The Genome and the One Who Wrote It First
In the year 2003, Dr. Francis Collins stood before a bank of microphones and announced that the Human Genome Project was complete. After thirteen years of painstaking research, scientists had finally mapped all three billion base pairs of human DNA — the biological instruction manual for building a person. Collins called it "the language in which God created life."
Three billion letters. That is what it takes to describe the physical blueprint of a single human being — the curl of your hair, the rhythm of your heartbeat, the precise shade of brown in your eyes. It took 2,800 researchers from twenty countries over a decade to read what was already written.
And the Psalmist knew it long before any microscope existed. "You knit me together in my mother's womb," David wrote. "Your works are wonderful." He understood that the Almighty was not a distant architect filing blueprints from heaven. El Roi — the God Who Sees — was intimately present in the hidden place, threading nerve endings and folding brain tissue with the attentiveness of a Father who already knew every word His child would speak, every path that child would walk.
What stunned the scientific world in 2003, God had been doing quietly, personally, in every womb since the beginning. His thoughts toward you outnumber the sand. You were never mass-produced. You were hand-written.
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