EYE IN THE SKY
I woke up at about 3 a.m. and went
outside to see the stars on a moonless night. It was cloudy all day, but
tonight the sky was clear and the stars magnificent. In the northern sky, I
could see one of the best-known constellations—the Big Dipper. There are 87
stars named in this constellation, and they all have meanings centered on a
sheepfold. The star names are translated “lamb,” “flock,” “the assembled,” “the
appointed,” “the gathered.” The constellation and stars are mentioned several
times in the Bible, referring to the flock of God.
If you draw a line connecting the two
stars at the farthest end of the dipper, they point straight to the North Star,
which is the end star in the Little Dipper’s handle. This North Star is the
central point of the heavens, and all the other stars move in circular paths around
it. However, it is interesting to note that at one time, this central star,
around which all others concentrate, was in the constellation Draco, the
dragon. But it has slowly and steadily moved into the Little Dipper, the small
sheepfold of God.
If you follow the curve of the Big
Dipper handle, you see two very bright stars. The first is Arcturus in the
constellation Bootes. Bootes is a man walking rapidly with a spear in his right
hand and a sickle in his left. “Bootes” comes from the Hebrew root word meaning
“the coming.” The constellation is referred to in Psalm 96:13: “For he cometh,
for he cometh to judge the earth: he shall judge the world with righteousness,
and the people with his truth.”
Still following the curve from the
handle of the Big Dipper, you come to the bright star, Spica, in Virgo’s left
hand. Spica means an ear of corn. It also has the name Al Zimach, which means
“branch” and is found in Jeremiah 23:5: “Behold, the days come, saith the Lord,
that I will raise unto David a righteous Branch, and a King shall reign and
prosper, and shall execute judgment and justice in the earth.”
God arranged the stars so that even
in the flurry of technology and the barrage of inconceivable inhumanity, we can
still look around us and always see something created by a loving God. If we
only take a look, we can see that a God of love and magnificence is still over
it all.
Love,
Carolyn
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