
released 10/27/2025
In November 2018, Alan Noble gave a lecture in which he explained why the modern world makes it profoundly difficult to experience Creation as revelation. Our technology and lifestyles of distraction overwhelm our attention and interiority, and our secularist, consumerist society frames us to think of everything as existing within the “immanent frame” of the material world. Because of this, we must make great effort to give focused attention to — and meditate on — Creation to be able to receive its revelation about who God is. Noble explains how this kind of meditation begins with attending with our senses and moves on to contemplating with our minds. As we practice this kind of meditation, we nurture our interiority, which is under constant threat by busyness, diversion, and a flattening of meaning. Noble calls for clergy to preach these truths and help shape church practices that encourage direct, not mediated, encounters with Creation. He concludes with the hopeful truth that “nature is never spent”: we only need to cleanse the eyes of our perception and learn to wonder at God’s goodness and glory manifested in all he has made.
This lecture is provided courtesy of the Carl F. H. Henry Center for Theological Understanding.
52 minutes
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