Michael Faraday and the Invisible Force That Binds All Things
In 1845, Michael Faraday stood in his basement laboratory at the Royal Institution in London, demonstrating something no one had ever seen. By rotating a beam of polarized light through a magnetic field, he proved that an invisible force permeated all of physical reality. The scientific establishment had long dismissed the idea — what couldn't be seen couldn't be real. But Faraday, a bookbinder's apprentice with no formal education, revealed that unseen electromagnetic fields were woven through every atom of the material world, quietly holding it all together.
What his colleagues didn't always appreciate was the faith behind his curiosity. Faraday was a lifelong member of the Sandemanian church in London, a man who knelt in prayer before entering his laboratory each morning. He believed his experiments were simply uncovering what God had already built into creation. "The book of nature," he once told a colleague, "which we have to read is written by the finger of God."
Paul told the Colossians that Christ is the image of the invisible God — that in Him all things were created, and in Him all things hold together. Faraday spent his life discovering the invisible forces that sustain the physical universe. But the passage points us deeper still: behind every force, every field, every particle that coheres, stands the Son of God Himself, the unseen architect whose word holds every atom in its place.
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