The Sun Burns Faithfully — Who Kindles Its Fire? Seeing the Unseen Creator in a Rebellious World

Look up. The sun has risen again—faithfully, relentlessly—pouring light and heat across the earth as it has for millennia. It never falters, never dims without cause, never wanders from its ancient path. We take it for granted, this blazing sphere that makes life possible. But pause and ask: Who kindles its fire? Who set it alight and keeps it burning with such perfect constancy? To say it simply “happened” or sustains itself by blind chance is to descend into a kind of madness no thinking person would accept for anything smaller.

We do not deny the existence of things we cannot see with the naked eye, only because we experience their effects. Electricity courses through wires we cannot perceive until we build instruments to harness it. Had no one ever invented a bulb or a motor, would we have believed in such a force? Probably not—yet it was always there. The wind rushes past our skin; we feel its power, hear its roar, watch trees bend before it. We cannot see its form, grasp its origin, or predict its final destination. Yet we do not deny it. We breathe invisible gases every moment—oxygen in, carbon dioxide out—and never question their reality, for our lives depend on them.

How absurd, then, to accept these unseen forces while fiercely denying any deeper invisible realm that governs existence itself. If the effects prove the cause in the physical world, why do we refuse the same logic when the effects are moral, spiritual, eternal?

Consider the oceans. An ancient boundary was drawn for them: “Thus far shall you come, and no farther; here shall your proud waves be stayed.” Yet we witness rebellion—hurricanes that lash beyond their limits, tsunamis that swallow coastlines whole. What should remain beneath the earth sometimes erupts in fury: mountains spit fire, molten rock boils upward to destroy whatever lies in its path. These are not mere accidents of nature; they are visible fractures in a created order, evidence of a transgressing force that seeks chaos where harmony was intended.

Everything around us bears the mark of design. Great rivers begin as hidden springs high in forgotten places. A tiny fountain becomes a mighty flow that carves continents. Nothing emerges without a source. The intricate dance of planets, the precise tilt of our earth, the unfailing rhythm of seasons—all proclaim intention, not accident. When we craft something as simple as a watch or a bridge, no one dares claim it assembled itself. How much more unthinkable that the far greater works we awoke to find already present—the sun, the stars, the living creatures—should owe nothing to a Designer?

Goodness sustains us. The air we breathe, the water we drink, the harvest that feeds billions—all flow from a love that willed preservation, not destruction. Yet evil is equally undeniable. It touches every life: cruelty, disease, hatred, catastrophe. We feel its pressure from without and its whisper from within. If goodness has a source, so must evil. They cannot both flow from the same fountain. One upholds order; the other breeds rebellion. One preserves; the other disrupts. There are, then, two spiritual realities at work—an unseen Creator who kindles light and life, and an anti-force that seeks to unravel what was lovingly made.

And what of us? We are not merely bodies of organized dust. When breath leaves, the body does not vanish into nothing; it disintegrates, returning to its elemental forms—carbon, water, minerals—scattered back to the earth from which it was shaped. Nothing in creation is ever truly annihilated, only transformed. How much less, then, can the invisible core of a person—the intelligence that thinks, the conscience that judges, the self that loves and chooses—be destroyed?

What leaves the body at death is the real you: the soul, the eternal person. It does not dissolve. It simply returns to its Source, to the realm from which it came, to the Designer who destined its final place. The body was temporary housing; the soul is everlasting.

Look up again. The sun still burns faithfully across an age that denies its Kindler. The wind still blows where it wills, unseen yet undeniable. Your lungs still draw invisible breath. And your soul—immortal, accountable—still stands before the eternal realities you cannot escape.

The evidence surrounds you. The question remains:

Who kindles the fire?

And where will you go when yours is finally revealed?

The THREE Fathers: A Journey of DISCERNMENT, Redemption, and Abundant LIFE

Every soul navigates a world shaped by three fatherly voices, each vying to define our identity, purpose, and destiny. The father of lies, Satan, whispers deception, cloaking destruction in the guise of freedom. His voice, as John 8:44 declares, is the origin of falsehood, seeking to impede souls from the life of God by ensnaring them in spiritual deadness. He exploits the potential for despair, tempting us with lies like “you are unworthy” or “you are alone,” aiming to bind us in darkness and separation from truth.

The earthly father, through whom we enter the world, shapes our early sense of self. Yet, as a fallen soul himself, he is subject to the law of sin and death (Romans 7:23), influenced by the devil’s deceit or his own human frailty. Some earthly fathers nurture, but others, swayed by sin or brokenness, may crush their children’s spirits, conditioning them to believe they are “good for nothing,” rejecting them outright, or leaving them as orphans—whether physically absent or emotionally distant, raised by others or left to fend for themselves. Even the best earthly fathers, bound by imperfection, cannot fully meet the soul’s deepest need for unconditional love.

Yet above these voices rises the Everlasting Father, God Almighty, whose love is boundless and whose presence is eternal. As Isaiah 9:6 proclaims, He is the Everlasting Father, and through His Son, Jesus Christ, He calls all souls to come to Him, that they might have life—life abundant and full (John 10:10). Unlike the father of lies, who seeks to steal, kill, and destroy, or the earthly father, whose failures may wound, God pursues weary souls with a promise: “I will not leave you as orphans; I will come to you” (John 14:18). Through Jesus Christ, who paved the way for liberation from sin, the devil, and darkness, God offers salvation, adoption, and a restored identity as beloved children (Romans 8:15).

For those who walk in faith, a spiritual father—whether a mentor, pastor, or guide—may serve as a bridge to this divine truth. As Paul describes in 1 Corinthians 4:15, such figures facilitate rebirth into Christ, echoing the Everlasting Father’s call and guiding souls toward His light. These spiritual fathers, though imperfect, help navigate the journey from spiritual deadness to abundant life.

Life, then, is a journey of discernment and redemption: to reject the lies that bind, to forgive the earthly flaws that wound, and to answer the call of Jesus Christ to abundant life. The father of lies exists to thwart this journey, exploiting the spiritual deadness of souls to keep them from God’s truth. The earthly father, swayed by sin or brokenness, may reinforce these lies through rejection or failure. But the Everlasting Father, through His Son, seeks those weary souls, offering liberation from sin’s dominion and the devil’s deceit. Jesus’ invitation is clear: “Come to me, all you who are weary and burdened, and I will give you rest” (Matthew 11:28).

To choose the Everlasting Father is to embrace a transformative truth: that we are never alone, never forsaken, and always loved. It is to step into a destiny where lies are exposed, wounds are healed, and the soul finds its eternal home in the abundant life offered through Christ. This is the profound reality of God’s love—a love that pursues, redeems, and restores, calling every soul to rise above deception and brokenness into the fullness of His salvation.