The LORD has chosen Zion, He has desired it for His dwelling. Psalm 132:13

Have you seen the beauty of the whole earth?

The heavens proclaim the glory of God. The skies display his craftsmanship.” Psalms 19:01

The psalmist has wonderfully defined the awesomeness of the one who is the source of all this. These verses are the start of the proclamation of all the wonders he can see and acknowledge the power behind all this. Everything exists or felt is continually providing evidence of His existence. He leads us to the consideration of the invisible things of God, who being appears incontestably evident, and whose glory shines transcendentally bright in the visible heavens, the structure, and beauty of them, and the order and influence of the heavenly bodies. This instance of the divine power serves not only to show the folly of atheists, who see there is a heaven and yet say, "There is no God,’’ who seen the effect and yet say, "There is no cause,’’ but to show the folly of idolaters also, and the vanity of their imagination, who, though the heavens declare the glory of God, yet gave that glory to the lights of heaven which those very lights directed them to give to God only, the Father of lights.

Now observe here, what is which the creatures notify to us? They are in many ways useful and serviceable to us, but in nothing so much as in this, that they declare the glory of God, by showing his handy-works. Every single thing was created by Him plainly speaking to be God’s handy-works; for they could not exist from eternity; all succession and motion must have had a beginning; nothing can be self-existed, that is a contradiction; they could not be produced by a casual clash of atoms, that is an absurdity, therefore everything must have a Creator, who can be no other than an eternal mind, infinitely wise, powerful, and good. Thus, it appears they are God’s works, the works of His own fingers. This is the reason everything declares His glory. From the excellency of the work we may easily infer the infinite perfection of its great author.