Beyond What the Mind Can Hold
In the spring of 1905, a twenty-six-year-old patent clerk sat at his desk in the Swiss Federal Patent Office in Bern, reviewing applications for electromagnetic devices. Albert Einstein held no university post. He had no laboratory, no research assistants, no prestigious credentials — just a restless mind that had been chasing a single question since he was sixteen: what would it look like to ride alongside a beam of light?
That June, he submitted a paper to the journal Annalen der Physik titled "On the Electrodynamics of Moving Bodies." In it, he demonstrated that time itself is not fixed — that clocks tick differently depending on how fast you travel, that space contracts, that the speed of light remains constant no matter who measures it. The universe, it turned out, did not operate the way human intuition assumed. Reality was stranger, deeper, and more magnificent than anyone had imagined.
Einstein's discovery humbled the entire scientific world. The universe refused to fit inside the small box of human expectation.
Isaiah knew this long before Bern. "For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways," declares the Lord. "As the heavens are higher than the earth, so are My ways higher than your ways."
If the physical universe already stretches beyond our comprehension, how much more the mind of the Almighty? The God who designed spacetime itself thinks in dimensions we have not yet dreamed of. That is not a reason for despair — it is an invitation to wonder.
Scripture References
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