Ecclesiastes 1:7 reads, “To the place from which the rivers come, there they return again.”
The Bible talks about the water cycle. “All the rivers run into the sea, yet the sea is not full; to the place from which the rivers come, there they return again.” Every day the Mississippi River dumps approximately 420 billion gallons of water into the Gulf of Mexico. And when you think about the Thames, the Nile, and the Amazon, every day the same thing is happening in rivers ail around the world.
So where does all that water go? The answer lies in the hydrologic cycle, which the Bible introduced almost three millennia ago. The wise King Solomon wrote, “If the clouds be full of rain, they empty themselves upon the earth” (Ecclesiastes 11:3).
Amos the prophet said, “He…calls the waters of the sea, and pours them out on the face of the earth” (Amos 9:6). And Job’s friend Elihu said, “Behold, God is great…He draws up drops of water, which distill as rain from the mist, which the clouds drop down and pour abundantly on man” (Job 36:26-28).
The idea of a complete water cycle was not fully understood by science until the seventeenth century. Yet more than two thousand years prior to the discoveries of brilliant minds like Pierre Perrault, Edme Mariotte, Edmond Halley, and others, the Bible clearly explained the water cycle.
The truth is, your Bible is inspired, inerrant, reliable, and more up-to-date than tomorrow morning’s newspaper. Every newspaper has a correction column acknowledging its printed errors. Not the Bible! You can trust it to guide you right in every area of your life.
© 2017 CE