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During a gathering of entrepreneurs in Las Vegas one of the speakers was a brand architect at Lego. During his presentation, he handed each attendee six Lego bricks. Then he asked them to estimate the number of unique combina¬tions that could be created with those six bricks. This sounded like a trick question, so one attendee aimed high and guessed several hundred combina¬tions. That left him several hundred million short of the actual answer!
Are you ready for this? The total number of possible permutations—six bricks with eight studs each—is 915,403,765. Nearly a billion possible permutations with six Lego bricks!
While the number of possible Lego combinations is mind-boggling, it pales in comparison to the sheer complexity and potential combinations found within DNA. Here's why:
Legos have a limited number of ways they can connect. DNA, on the other hand, uses four different "bases" (adenine, guanine, cytosine, and thymine) that can pair in specific ways. However, the sequence of these base pairs is what carries the genetic information, and this sequence can vary enormously.
A single strand of DNA can contain millions or even billions of these base pairs. A gene, which is a specific segment of DNA, might be hundreds or thousands of base pairs long. The number of possible sequences for a gene, let alone an entire DNA molecule, is astronomically huge.
To give you a sense of the scale, the human genome contains roughly 3 billion base pairs.
Even a relatively short gene of 1,000 base pairs has 4^1000 possible sequences (4 because there are 4 bases). That's a 4 followed by 1,000 zeros, a number far exceeding the number of atoms in the known universe!
Possible Preaching Angle:
The information encoded in DNA is incredibly vast and precisely organized, making the Lego analogy seem in comparison. It serves as a powerful reminder of the awe-inspiring power and intelligence behind creation and is a testimony to the purposeful Creator behind life.
Source: Adapted from Editor, “What Is a Gene?” MedlinePlus.gov (Accessed 2/12/25); Bruce Alberts et al., Molecular Biology of the Cell (Garland Science, 2014); Mark Batterson, A Million Little Miracles (Multnomah, 2024), p. 37.
In the optimistic vision of many people, artificial intelligence will make us like gods. If that seems like hyperbole, listen to AGI (artificial general intelligence) enthusiasts’ own words. Last November, Masayoshi Son (CEO, SoftBank) said, “Artificial super intelligence will evolve into Super Wisdom and contribute to the happiness of all humanity.”
In October of 2024, Demis Hassabis (CEO, Google DeepMind) predicted that AGI will emerge within ten years and, among other fantastical things, will “cure all diseases.” In January, he upgraded this projection to five years.
Sam Altman (CEO, OpenAI) spoke of his company’s contribution to “the glorious future.” The AI Action Summit in Paris, Dario Amodei (CEO of the AI company Anthropic) portended that by “2026 or 2027,” we will likely have AI systems comparable to a “country of geniuses in a datacenter.”
A.G. Elrod, a Christian who researches AI, commented: “This technology may well benefit humanity in incredible ways… But Christians [alone] are uniquely positioned to… speak to the need for faith in the changeless God who is ‘the same yesterday and today and forever’ (Heb. 13:8). We are positioned to offer the only true solution to life’s uncertainty… Our identity, hope, and future belong ultimately and only to Christ. Rightly engaging with technology—avoiding the open idolatry of some AGI boosters today—requires us to honor the God who liberates us from bondage to every idol, ancient or modern, and invites us into a Canaan of genuine freedom and flourishing.”
Source: A.G. Elrod, The Silicon Calf, Christianity Today (4-21-25)
On a cloudless November night in 1572, Tycho Brahe observed an unusually bright star in the northern sky that suddenly appeared in the constellation Cassiopeia. It had been assumed since antiquity that anything beyond the moon's orbit was eternally immutable. That star, SN 1572, is now classified as a supernova that is 7,500 light-years from Earth.
By 1592, Tycho Brahe had cataloged 777 stars. His mapping of those fixed stars blazed a trail for his protege, Johannes Kepler, to discover the laws that govern planetary motion. Several centuries later, it was a telescope named in Kepler's honor—the Kepler space telescope—that would catalog 530,506 stars.
Tycho Brahe is widely regarded as the greatest observer of the skies who had ever lived, but even Brahe couldn't have imagined the existence of half a million stars. And that's the tip of the iceberg. Astronomers now estimate the existence of more than two trillion gal¬axies. Each of those two trillion galaxies has an average of one hundred billion stars. Do the math, and that adds up to two hundred sextillion stars in the observable universe.
