On
September 29, 1909, a young man took flight in a strange contraption that
resembled a huge box kite. As he gained altitude, the pilot manipulated the
levers so he could fly over New York Harbor. People looked up in amazement. In
the harbor, boats celebrated by sounding their steam whistles. Crowds near the
Statue of Liberty exploded with cheers at the sight of Wilbur Wright taking a
flight into the heavens.
Wilbur’s
brother Orville, who had piloted the first airplane flight 6 years earlier,
reflected on their inspiration to fly: “The desire to fly is an idea handed
down to us by our ancestors who . . . looked enviously on the birds soaring
freely through space, at full speed, above all obstacles, on the infinite
highway of the air.” The Wright brothers spent a great deal of time studying
birds in flight before designing their planes.
In
Genesis we read that “in the beginning God created the heavens and the earth”
(1:1), and He said, “Let birds fly above the earth across the face of the
firmament of the heavens” (v.20). We applaud the inventiveness of the Wright
brothers. Yet, the Creator, who made creatures capable of flight in the first
place, deserves the ultimate glory—for the birds and for every other creation
He has made!
The
design of creation points to the Master Designer. (RBC)