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The Mystery Spencer Can’t Solve

Spencer Manning is a private investigator. He solves mysteries. So far he’s solved them all. But  then I have some control over that. I have purposefully not given much description of Spencer so  that each reader can form their own image of how he looks. But the stories aren’t dependent on  what he looks like. They are dependent on how he thinks, because how he thinks is why he has  solved all of his cases. And how he thinks is very logical and based on facts. He collects  information, asks questions, makes logical assumptions, rules out the impossible, and arrives at a  solution. 

During the last story, Spencer moved into his parents’ house. They had been killed in a  questionable car accident, and he is trying to live with the memories and the ghosts that haunt his  dreams. One of those memories sits on the back porch. In the next story, Spencer takes out the  telescope that his dad taught him how to use. They had spent many nights looking at the sky, wondering about the ‘big picture,’ and asking each other questions about Creation, what God  was, and where humans fit into that big picture. 

Where we fit into the picture is rather philosophical, but the picture at the left is interesting. The  similarities in structure are amazing and leave a lot of room for thought. 

Spencer’s dad explained the Big Bang Theory. Everything in the universe formed out of a single,  tiny point of energy, perhaps the size of a proton. That was something Spencer’s fact-based mind  had trouble accepting. It didn’t make much sense. But the evidence seemed to point in that  direction. Science has shown that the universe is expanding. If that expansion were reversed, it  would end at a single point.  

There were enough facts there for Spencer to accept the theory. But the question about God was  still on the table. And the theory only answers part of the creation question. We humans formed  out of matter found in stardust that evolved out of the big bang. But where did the proton come  

from? I have spoken with two astrophysicists and asked them that question. Their answer?—they  don’t care. They only care about what their science can explain, and their science cannot explain  where the proton came from… it can’t even explain the proton. Their equations only work  shortly after the proton explodes.  

But Spencer cares. The question haunts him. He and Dad had come up with two possible answers. Either there was some scientific explanation beyond our knowledge, or God had put it  there. But that wasn’t really an answer. If there was some scientific explanation, then what was 

the reason behind that? No matter how much could be explained by science, at some point there  had to be a beginning that could only be explained by faith.  

Every time Spencer sees the telescope he is reminded of those conversations with Dad and  wonders if Dad has any more answers now than he had on the back porch. He still wonders but  tries not to think much about it. It’s a mystery that can’t be solved with facts. Imagine how  frustrated Spencer feels about that unsolved mystery!

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