The Architect Who Spoke Light Into Being
In 2019, Japanese artist Yayoi Kusama unveiled her Infinity Mirror Rooms installation in London — a pitch-black chamber that, when visitors stepped inside, suddenly erupted with thousands of tiny LED lights suspended on thin wires. For a breathless moment, each person stood surrounded by what felt like an endless cosmos of light piercing the darkness. Visitors wept. Children gasped. Grown men stood perfectly still, afraid to break the spell.
Genesis opens with that same breathless moment, magnified beyond all human imagination. Before the first word was spoken, there was only formless void — the Hebrew tohu wabohu — a darkness so complete it had no edges. And then the Almighty spoke. Not with tools. Not with blueprints. With His voice alone, El Shaddai called light out of nothing, separated sea from sky, hung stars like lanterns across the expanse, and sculpted humanity from dust and divine breath.
What Kusama needed months of engineering and thousands of LEDs to approximate, God accomplished with three words: "Let there be." And notice — after each act of creation, He paused. He looked. He declared it good. The Creator of the universe was not in a hurry. He savored every detail, from the hummingbird's iridescent throat to the rings of Saturn.
If the Most High took that kind of care crafting the cosmos, imagine the care He took crafting you.
Scripture References
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