The point? Creation is much larger than any of us can imagine! And the same goes for the Creator. Like Tycho Brahe, some of us are quite content with our catalog of 777 stars. We think that's all there is. We've settled for a god we can measure and manage. If that's you, your god is too small.
Possible Preaching Angle: Why did God tell Abram to count the stars? (Gen. 15:5). God was messing with his mind, in a good way. He was giving Abram a nightlight—a visual reminder of both his history and his destiny. The same God who hung the stars in the sky can give you descendants. Faith adds God to every equation. When you do that, five loaves plus two fish equals all-you-can-eat for five thousand people. And there is more left over than you started with.
Source: Mark Batterson, A Million Little Miracles (Multnomah, 2024), pp. 4, 21
“For My thoughts are not your thoughts, neither are your ways My ways,” declares the LORD. “For as the heavens are higher than the earth, so My ways are higher than your ways and My thoughts than your thoughts.” Isaiah 55:8-9
To give these verses some perspective, the distance from one side of the universe to the other is an incredible 93 billion light-years. Using this as our measure, God likens the distance between our thoughts and his thoughts to the distance from one side of the universe to the other.
To put that immense number another way, 93 billion light-years is 544 septillion miles (544 followed by 20 zeros). Even if we tried to travel from one side of the universe to the other at the speed of light (5.88 trillion miles a year), it would take an infinite amount of time. That's because the universe will continue to expand whilst you are travelling, even at the speed of light. So, the edge of the universe will remain forever sealed off from you — even travelling at the speed of light.
That means that your best thought on your best day is ninety-three billion light-years short of how great God really is.
Possible Preaching Angles: Greatness of God; Omniscience of God; Trusting God – The immense wisdom, insight, and love of God should calm our fears. You may not understand your current crisis and worry about the outcome, but God is in control, His love for you is everlasting, His plan for you will happen, and you can rest secure that your Father is watching over you.
Source: Adapted from Mark Batterson, A Million Little Miracles (Multnomah, 2024), pp. xvii-xviii; Fraser-Govil, Ph.D., Wellcome Sanger Institute, Quora (Accessed 2/23/25)
Two reasons why we should use God’s wisdom—not ours—with sex.
Senior Lead Pastor and author Anthony Delaney writes:
We are told this is the Knowledge Economy. The Information Age. But where is wisdom to be found?
Great question – where is wisdom to be found?
Google it.
I did.
You could do it too.
Guess what came up as the top answer?
In fact, as I type into Google, “Where is wisdom to be found?” I scroll down and just keep rolling - and every answer, the first 25 at least – come from the Bible.
From the Book of Job, chapter 28:12, that says, “But where shall wisdom be found? and where is the place of understanding?”
Google can’t tell you the answer, but it can tell you where to find it, in God’s Word.
Source: Google Search, “Where is wisdom to be found?” (Accessed 5-30-24)
The world began a weekly group therapy session with Frazier Crane thirty years ago. This spin-off character from Cheers played by Kelsey Grammer, emerged as an iconic counselor who masterfully blended humor and wisdom. While Grammer is an actor by trade, his years playing a therapist has given him lasting insights into the human psyche.
In an interview with The Guardian, Grammer was asked how he felt attitudes towards therapy has changed evolved over the last 30 years. After wrestling with the question for a few moments, he concluded with this:
God is probably the best therapist, without wanting to get on too big of a preachy soapbox. I just think if you have faith, you’re probably one step ahead of the storm of everyday life today. There is insanity everywhere. It’s a global phenomenon. It seems to be cooked into our governments. It’s a difficult road to navigate on your own.
Source: Catherine Shoard, "‘I cast a long shadow’: Kelsey Grammer on Frasier, fame and why God is the best therapist," The Guardian (12-1-23)
Wesley So, the current US Chess Champion (in 2017, 2020, and 2021), shares how he came to Christ:
On the small planet where elite chess players dwell, very few people worship Jesus Christ. If anyone discovers that you’re one of those “superstitious,” “narrow-minded idiots,” you’re likely to see nasty comments accumulate on your Facebook fan page. They wonder how I, the world’s second-ranked chess player, can be so “weak-minded.”
Wesley grew up in the Philippines and as a child was told that if he was good, God would bless him. But this confused him, because it seemed like the bad people received more than the good people. He knew of many famous crooks who went to church and they were pretty rich. So, Wesley decided to play it safe. He would recite the right words in church, but he never connected to God in a meaningful way.
