As the High Calling newsletter editor, I have the pleasure of reading and featuring other bloggers from around the network. It’s a great position that allows me to encourage others, and at the same time be inspired by great writing.
I recently read a couple of bloggers who took two approaches to the same topic of Creation.
Michelle Cox was ready to do battle, reading books about science and creation. She found debates and arguments and drank them up. But then it hit her. “
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Photo by David Rupert. . |
Mystery is that cloud that neither the scientist nor the theologian can see through. The scientist cannot explain the spark of life, that combustible moment when dead matter finds living substance. The theologian cannot explain a universe that seems to be self-sustaining, spinning without obvious intervention.
She quotes Ray Stedman, who says, “Here is a book that is simply dealing with matters science has not wrestled with and indeed cannot wrestle with– the key to the mystery of human life.”
Go on over to Michele’s Blog, “Quiet Heart,” and encourage her to keep writing.
Kat also experienced questions surrounding Creation, writes “I may not have all the answers, but I know truth.”
She’s comfortable in her own skin of faith, aware that He isn’t always obvious, that He cannot be measured.
Read, “He is, because he is.”
What do you think about Mystery? Or do you need all your questions answered scientifically. Do we need science? Do we need faith? How do you integrate the two?
By the way, I’m always looking for interesting, unique and new blogs to highlight. You can drop me a note here.
Related articles
- Unexpected Journey (highcallingblogs.com)
- Can evolution and creationism be reconciled (wiki.answers.com)
- The ongoing joy of creation (redletterbelievers.blogspot.com)
Read all past issues at http://www.patheos.com/blogs/davidrupert