The Echo That Wouldn't Go Away
In 1964, two radio astronomers at Bell Labs in Holmdel, New Jersey — Arno Penzias and Robert Wilson — pointed a massive horn-shaped antenna toward the sky and heard something they couldn't explain. A persistent hiss filled their instruments, a low static coming from every direction. They scrubbed pigeon droppings from the antenna. They recalibrated their equipment. They aimed at empty patches of sky where nothing should be. The hiss remained.
What Penzias and Wilson had stumbled upon was the cosmic microwave background radiation — the faint thermal afterglow of the moment the universe blazed into existence. They were listening to the echo of creation itself, a residual warmth still radiating across the cosmos billions of years later.
Genesis tells us that God spoke, and light erupted from nothing. The Almighty's voice shattered the silence of the void, calling order out of formlessness and brilliance out of darkness. That act was so powerful, so fundamentally world-altering, that its reverberations are still measurable today — literally detectable by a radio antenna in New Jersey.
Every act of God carries that kind of permanence. When the Most High speaks, reality rearranges itself. The word that called light into being on the first day has never stopped resonating. And the same voice that pierced the primordial darkness still speaks into the chaos of our lives today, calling forth light where there was none.
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