He played chess since age six or seven and as he grew up, he kept on winning. But he could never afford to hire a coach or get serious chess training. When he was 18, he got an offer to play on the chess team of a small American university. So, he left home and moved to America.
Then I met the people who would become my foster family. They were Christians, and Lotis, my foster mother, could sense my unhappiness. She asked me what I wanted to do in life, and I replied that I loved playing chess but didn’t think I was talented enough to translate that into a full-time career. Lotis told me to focus on chess alone for the next two years—the family would support me any way it could.
His foster parents were mature Christians and insisted that living as a member of the family meant that he would need to faithfully accompany them to church. They taught him that the Bible was the final authority, deeper and wiser than the internet and more truthful than any of his friends.
Before long, I was practicing my faith in a more intense way. My new family calls Christianity the “thinking man’s religion.” They encouraged me to ask questions, search for answers, and really wrestle with what I discovered. I knew I wanted the kind of simple, contented, God-fearing life they enjoyed.
People in the chess world sometimes want to know whether I think God makes me win matches. Yes. And sometimes he makes me lose them too. He is the God of chess and, more importantly, the God of everything. Win or lose, I give him the glory. Will I rise to become the world champion one day? Only God knows for sure. In the meantime, I know that he is a generous and loving Father, always showering me with more blessings than I could possibly deserve.
Source: Wesley So, “Meeting the God of Chess,” CT magazine (September, 2017), pp. 87-88
Thomas Young was known as “The Last Person Who Knew Everything.” The 18th-century Britain was a polymath, meaning a person whose knowledge spans a substantial number of subjects, using complex amounts of knowledge to solve specific problems.
As a child Thomas was precociously talented; by the age of 13 he had read 30 chapters of the Book of Genesis in Hebrew, a language he taught himself. In 1801, he had been appointed to a professorship of natural philosophy at the Royal Institution, where he delivered as many as 60 lectures in a year. In 1808 he completed his medical training at the University of Cambridge and set up practice as a physician in London. Young's skill as a physician, however, did not equal his skill as a scholar of natural philosophy or linguistics. His opinions were sought in many areas, such as the introduction of gas lighting to London and methods of ship construction.
In physics, he had the boldness to contradict Newton and propose a wave theory of light. In physiology, he made significant advances in understanding the mechanisms of the eye, explaining how it focuses, and defining astigmatism. Egyptologists hail Young as one of the founders of their science. He provided key insights into deciphering the ancient Egyptian hieroglyphs on the Rosetta stone. In medicine he was a distinguished physician. In music he invented a technique for tuning keyboard instruments.
The “Last Man Who Knew Everything” was one of the most versatile minds of the 19th century.
The world gives great praise to brilliant minds, such as Thomas Young, Albert Einstein, Leonardo da Vinci, and Stephen Hawking. But God considers the wisdom of the world as foolishness (1 Cor. 1:20) because it overlooks the One who was truly wise – “One greater than Solomon is here” (Matt. 12:42, Luke 11:31). Only Jesus could show us the true meaning of life, true wisdom, and could give us eternal life beyond the grave.
Source: Adapted from Lauren Kassell, “The Last True Know-It-All,” American Scientist (Accessed 9/17/21); Andrew Robinson, The Last Man Who Knew Everything (PiPress, 2005)
Americans are worse at The Price Is Right than they used to be. On the game show, which has been running since 1972, four contestants are asked to guess the price of consumer products, like washing machines, microwaves, or jumbo packs of paper towels. The person who gets closest to the actual price, without going over, gets to keep playing and the chance to win prizes like a new car. In the 1970s, the typical guess was about 8% below the actual price. These days, people underestimate the price by more than 20%.
This finding comes from research released in 2019 by Jonathan Hartley, at Harvard University. A longtime fan of the show, Hartley was inspired to conduct his research after reading a paper that reveals contestants don’t use optimal bidding strategies. Hartley wondered what else the data might show. He found that the accuracy of people’s guesses sharply decreased from the 1970s to the 2000s, and then stabilized in the 2010s.
So, what accounts for guesses getting so much worse? Hartley thinks there are three economic factors that are the most likely culprits:
First, inflation in the US was much higher in the 1970s and 80s. When inflation is high and variable, people become more attentive to prices, noticing they are paying more for goods than before.
