. President Kennedy had predicted that we would land men on the moon by the end of that decade. Newsmen doing a report on the pending program stated that some people thought space exploration was a sin and they were asking the opinion from several ministers. One minister replied, “Exploring space is no more a sin than boring a hole in the ground to get water or oil. The possibility of sin lies in what we do with what we learn. The same oil well will produce gasoline for a car driven by a drunken driver who injures people. It also will produce gasoline for an ambulance to take the injured to a hospital.”
Also, in 1973, on one particular day, the San Francisco Chronicle carried an article about two astronomers working in the large observatory there. They had picked up radio signals from an object in space. Their measuring instruments showed that it was fifty million light years from the earth, with light traveling at a speed of over 186,000 miles per second. Someone said that object may have burned up billions of years ago, but its radio waves were still coming through. The human mind can scarcely grasp that concept!
I don’t understand it all though I love advancements in science. But it doesn’t frighten me because I believe it is God, the Author of science that is revealing these things to mankind in His proper time. Regardless of how large science may calculate that the universe is, I know that my Lord made it all! The more we learn about the universe, the greater do we understand the glory and literal awesomeness of Christ.
And He keeps this vast universe running in exact precision. In our own solar system, we determine earth time by the movement of the heavenly bodies.
In this is a lesson for each of us. If the Lord can make this vast universe a cosmos instead of a chaos, surely He can take our shattered lives, put the pieces together, and give us orderly lives.
Christ’s Relationship to Us
“The Word became flesh and dwelt among us . . . full of grace and truth.”
The word for “became” translates the verb “to become” or to come into being. “Dwelt” renders the verb meaning to live in a tent, a temporary dwelling. For thirty-three years, Christ became something He had never been before, a flesh-and-blood man. He identified Himself completely with us, apart from sin. He did so that He might reveal God’s grace and truth in terms of our (mankind’s) understanding.
We say that Jesus of Nazareth was God. And so He was. But to me a far more thrilling truth is that God became Jesus of Nazareth, for me personally!
Just think of it! He who always was, who always was equal with God, yes, who always was God Himself, who created the universe from the smallest components making up atoms to multiplied solar systems, who is the Lord of creation, the center of the universe, and who keeps it running in exact precision, He became a flesh-and-blood man for you and me!
Even more so, He became obedient unto death, even the death of the cross, and He is alive forevermore that He might provide redemption to all who accept and receive Him as Savior. Also, remember this, He would have done so, even if you were the only lost person in His universe.
The planets move at His word. Only you and I, made in God’s image with the right of choice, can say yes or no to Him. But upon your choice hangs your eternal destiny.
John 1:11–12 says of Christ, “He came to His own, and His own did not receive Him. But as many as received Him, to them He gave the right to become children of God, to those who believe in His name.”
Will you reject Him or receive Him? Only you can answer that question.




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