Hello ,
On a cloudless November night in 1572, Tycho
Brahe observed an unusually bright star in the northern sky that suddenly appeared in the constellation Cassiopeia. It had been assumed since antiquity that anything beyond the moon's orbit was eternally immutable. That star, SN 1572, is now classified as a supernova that is 7,500 light-years from Earth.
By 1592, Tycho Brahe had cataloged 777 stars. His
mapping of those fixed stars blazed a trail for his protege, Johannes Kepler, to discover the laws that govern planetary motion. Several centuries later, it was a telescope named in Kepler's honor—the Kepler space telescope—that would catalog 530,506 stars.
Tycho Brahe is widely regarded as the greatest observer of the skies who had ever lived, but even
Brahe couldn't have imagined the existence of half a million stars. And that's the tip of the iceberg. Astronomers now estimate the existence of more than two trillion galaxies. Each of those two trillion galaxies has an average of one hundred billion stars. Do the math, and that adds up to two hundred sextillion stars in the observable universe.
The point?
Creation is much larger than any of us can imagine! And the same goes for the Creator. Like Tycho Brahe, some of us are quite content with our catalog of 777 stars. We think that's all there is. We've settled for a god we can measure and manage.
"Lift up your eyes on high, and see who has created these things, who brings out their host by
number; he calls them all by names by the greatness of his might, for that he is strong in power; not one fails."
Isaiah 40:26, KJV
Have a great day and God bless!
Pastor Mike / The Open Word