Second, the rise of e-commerce may have made people less sensitive to price. As a result, people may feel less of a need to do price comparisons.
Third, there are more products than ever. There are 50 times as many products at a grocery store than 80 years ago. This also might make it harder for The Price Is Right contestants, along with the rest of us, to know how much stuff costs.
Are believers getting worse at recognizing sound doctrine and genuine Bible teachers and churches? If so, it is because they are paying less attention to the study of biblical doctrine, are less aware of doctrinal issues, and are confused by the hundreds of varieties of churches, denominations, and even cults.
Source: Dan Kopf, “Why are people getting worse at ‘The Price Is Right’?” Quartz (11/10/19)
In both 1929 and 2008, economic experts everywhere claimed to know exactly what they were doing, yet not a single person could fix the series of mistakes that crashed the world’s economy.
After these financial crises, many were rightfully furious--at the fraudulent bankers, who systematically destroyed the world economy for their own gain; at the Wall Street brokers who received bailouts and little to no jail time, while millions lost everything.
To avoid future financial catastrophes, a library in Edinburgh, Scotland has compiled a collection of sensible economic literature that aims to educate the next generation of economists. The Library of Mistakes contains over 2,000 books, all relating to economics and finance. Book titles sizzle with the message of it all; Crash of the Titans, The Crunch, Debt Shock, Too Big to Fail, and The Manipulators.
The Library of Mistakes was inspired by the 2008 Great Recession, which served as a perfect example of how, according to the library’s curators, “smart people keep doing stupid things.” The library’s curators argue that the only way to build a strong economy is to learn from our mistakes.
Ultimately, the Library of Mistakes encourages self-reflection and the serious study of history. In the wise words of George Santayana, “… for those who cannot remember the past are condemned to repeat it.” And given the turbulent state of the world today, such advice could not be more timely.
God has written the historical sections of the Bible for this very reason--so that we would learn not to repeat the mistakes of others. The clear message is “don’t let this happen to you.” “Now these things happened to them as an example, but they were written down for our instruction, on whom the end of the ages has come” 1 Cor. 10:11).
Source: Adapted from: Deborah Chu, “How the Great Recession Inspired Edinburgh’s Library of Mistakes,” Culture Trip (12-18-17); Staff, “Library of Mistakes,” Atlas Obscura (Accessed 5/27/21); Douglas Fraser, “The Library of Mistakes,” BBC (2-16-19)
Tessica Brown got internet famous for making a huge blunder; but she used that opportunity to do something good. Brown became famous after uploading a video to TikTok explaining how she accidentally set her hair with spray-on industrial adhesive Gorilla Glue instead of her similarly-named regular hair product, Got2b Glued. Brown said, “It went from scary to terrifying to pretty much being tortured.”
Reactions online were mixed; some thought it was an intentional prank engineered for viral fame, others seem to recognize it as an innocent mistake that left a woman in genuine distress. Nevertheless, Brown was on a mission to try to redeem her hair from the sticky situation. She endured an unsuccessful trip to the hospital, and friends set up a GoFundMe account to help pay for whatever treatment she could find.
Redemption, however, came from a plastic surgeon from Los Angeles, Dr. Michael Obeng, who offered to operate on Brown free of charge. Having a chemistry background, Dr. Obeng created a solvent to break down the adhesive’s active ingredient, polyurethane. Brown said, “Dr. Obeng got every bit of it out,” and she also received a few extra scalp treatments to ensure her hair wouldn’t fall out.
Out of gratitude for his generosity and expertise, Brown is donating the balance of her GoFundMe account to Restore, Dr. Obeng’s foundation that raises money for overseas patients needing reconstructive surgeries.
We all make mistakes, but God is not through with us. God gives us opportunities to turn our blunders into triumphs. Even in trying circumstances, you might still have a chance to bless somebody else.
Source: Lee Brown, “‘Gorilla Glue girl’ Tessica Brown donating $20K from GoFundMe to charity,” New York Post (2-14-21)
When we compare the sum of human knowledge today with what it was just 100 years ago, we are sometimes tempted to think ourselves advanced. Collectively, we have accumulated a great deal of knowledge in recent years. The internet represents the amazing breath of human knowledge.
According to current estimates, the web is just over 1 million exabytes in size. An exabyte is 1 billion billion bytes. If you were to download the entire web, it would take approximately 11 trillion years.
