Writing for God

Home
Books
Articles
Downloads
Dramas
Online Books
Shop
Blog
Media
Links
About Steve
Contact Steve

Trust in the LORD with all your heart and lean not on your own understanding; in all your ways acknowledge him, and he will make your paths straight (Proverbs 3:5-6)

"A child of five could understand this. Fetch me a child of five."
(Groucho Marx )

"And the lamb and the wolf shall lie down together, but the lamb won't get any sleep" (Woody Allen)

My Blog

<< previous article ARTICLES next article >>

Starry, starry night
God in the Universe

(This article originally appeared in Prophecy Today magazine)

The press had called it E-day. It was a unique event, not seen before in Britain for over 70 years and it was going to happen over Cornwall on August 11th 1999 at around 11am. It was, of course, a total eclipse of the sun and I was ready for it, in the Lake District, around 600 miles north from ground zero, but still with a reasonable view. We got our cosmic performance, oo-ed and aah-ed for a few minutes, then followed the sated crowd back into town for lunch.

We tend to take such things for granted, an entertainment to slot alongside the CGI-laden movies and technical wizardry of sci-fi dramas on the TV. Yet this was no illusion brought about by the manipulation of photons by indulged technicians, this was real life, a "mother nature" production and free!

Yet, if we only realised it, a total eclipse is a totally unlikely event, not just because it hardly happens, but because it happens at all! The astronomer Patrick Moore calls it "unquestionably the finest display in all Nature" but he also says that the fact that it happens at all is "pure chance".

A total eclipse of the sun only happens because, from our perspective peering at the skies, the sun and moon seem to be about the same size, so that when the moon passes exactly in front of the sun, it blots it out to our eyes. There's nothing magical about that if, indeed, the sun and moon are the same size. But they are not. The sun is around 400 times larger than the moon and the only reason they seem to be the same size is that the sun is around 400 times further away from us. If the moon was 5% smaller or larger or the sun was 5% smaller or larger then there could never be a total eclipse. Or if the moon or sun were 5% nearer or further. It's a fine balance here, a slight nudge either away would deprive us of this "finest display in all Nature".

It's not just about entertainment, though. It's not just about having something beautiful to look at. It seems that the Sun and the Moon are the size and distance away that they are for a far more important reason. If they weren't just as they are, then life on Earth would not be. We would not exist, or at best we'd live as scraps of amoeba or bacteria. If we were 5% closer to the Sun we would burn to a crisp in a runaway greenhouse effect. If we were a tad further away from the Sun, we would suffocate in a cloud of carbon dioxide. If the Moon was a little larger, our tides would swamp the earth. If it were a little smaller there would be no tides.

But it doesn't end there. When you look at our solar system as a whole, all nine planets with their collection of moons, there is another amazing fact. It appears that out of these seventy heavenly bodies, the surface of the Earth is the only place in the whole solar system where a total eclipse can be seen properly. So the focus is not just on the Sun and the Moon but on the Earth itself.

And what about the Earth? In ancient days the Earth was considered the centre of the universe. The clever term is geocentric. One of the first thinkers to come up with this idea was Pythagoras. He suggested that the Sun, Moon and five nearest planets all spun round the Earth in perfect circles. This remained popular for some time as it spoke of a stationary Earth, with the rest of the heavenly bodies moving around it. The religious establishment liked this as it put Earth and mankind at the centre of things. The alternative view of the Earth moving round the Sun was considered not just heresy but ridiculous as, if the Earth moved we'd feel it, wouldn't we?

But along came a Polish astronomer, Copernicus, and turned this on its head. He proved that the Earth did, indeed, move around the sun, as did the other planets. What was significant though about this development was something deeper than mere scientific speculation. It turned received wisdom on its head. It implied that the Earth was nothing special in the great scheme of things. It was called the mediocrity principle and confined us to living on a mediocre planet, orbiting a mediocre star in a mediocre galaxy. This view has remained ever since the favoured view of scientists and philosophers.

But there's a conspiracy afoot and it's not a conspiracy of silence. It's like no conspiracy you've ever heard of, as it exists for no selfish purpose. It's not about power, greed or ambition, it's about possibilities and purpose. It's a benign conspiracy, it's there for your benefit, whether you know it or not. It works mainly in the background and most are unaware of its existence. But it is there and it works on your behalf, drawing to itself those who thirst for a life or meaning and purpose. It tells you to engage your brain and think for yourself.

We have a brain in our head, with the capacity for rational thought. We have a heart beating in our chest, with the desire for passionate inquiry. Was Copernicus right or is there anything special about Earth? Many scientists are now beginning to ask this question. Why?

They are asking it because of the rapid advances in scientific knowledge in modern times, particularly in the new ways that things around us can be observed, measured and evaluated. Scientists have discovered some remarkable things. Taken alone they would just be considered quirks or oddities, but taken together - and there's an awfully large number of them - they tell an awesome story.

First we find that the ideal distance between the Sun and any planet, if you want life to occur there is to be not so near that the water in the oceans boils away and not so far that it freezes over. Earth is the only planet within that zone. Then we discover that the Sun itself is just the perfect size for life on Earth and that the size of the Moon and its distance from the Earth is also critical. Moving outwards into the Solar System, we discover that Jupiter, the largest planet, is in just the right place to act as protector of Earth, by capturing asteroids and comets, which otherwise could threaten us and knock lumps out of us.

As to the Earth itself, scientists have discovered how finely tuned it is in so many ways. The magnetic field is just right, the amount of oxygen in the atmosphere is just right, the rate of rotation is just right, the size and properties of the Earth's crust are just right. The list goes on and, in fact, scientists have come up with a list of twenty things that need to be just right and how, if any one of them was slightly different, life on Earth just wouldn't be.

In fact many scientists are now turning against received wisdom and are starting to consider the possibility that the whole Universe seems to be constructed for one purpose only - to make life on Earth possible! You begin to wonder …

(This article is based on material from "The Truth is Out There" published by Authentic)