The Heavens Declare His Glory
Psalm 19:1"The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of His hands." (Psalm 19:1)
David wrote this looking up. No telescope, no spectroscopy, no knowledge of nuclear fusion or orbital mechanics — and yet he understood that the sky was speaking. Not accidentally, not blindly, but declaratively. The word for "declare" in Hebrew is mesapper — it means to recount, to narrate, to tell a story. The heavens are not just beautiful. They are testimony.
Paul echoes this in Romans 1: "what may be known about God is plain... because God has made it plain... For since the creation of the world God's invisible qualities — his eternal power and divine nature — have been clearly seen, being understood from what has been made." The creation is not a neutral backdrop. It is a witness stand.
This is why the Creation Atlas exists. Not as a science project. Not as an academic exercise. As an act of listening to the testimony. Every star cataloged is a word heard. Every species classified is a sentence in a story that was being told before any human was here to receive it.
The mathematical precision of the cosmos — the fine-tuning of physical constants, the improbability of a universe hospitable to life, the information density of DNA — does not prove God to those who will not look. But for those who will look, it is overwhelming. The heavens declare His glory. They have always been declaring it. We are just learning to read.