Of course, not everything on the Internet can pass as knowledge. Still, that is a lot of information. But while that knowledge may seem vast beyond comprehension, it is not infinite. It is quite small in fact.
According to one telecommunications company, you could store all of that data (every TedTalk, every course syllabus, every Facebook rant, and every cat video) on approximately half a million 2 terabyte hard drives. These hard drives could easily fit into one large 80,000 square feet room. Your local Walmart is around 180,000 square feet. Imagine that for a moment. The breadth of human knowledge can be stored in a space where you shop for groceries.
Our knowledge is truly vast, but it is the height of arrogance to assume we are approaching anywhere near the sum of what can be known. “Claiming to be wise, they became fools,” (Rom. 1:22)
Source: Blog, “How big is the internet?” Starry.com (7-29-19)
Before there was the Internet and Google, the only way to find answers to a pressing question was to visit the local library and ask the all-knowing librarian. A few years ago, the staff at the New York Public Library discovered a box of cards containing questions posed to the librarian by members of the public. The telephone “Ask A Librarian” service was set up in 1967 and operates to this day. And surprisingly, despite people having information at their fingertips these days, the New York Public Library receives roughly 30,000 calls per year.
Help line manager Rosa Caballero-Li said, “People have been reaching out to librarians for as long as there have been libraries. Often time people do not have access to the technology at home, and I think some just want somebody to talk to.”
Among the questions that were discovered:
What does it mean when you dream you’re being chased by an elephant?
Why do 18th Century English paintings have so many squirrels in them?
If a poisonous snake bites itself, will it die?
Somebody in 1962 was looking for “Charles Darwin's book. Oranges & peaches." The librarian politely directed the person to On the Origin of Species.
One person just wanted to know how to put up wallpaper. “I have the paper; I have the paste. What do I do next? Does the paste go on the wall or the paper? I've tried both and it doesn't seem to work.”
"There are no stupid questions," Caballero-Li told NPR. "Everything is a teachable moment. We don't embarrass people; we try to answer any questions they have with honesty and we try to refer them to appropriate resources that they might find useful."
The Bible is a resource of God’s answers to our deep questions. God never forbids a sincere question but invites them (Jer. 33:3, Jam. 1:5) because they are teachable moments and lead us closer to him. Important Bible questions include those about: God’s presence (Ps. 10:1, Ps. 13:1), forgiveness (Matt 18:21), purity (Ps. 119:9), Christ’s return (Matt 24:3), guidance (Acts 1:24), and his attention to our needs (Matt. 8:25).
Source: Kaushik Patowary, “Before the Internet, What People Asked New York Public Library’s Librarians?” Amusing Planet (7-19-18)
Geoff Wood writes that a stained glass illustrates the importance of the Old Testament:
High over the portals within the south transept of the 800-year-old cathedral of Chartres in France spreads a great Rose window, forty feet in diameter. At its center sits Christ, while immediately around him orbit eight angels and symbols for the four evangelists, each enclosed within a circle of stained glass-and beyond them orbit the 24 elders of the book of Revelation, each also within its own bejeweled circle—for a total of 36 orbiting circles of blue, red, gold, purple, and white! Enough to make your head spin. Nor is that gigantic wheel of color the only thing to enchant you in that soaring wing of the cathedral, because below it rise five more long and narrow windows, the central one featuring Mary, while the other four show images of the evangelists, Luke and Matthew, John, and Mark-in that sequence.
Now if you look closely at the windows for the four gospel writers, you'll notice something amusing. All four, appearing almost boyish in size, sits on the shoulders of a tall prophet of the Old Testament: Luke on the shoulders of Jeremiah, Matthew on Isaiah's, John on Ezekiel's, and Mark on Daniel's. The four major voices of the New Testament ride piggyback on the four major voices of the Old—just the way a dad might lift a small child on his shoulders. Why would those artists do something as playful as that? Well, it wasn't playful. They wanted to make a serious point, namely that the gospels build on the wisdom and vision of the Old Testament.
Source: Adapted from Geoff Wood, Living the Lectionary Year C, (Liturgy Training Publications, 2007), page 101
Sometimes seemingly imperfect timing is perfect for accomplishing God’s purposes.
Finding encouragement in what God has already done for us.
