God’s Nanomachines

[ 8 ] April 20, 2012 |

Catholic Free Press

When that first soft cloud of pale green appears on the trees in Spring, I always try hard to comprehend the unimaginably high number of leaves there are budding into the world’s most sophisticated little nano-scale energy machines.  It is truly a miracle of nature, and one that is so common all around us, it’s easy to overlook.  Did you ever really consider the complexity in a single leaf cell? Each photosynthetic cell takes light and turns it into electrical energy, which is used to convert carbon dioxide and water into food.  The cellular factories are not only complex, they operate at a higher efficiency than man has ever been able to achieve.

More amazing still, the waste product is something quite necessary for other life – oxygen.  I know this sounds like a review of a high school science lesson, but take some time to stare at the trees and be awed.  Each cell in each leaf is God’s handiwork, multiple steps in multiple cycles, perfectly timed, perfectly aligned, perfectly productive, all ordered for a purpose.  A leaf can have tens of millions of cells and a tree can grow hundreds of thousands of leaves.  How many trees can you see just looking out the window?

Consider this: It is estimated that the global rate of energy capture by photosynthesis exceeds human civilization’s power consumption multiple times over in a given year, and there’s no pollution.  Photosynthesis is part of larger cycles on the earth and in the universe, a perpetual ongoing cycle of life all willed by God.  The matter that makes up the physical world today has been here since the beginning of time, recycling over and over.

Next time you are impressed with a new car or a fancy house, think about the leaves, think about where the materials came from to make those things we enjoy, think about how and why we even figured out how to invent technology.  Your new computer or latest new mobile device is impressive technology for sure, but those things only came to be constructed because God made man an intelligent being who desires to study his world and improve his life.  We only learned how to harness nature because it is ordered in the first place.  And just when you think you can’t smile any wider pondering the leaves, get ready.  Here come the flowers.  Man has never been able to approximate that beauty, but it’s proof that God wants us to be happy.

 

 

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Category: Catholic Free Press, Featured, Random, Science

Comments (8)

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  1. LJP says:

    Huzzah! Yes, I’ve often stood, slack-jawed in awe, pondering the amazing efficiency and impeccable timing of nature! To understand its mechanics only increases its wonder. How far we have come, but how far we have yet to go to match what has changed little for millions of years! Truly, truly amazing.

    Thanks for this one.

  2. Gina Burns says:

    What a beautiful reflection! Believing in God has never meant that we have to disregard science. God invented science!

  3. Leila says:

    This is an awe-inspiring post! Thank you!!

  4. Manny says:

    Great post. I agree it’s awe-inspiring. You should take a look at this post regarding our energy needs from the late Maria Esperanza. http://www.spiritdaily.net/oilprophecy.htm

  5. Name says:

    Well written thoughts on how much God amazes me every minute of every day!

  6. David Tolson says:

    And if we study the profound teachings on the Divine Will Jesus gave to Luisa Piccarreta,we begin to understand this beauty in Creation and why God gave it to us. Thy Kingdom come, Thy Will be done, on earth as it is in Heaven.

  7. tz says:

    ‘Miracle of Nature” is an oxymoron. If it occurrs or its origin is in natural processes, it is by definition not a miracle. But that is why Darwin was illu to try to reduce biology to a process.

  8. Andrew says:

    Life just wants to be… miracle or not, God’s will or not it is still nifty and efficient don’tcha think? Even despite mutations and defects it still keeps plodding along with or without us (presumably).

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