Many of history’s most influential scientists recognized that creation points beyond itself. Newton, Pascal, Mendel, Maxwell, Pasteur, and others openly affirmed belief in a Creator, seeing their scientific work as uncovering the order God built into the universe. Other lists of major scientists — including Einstein, Galileo, Bacon, Schrödinger, and Francis Collins — likewise document that many leading thinkers held theistic convictions. Creation‑research historians also note that many foundational scientists viewed their discoveries as “thinking God’s thoughts after Him.” In Messianic understanding, this Creator is the God of Avraham, Yitzchak, and Ya’akov — revealed fully through His Messiah, Yeshua.
When someone cannot see this, Scripture describes it as a veil over the heart. But veils can be lifted. When they are, call upon Yeshua the Messiah, who is near to all who seek Him.
We speak this in love. None of us are promised tomorrow. As the Psalmist declares: “The heavens declare the glory of Elohim; the skies proclaim the work of His hands.” Creation itself is a continual witness.
Even at the microscopic level, DNA contains a coded language — information — which many scholars argue points strongly toward intelligent design rather than randomness. Modern discussions of design in nature continue to highlight this debate. All creation testifies to the handiwork of the Messiah, through whom all things were made.
The spiritual battle is real. What happens in the unseen realm shapes what we experience in the visible one. Much has been done to hide or discredit this reality, but truth remains truth whether acknowledged or not. Even today, many scientists — including Nobel‑level thinkers — maintain belief in God despite cultural pressure to abandon it. So we pray for mercy — that the Ruach HaKodesh would open eyes, soften hearts, and reveal the truth of Yeshua to all who are searching, hurting, or wandering.
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