Even when things are broken, there is still order in the world. The universe is not pure chaos. Most things remain predictable; clear patterns and design persist. If that weren’t true, the scientific method itself would be impossible—it would be a meaningless, useless myth that we should abandon. Yet we use it consistently, knowing it works.
Moreover, to call something “broken,” we must have a standard of what “whole” looks like. The very idea of brokenness depends on comparing it to an original order or design. Something can only be broken if it was first ordered (or designed) to function a certain way.
We instantly recognize it as “broken” only because we already know what a properly working watch is supposed to look like and do: keep time accurately, with all gears turning together in precise harmony.
If there were no such thing as an intended, designed order for a watch—if watches were just random lumps of metal that sometimes ticked and sometimes didn’t—no one would ever say “this watch is broken.” They’d just say, “This is a watch.”
The concept of “broken” only makes sense against the backdrop of an original “right” or “ordered” state.
The same applies to the world: we can call parts of it broken only because, under the cracks, we still see an underlying pattern and design that things are meant to follow.
For a discussion on violating design, click here
For a discussion on our world being full of design and beauty, click here
For a discussion about how Christ is our Designer, click here
For a discussion on celebrating our design and our Designer, click here
For a discussion on how everything is broken, click here.
For a discussion on how we are created for glory, click here.
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Grace to you
Jim Deal