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Today's Creation Moment

May
20
Why Does it Rain?
Job 36:27-29
"For he maketh small the drops of water: they pour down rain according to the vapour thereof: Which the clouds do drop [and] distil upon man abundantly. Also can [...
In grade school we were taught how temperature, dew point and moisture in a cloud could condense around a tiny ice crystal to form a drop of rain. But scientists are not really all that sure how...
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Eyes in the Back of Their Backs

Proverbs 15:3
The eyes of the Lord are in every place, beholding the evil and the good.

While science has yet to find a human mother with eyes in the back of her head, it turns out that there is a species of shrimp that comes pretty close with extra eyes on its back.

The shrimp goes only by its Latin name - exoculata for short. It lives beneath two miles of water in the mid-Atlantic Ridge, near geological formations called black smokers. Black smokers continuously shoot out thick black clouds of water, at a temperature of 660 degrees F. No trace of sunlight ever penetrates to such depths. So why do these shrimp need eyes at all? Scientists learned that the super heated water coming out of black smokers is so hot that it actually glows. The glow isn't all that bright, which is why exoculata needs such large eyes that they will fit only on the shrimp's back. And what do the shrimp see? They make their living within inches of the hot stream of water. If they get too close to the super-heated water they could become instant shrimp cocktail!

Nothing escapes the Creator's notice. Not these shrimp, nor a life that is in trouble due to difficulty or sin. But we need to remember both His genius in solving problems and that His mind toward us is one of love because of the sacrifice of His Son for us.

Prayer: 
Dear heavenly Father, there is no problem that is too hard for You. Because I trust in Your forgiving love to me through Jesus Christ, I give all my problems and needs to You. In Jesus' Name. Amen.
Notes: 
Richard Monastersky. Deep-Sea Shrimp. Science News, vol. 135. Feb. 11, 1989. P. 90-93.