The Architect Who Holds It All Together
In 2015, structural engineers discovered that the Millennium Tower in San Francisco was sinking — tilting inches per year into the soft soil beneath it. Fifty-eight stories of luxury condos, and the whole thing was slowly leaning because the foundation piles had never reached bedrock. Residents watched cracks spider across their walls. Property values plummeted. Lawsuits flew. Engineers debated fixes for years. The building looked magnificent from the outside, but without something anchoring it to solid rock, every floor, every beam, every pane of glass was gradually pulling apart.
Paul wrote to the Colossians about a cosmos that works the same way. "In Him all things hold together," he declared — not as poetry, but as structural theology. Christ is the bedrock beneath every created thing. He is before all things, and in Him the entire frame of existence keeps its integrity. Without Him at the center, civilizations tilt, relationships fracture, and the human soul develops cracks no amount of success can plaster over.
But here is the gospel buried in that engineering metaphor: God was pleased to have all His fullness dwell in Christ and through Him to reconcile all things. The Almighty did not abandon the sinking tower. He drove the foundation all the way down to bedrock — through the cross — so that everything broken could be made plumb again. Every life anchored to Christ finds the one foundation that will never shift.
Scripture References
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