God's Little Workshop
George Washington Carver used to rise before dawn at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama, walking through the fields with a small collection jar, praying a simple prayer: "Mr. Creator, show me the secrets of Your universe." What Carver found astonished the scientific world — over three hundred uses for the peanut, more than a hundred for the sweet potato. He called his modest laboratory "God's Little Workshop."
What made Carver extraordinary was not just his brilliance. It was his conviction that wisdom was already there, woven into the cellular structure of every plant, waiting to be discovered. He did not invent the chemistry of the peanut. He listened until creation spoke.
This is precisely the vision of Proverbs 8. Wisdom is not locked away in some heavenly vault, accessible only to scholars and saints. She stands at the crossroads and calls out at the city gates. She was present when the Almighty laid the earth's foundations, "rejoicing always in His presence, delighting in the human race." The same wisdom that calibrated the orbits of planets also hides inside the shell of a peanut.
Carver understood what Solomon wanted us to grasp: wisdom is not distant. She is near, calling, embedded in the very fabric of what God has made, waiting for anyone humble enough to listen.
Scripture References
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