God in Nature
Upon all created things is seen the impress of the Deity. Nature
testifies of God. The susceptible mind, brought in contact with the
miracle and mystery of the universe, cannot but recognise the working of
infinite power. Not by its own inherent energy does the earth produce
its bounties, and year by year continue its motion around the sun. An
unseen hand guides the planets in their circuit of the heavens. A
mysterious life pervades all nature--a life that sustains the unnumbered
worlds throughout immensity, that lives in the insect atom which floats
in the summer breeze, that wings the flight of the swallow and feeds the
young ravens which cry, that brings the bud to blossom and the flower to
fruit.
The same power that upholds nature, is working also in man. The same
great laws that guide alike the star and the atom control human life.
The laws that govern the heart's action, regulating the flow of the
current of life to the body, are the laws of the mighty Intelligence
that has the jurisdiction of the soul. From Him all life proceeds. Only
in harmony with Him can be found its true sphere of action. For all the
objects of His creation the condition is the same--a life sustained by
receiving the life of God, a life exercised in harmony with the
Creator's will. To transgress His law, physical, mental, or moral, is to
place one's self out of harmony with the universe, to introduce discord,
anarchy, ruin.
To him who learns thus to interpret its teachings, all nature becomes
illuminated; the world is a lesson book, life a school. The unity of man
with nature and with God, the universal dominion of law, the results of
transgression, cannot fail of impressing the mind and moulding the
character.
These are lessons that our children need to learn. To the little
child, not yet capable of learning from the printed page or of being
introduced to the routine of the schoolroom, nature presents an
unfailing source of instruction and delight. The heart not yet hardened
by contact with evil is quick to recognise the Presence that pervades
all created things. The ear as yet undulled by the world's clamour is
attentive to the Voice that speaks through nature's utterances. And for
those of older years, needing continually its silent reminders of the
spiritual and eternal, nature's teaching will be no less a source of
pleasure and of instruction. As the dwellers in Eden learned from
nature's pages, as Moses discerned God's handwriting on the Arabian
plains and mountains, and the child Jesus on the hillsides of Nazareth,
so the children of today may learn of Him. The unseen is illustrated by
the seen. On everything upon the earth, from the loftiest tree of the
forest to the lichen that clings to the rock, from the boundless ocean
to the tiniest shell on the shore, they may behold the image and
superscription of God.
So far as possible, let the child from his earliest years be placed
where this wonderful lesson book shall be open before him. Let him
behold the glorious scenes painted by the great Master Artist upon the
shifting canvas of the heavens, let him become acquainted with the
wonders of earth and sea, let him watch the unfolding mysteries of the
changing seasons, and, in all His works, learn of the Creator.
In no other way can the foundation of a true education be so firmly
and surely laid. Yet even the child, as he comes in contact with nature,
will see cause for perplexity. He cannot but recognise the working of
antagonistic forces. It is here that nature needs an interpreter.
Looking upon the evil manifest even in the natural world, all have the
same sorrowful lesson to learn--"An enemy hath done this."
Matthew 13:28.
Only in the light that shines from Calvary can nature's teaching be
read aright. Through the story of Bethlehem and the cross let it be
shown how good is to conquer evil, and how every blessing that comes to
us is a gift of redemption.
In brier and thorn, in thistle and tare, is represented the evil that
blights and mars. In singing bird and opening blossom, in rain and
sunshine, in summer breeze and gentle dew, in ten thousand objects in
nature, from the oak of the forest to the violet that blossoms at its
root, is seen the love that restores. And nature still speaks to us of
God's goodness.
"I know the thoughts that I think toward you, saith the Lord,
thoughts of peace, and not of evil." Jeremiah 29:11. This is the
message that, in the light from the cross, may be read upon all the face
of nature. The heavens declare His glory, and the earth is full of His
riches.
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