The total of human knowledge is increasing at an astonishing rate. It is estimated that it took 300 years for knowledge to double after 1450, but only 150 years for it to double again. From 1900 to 1950 it doubled once more. It is now believed to double every 12 months and, with the build out of the internet and AI, is soon expected to double every 12 hours.
Only 200 years ago physicians thought that illness was caused by bad blood.
George Washington was virtually bled to death in 1799 as the favored treatment
for an obvious infection. One hundred years ago Henry Ford introduced the
assembly line and the Model T. Fifty years ago personal computers were unknown.
Thirty-five years ago, the World Wide Web was introduced. The first iPhone went on sale January 29,
2007. Our access to knowledge and the
world has dramatically changed. What is there that we do not know today that
will be common knowledge tomorrow? What is it that we think we know that will
be proved wrong or usless?
Each of us can comprehend only a small segment of the vast ocean of human
knowledge. And, when all our knowledge is compiled and computed it only
scratches the surface of the limitless universe. We are still confined to this
tiny spec of a planet. Humans have not been able to travel any further than the
moon. The vastness of the universe remains far beyond our reach. The closest
star, Proxima Centauri, is 4.33 light years away. Traveling at the fastest
speed imaginable with current technology, scientists estimate it would take
19,000 years to reach it. At our very best we can only observe the vast reaches
of the universe through our telescopes as though looking through a glass
darkly.
Regarding God, we debate our axioms and truths as if we have complete and
comprehensive knowledge about God. We must always be reminded by the words of
the prophet when God says, “My ways are not your ways. My thoughts are not your
thoughts. As the heavens are above the earth, so are my thoughts above your
thoughts.”
This is one of the reasons God sent his Son, simply because God is
incomprehensible. Knowledge of his universe is too vast. Knowledge of his
nature and character is too far beyond our mortal minds. As with his creation,
we can only observe and stand in awe.
We are like newborn babes first opening their eyes to a new world they have
never seen. We are like children giggling over newfound discoveries on the playground:
a stick, a flower, a worm, a caterpillar. I think God takes joy in this. He
takes pleasure in our discoveries of his intricate, complex and mysterious
creation.
At the same time, he is grieved by our blindness. The violence, cruelty, abuse and conflict that exists on the earth bears witness that for all our advance in scientific and technological knowledge, we are still unable to focus on the truths that matter most.
Jesus was the
only one who has ever known and seen all things clearly. For all of our
advances we have yet to learn the Sermon on the Mount and put it into practice.
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