As California's prolonged drought dries up irrigation supplies for agriculture and forces cutbacks in urban water deliveries, it also creates opportunities for prospectors and miners panning, sluicing, chiseling, and diving for gold. In recent years, drought-inspired gold seeking has spiked sales of sluice boxes, gold pans, and metal detectors at Gold County mining stores from Columbia in Tuolumne County to Auburn in Placer County. While the drought, now in its fourth year, has rendered many creeks too dry for panning, new adventures are opening elsewhere as receding waters reveal more treasures.
These days, Albert Fausel, a lifelong gold seeker who owns the historic Placerville Hardware store, is having some of the best experiences of his life. Fausel sets out to the upper Cosumnes River in southern El Dorado County. Once a great spot for swimming and fishing, the river's weakened flows are revealing sediments with "a lot of gold in 'em." Because of the drought, he says, "it's a sad season for fishing—so why not go out and get some gold?"
At Placerville Hardware, founded in 1852, four years after James Marshall discovered gold in the American River in nearby Coloma, modern prospectors now drop in to show off flecks they're harvesting from other high-country creeks. Some bring in old coins and other historic relics found in drying stream beds.
"I see some beautiful gold coming into the store," Fausel said. "That gets my tourists all excited. You come into the store and somebody's got gold in their pocket. It's amazing."
Possible Preaching Angles: (1) Disappointment; Spiritual dryness—This is an updated, interesting take on the old adage "When life gives you lemons (disappointing circumstances, seasons of spiritual dryness), make lemonade." (2) Christians should have the same attitude about seeking treasure in God's Word or in seeking wisdom.
Source: Peter Hecht, "Falling Waters Raise Hopes of Area's Gold Prospectors," The Sacramento Bee (6-23-2015)
Editor's Note: Use the following analogy to illustrate how God has a much larger and wiser plan (that we may not understand) for the way he rules the world and guides our lives:
Think of it this way: A basketball coach could call a time-out for any number of reasons at any different point in a ball game. He might see a flaw in the opponent's defense, for example, that he thinks his team could exploit with a hastily designed play. He might want to stop a flurry of momentum or a hot hand by one of the opposing players. He might use it to try icing a free-throw shooter. He might use it to stop the clock near the end of the half or regulation. He might use it to force an instant-replay review of a questionable call by the officials.
That's six different options right there. And they're all determined not by fixed logarithms but by the flow of the game, the nature of the opponent, the time left on the shot clock or the game clock—any of these factors and many others could dictate his purpose in asking for a stoppage in play. Plus it's all dictated by the coach's unique, personal knowledge of his players, his awareness of what each of them can do, what makes them perform best, what puts them in the best position to win the game.
Why must God's decisions for our lives be any different?
Possible Preaching Angles: God, Sovereignty of; Sovereignty—Real life is much more complex than a basketball game, but this illustration can show how a wise "coach" can make good decisions that we may or may not understand. Of course there is one crucial difference: basketball coaches make mistakes; God doesn't.
Source: Andreas Kostenberger, Darrell Bock, and Josh Chatraw, Truth Matters: Confident Faith in a Confusing World (B&H Publishing, 2014)
The Library of Congress is the largest library in the world. The Library of Congress was established by an act of Congress in 1800. In 1815 the Library accepted 6,487 books from the library of Thomas Jefferson. As of 2022, the Library of Congress had a collection of more than 175.5 million items, which included more than 35 million cataloged books and other print materials in 470 languages and nearly 120 million additional items in various formats.
But regarding this enormous collection, James Billington who served for 30 years as Librarian of Congress, argued that it's even more difficult for our nation to know what to do with all of this information. Describing the contemporary world as "an info-glut culture," Billington asks a probing question: "But have we become any wiser?"
Possible Preaching Angles: (1) Wisdom—How do we live a life of wisdom in our "info-glut" culture? (2) Bible; Scripture—35 million catalogued books in the Library of Congress, but one book is the divinely inspired Word of God. (3) Conversion; Salvation—We're not saved by accumulating more and more information; we're saved by the power of Christ through faith. (4) God, Omniscience of; God, wisdom of—Everything in the Library of Congress is a drop in the bucket compared to God's omniscience.
Source: Emily Langer, "James Billington, long-reigning librarian of Congress, dies at 89," The Washington Post (11-21-18); Adapted from Stephen Garber, Visions of Vocation (IVP Books, 2014), pp.