George Washington Carver's Laboratory of Wonder
In 1921, George Washington Carver stood before the United States Congress holding a handful of peanuts. From that humble legume, he had derived over three hundred products — dyes, plastics, fuel, medicines. When a senator asked the source of his genius, Carver replied simply: "I go into my laboratory and say, 'Dear Mr. Creator, please tell me the secrets of Your universe.' And the Creator answers."
Carver rose each morning at four o'clock to walk the fields near Tuskegee, Alabama, listening for what he called "the voice of the Great Creator" in every leaf, root, and blossom. He believed that the God who spoke the cosmos into being had encoded infinite purpose into the smallest seed. A peanut was never just a peanut. It was a divine idea waiting to be discovered.
Genesis 1 tells us that the Almighty spoke, and light blazed forth. He separated waters from dry land, filled the sky with stars, and packed the earth with living things. Then He looked at all He had made and called it very good. Every atom, every cell, every grain of sand was fashioned with intention.
Carver understood what the creation account proclaims — that this world is not an accident but an artwork, designed by a Creator whose imagination exceeds our comprehension. The same God who flung galaxies into the void tucked three hundred possibilities inside a single peanut shell.
Scripture References
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