God's Glory in the Heavens
"The reverence of Jehovah is the beginning of wisdom."
Only the foolish say in their heart, "There is
no God." "Day unto day uttereth speech, and
night unto night showeth knowledge." "The heavens declare
the glory of God."--Psalms 111:10; 14:1; 19:1,2
An appreciation of the infinite Power of the Creator and of
our own littleness should make us teachable. The study of
Creation is the "Key of Knowledge." Using this Key we
begin to realize that the only worthy ambition is to co-operate
with our Creator's beneficient designs respecting His Creation.
The planets of our System compared with our Sun are as
nothing. Imagine the Sun's diameter that of a large flour
barrel: Jupiter would compare as a small orange, Earth and
Venus as peas, and Mercury and Mars as raspberry seeds.
The Sun is three hundred thousand times the size of our
Earth. A train at thirty miles an hour could go around the
Earth in one month, but three hundred and forty years would
be required for it to travel the circumference of the Sun.
Our day and night are the result of the Earth's rotation on
its own axis, while its motion around the Sun marks our year.
Planets nearer the Sun have shorter orbits, and hence, shorter
years, while remote ones have longer years. A year on the
planet Mercury would equal three of our months. On Neptune
a year equals 164 of Earth's years.
Yet our Sun is only one of the fixed stars. Around
each of these fixed stars undoubtedly revolves a planetary
System like our own. Thus reckoned, there are billions of other
worlds. Even this is not the limit. If we should stand upon the
farthest and dimmest star, we should no doubt from there see as many
more beyond. We are appalled at the greatness of the Universe.
The zodiacal signs illustrate various sections of the heavens,
visible at different seasons.
The Photodrama of Creation: Part 2 of 96,
The First Day or Epoch