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the great things which fill us humans with wonder” (Confessions XII.8.8). This body of evidence should convince the Christian that the primary reason for creation, the purpose for which it is so good, is the greater glorification of God. Stepping down from this high-level abstraction, we must ask ourselves: how exactly does creation glorify its Creator? Our senses and emotions easily provide us with a piece of the answer. Who among us will deny that the laws of nature are consistent, that friendship is sweet, that little children are adorable, or that summer ice cream is delicious? Certainly a God who would think to place such things in His creation (and enable us to enjoy them) is good and worthy of praise, and we should worship Him because of these gifts. But thinking a step further, it cannot be that glorification comes only through humanity’s appreciation, or what reason would there be for every remote corner of the universe into which humanity cannot even see? Scripture acknowledges this as well, with Isaiah beseeching the very mountains and forests to break forth into song (Isaiah 42:8), and John the apostle describing “every creature in heaven and on earth and under the earth and in the sea, and all that is in them, saying, ‘To him who sits on the throne and to the Lamb be blessing and honor and glory and might forever and ever!’” (Revelation 5:13). Evidently, the mountains and forests cannot actually sing, and the creatures of the world cannot actually speak, but is it possible that their mere existence is a testimony to God’s nature, one that is wholly pleasing to Him? If God’s original creation was purely good, then perhaps simply being as God intended is a form of worship. And so, by heeding the laws of His creation, the nucleus of an atom, held together by the strong force, pleases God, as does the Andromeda Galaxy while it hurtles towards our home at 110 km/s. Two objections quickly follow in the wake of this particular view of God’s creation. The first pertains to the truism that the world is not perfect, and this objection cannot be perfectly satisfied, though we will still spend some time acknowledging it. The second is the problem presented by a pervasive sense of mediocrity in the world, which breaks apart quickly under Christian theology. Any person can look at the world and see plainly that the bad almost seems to outweigh the good. Wealth is so unevenly distributed that the world contains both those who must feed their families with mud and those who enjoy such abundance that their own bodies, adapted for scarcity, turn against them. This past year, we have watched disease burn across the entire globe, ravaging humanity’s most vulnerable. Long-standing racial injustices against America’s Black communities are still festering. And issues persist on a personal level as well. We fight with our friends and family for no better reason than to appease our fickle emotions, and even the best of us cannot eliminate daily hypocrisies and indignities. 15