The ancient pagans worshiped idols of wood, brass, or
stone. Modern society has invented an even weaker idol - clearly the most
insulting of all. It is ironic that it has become fashionable to attribute the
creation of this universe - and of ourselves - to randomness
. "First there was nothing;
then, it exploded." That's the dictum of the day.
This, of course, flies in the face of all observed
phenomena as well as common sense. Whether we look through a telescope or a
microscope, we are confronted with the irrefutable evidence of design
: clear demonstrations of a
level of skill and craftsmanship that renders any comparison with man's best
efforts as clumsy and inept. Yet it has become the "politically correct"
view of our society that it all just "happened" by unaided chance alone!
This is what Peter refers to as "willful ignorance" ( 2 Peter 3:5).
Let's examine a "simple" leaf:
The leaf provides food for the rest of the plant through the process of
photosynthesis.
The outermost layer of the leaf is the
epidermis, which is protected by the waxy coating of the
cuticle .
Guard cells implanted in the epidermis form
pores, known as stomata , through which water, oxygen, and carbon dioxide pass.
Embedded in the inner tissues of the leaf are
chloroplasts, where photosynthesis occurs. The plant veins consist of
two specialized tissues: xylem conducts water from the plant to the
leaf, while phloem
carries food from the leaf to the plant.
The Sympathetic Miracles of
Photosynthesis
Photosynthesis is a process involving two interdependent
stages: the Light-Dependent Reaction (in two phases: [see chart])
and the Light-Independent Reaction.
Light contains many wavelengths. Certain red and blue wavelengths of light are the most effective in photosynthesis because they have exactly the right amount of energy to energize chlorophyll electrons and boost them out of their orbits to a higher energy level.
Other accessory pigments enhance the light-absorption capacity of the leaf by capturing a broader spectrum of blue and red wavelengths, along with yellow and orange wavelengths.
None of the photosynthetic pigments absorb green light; as a result, green wavelengths are reflected, which is why plants appear green.
A chloroplast traps light energy and converts it into chemical energy
contained in two types of molecules:
1) Nicotinamide adenine dinucleotide phosphate (NADPH)
2)
Adenosine triphosphate (ATP)
These will both be used
in the subsequent Light-Independent Reaction [see chart]. The Light-Independent
Reaction takes the two chemicals produced in the Light-Dependent Reaction,
along with CO2 , to form glucose (sugar): the NADPH provides the hydrogen atoms that help form glucose, and the ATP provides the energy for this and other reactions used to synthesize glucose in the stroma.
There is a broader system design that is evident in
the elegance of the total picture. Plants produce both the free oxygen as well
as a surplus of sugar to provide food for the animals. Animals burn
this energy, producing the CO2 needed by the plants [see chart].
This highly complex interdependency all happened, of course, "simply by
blind, unaided chance"! Hardly. But there is an even more astonishing
insight as we stand back and behold the overall composite designs.
Randomness, by its very nature, lacks symmetry, or order of any kind.
When scientists search the heavens with their radio telescopes searching for
extraterrestrial life, they sift through the random "noise" hoping to find
non-random signals indicating the presence of intelligent life.
The very existence of non-random signals are the
very evidence of intelligent life!
This is an inadvertent admission that ascribing the creation itself to
randomness is a contradiction of logic. But the mathematics of nature
contains many further surprises...
The Mathematics of
Beauty
In 1180, an Italian mathematician named Leonardo Fibonacci discovered a
strange sequence of numbers that have since attracted the attention of many
perceptive observers:
1, 1, 2, 3, 5, 8, 13, 21, 34, 55, 89, 144, 233…etc.
Each number is the sum of the previous two. It turns out
that the ratio of any adjacent numbers approximates (1 + 5(½))/2 =
1.618. It would be several hundred years
before these sequences would be broadly recognized in nature. In floral arrangements,
the lily has 3 petals; the yellow violet, 5; delphinium, 8; mayweed, 13;
aster, 21; pyrethrum, 34; helenium, 55; and the Michaelmas daisy, 89 -
all Fibonacci numbers!
In the study of phyllotaxis, the spiral arrangement of
leaves around a plant's stem, the leaves of the elm are arranged at 1/2
circumference; the beech and hazel, 1/3; the apricot and oak, 2/5; the pear and
poplar, 3/8; the almond and pussy willow, 5/13; pines, 5/21 or 13/34; etc. In a
review of 434 Angiospermae and 44 Gymnospermae, they all involve Fibonacci numbers! It
turns out that this maximizes their exposure to sunlight and air without shading
or crowding from other leaves.
In the study of seeds, the rows of bracts on pinecones are 8 and 13;
pineapples, 8, 13, and 21; etc. The optimum divergence angle of 137.5o
produces the best packing. That's why you see Fibonacci spirals in the seed
heads (sunflowers, etc.) But what's really astonishing is that this peculiar
sequence is far more pervasive than in just botany alone.
In art, it has long been recognized that there is a relationship known as
"the Golden Rectangle". This has the peculiar property in that if you remove a
square, you still retain the same "ideal" rectangle in the remainder. You find
this relationship exploited in the Parthenon in Greece, the Great Pyramid in
Egypt, the United Nations Building, credit cards, playing cards, postcards,
light switch plates, writing pads, 3x5, 5x8 index cards, etc. In classic art,
Leonardo da Vinci, Van Gogh, Vermeer, John Singer Sargent, Monet, Whistler,
Renoir, Mary Cassatt, Giotto, Durer and others relied on this "golden rectangle"
in their designs.
In music, the various scales are all Fibonacci numbers: most beautiful chords
found in music are the major and minor sixths.
Musicians like Bach, Beethoven, Bartok, et al., would divide musical time
into periods based on the same "golden" proportions to determine the beginnings
and endings of themes, moods, texture, etc.
This same "Golden Rectangle" is the basis for the "Golden Spiral," which is
the only spiral that does not alter its shape as it grows. This is often noticed
in the chambered nautilus, but this "Golden Spiral" also appears in hurricanes,
spiral seeds, ram's horns, sea-horse tails, growing fern leaves, the DNA
molecule, waves breaking on the beach, tornados, galaxies, the tail of a comet
around the sun, whirlpools, seed patterns of sunflowers, daisies, and
dandelions; the ears of all mammals; and, the cochlea of the human ear.
What is also surprising is that even the orbits of the planets reveal a
relationship suggesting the Fibonacci numbers. Penetrate into nature wherever he
[the scientist] may, thought has been there before him. Clearly, the same
architect that designed the plants, designed the animals, and the universe
itself! His fingerprints seem to define beauty itself. God is, indeed, a
mathematician.
* * *
[This summary was excerpted from our
Expositional Commentary of Genesis.]