Files
www.dangerouswonder.org/about.html

180 lines
14 KiB
HTML

<!DOCTYPE html>
<html lang="en">
<head>
<meta charset="UTF-8">
<meta name="viewport" content="width=device-width, initial-scale=1.0">
<meta name="description" content="About Dangerous Wonder — A faith filled with astonishment at the works of the Creator">
<title>About — Dangerous Wonder</title>
<link rel="stylesheet" href="css/style.css">
</head>
<body class="section-about">
<div class="page-wrapper-wide">
<header class="site-header">
<h1 class="site-title"><a href="index.html">Dangerous Wonder</a></h1>
<p class="site-subtitle">A Field Guide to Everything Worth Knowing</p>
</header>
<nav class="site-nav">
<ul>
<li><a href="index.html">Home</a></li>
<li><a href="natural-world.html">Natural World</a></li>
<li><a href="inventions.html">Inventions</a></li>
<li><a href="phenomena.html">Phenomena</a></li>
<li><a href="maps.html">Maps &amp; Places</a></li>
<li><a href="human-body.html">Human Body</a></li>
<li><a href="space.html">Space</a></li>
<li><a href="about.html" class="active">About</a></li>
</ul>
</nav>
<img src="img/steampunk-book-and-goggles-image.png" alt="" class="clipart-section">
<div class="section-bar">About This Site</div>
<h2 class="section-header">About Dangerous Wonder</h2>
<p class="section-header-sub">A faith filled with astonishment at the works of the Creator</p>
<div class="breadcrumbs"><a href="index.html">Home</a> &rsaquo; About</div>
<hr class="dk-rule-thin">
<div class="content-section">
<div class="figure-right">
<img src="photos/photo-1448375240586-882707db888b_600x400.png" alt="A child gazing up at a towering forest">
<p class="figure-caption">Wonder is not passive. It is the decision to look again at what you have already stopped seeing.</p>
</div>
<p class="drop-cap">Somewhere along the way, most of us stopped looking. The world became background noise — a routine of sidewalks and stoplights, of ordinary mornings and forgettable afternoons. The sky is just the sky. The trees are just trees. The body is just a body, the stars are just stars, and everything remarkable has been explained away into something manageable and small. We have been trained, by habit and by culture, to see the predictable instead of the miraculous, the familiar instead of the astonishing. But the world was never mundane. We just stopped paying attention.<span class="easter-egg"> What if the ordinary is only ordinary because you haven't looked closely enough?</span></p>
</div>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
<div class="content-section">
<h2>Why This Site Exists</h2>
<img src="img/quill-and-ink-jar-clip.png" alt="" class="clipart-right">
<p>Dangerous Wonder exists for one purpose: to restore your capacity for astonishment — and to direct that astonishment toward the One who made all of it. The universe did not assemble itself. The creatures did not invent their own designs. The physical laws were not voted into existence. In the beginning, God spoke — and what He spoke was very good. Every leaf, every feather, every photon of light, every bizarre patent and strange phenomenon and hidden city and migratory impulse is a brushstroke from the hand of a Creator whose imagination exceeds anything we have yet catalogued.</p>
<p>This site is a field guide to the handiwork of God — not in the abstract, but in the specific, the strange, the overlooked, and the beautiful. It is organized like a reference book because wonder deserves the same diligence we give to analysis. But its aim is not analysis. Its aim is worship. Every fact on these pages is an invitation to stand in awe of the Maker. Every curiosity is a doorway to praise. The more you learn about what God has made, the more you realize how little you have been seeing.</p>
</div>
<hr class="dk-rule">
<img src="img/medieval-leather-bound-book-illustration.png" alt="" class="clipart-wide">
<div class="content-section">
<h2>Why "Dangerous Wonder"?</h2>
<img src="img/old-leather-book-search-icon.png" alt="" class="clipart-right">
<div class="figure-left">
<img src="photos/photo-1521587760476-6c12a4b040da_600x400.png" alt="A warm, book-filled room — the spiritual home of Dangerous Wonder">
<p class="figure-caption">The kind of place where curiosity becomes worship.</p>
</div>
<p>The name comes from the book <em>Dangerous Wonder</em> by Michael Yaconelli, who argued that the Christian faith was meant to be lived with the wide-open eyes and relentless curiosity of a child — not the cautious, domesticated religion that most adults settle for. Yaconelli wrote that wonder is dangerous because it refuses to leave the world as it appears. It insists on looking closer. It asks questions that comfortable people have stopped asking. It sees the extraordinary hiding inside the ordinary and refuses to let it stay hidden.</p>
<p>This website shares that conviction. We believe that a faith filled with wonder is not a weaker faith — it is a stronger one. The psalmist did not say, "The heavens are adequately explained by astrophysics." He said, "The heavens declare the glory of God." Jesus did not say, "Consider the lilies, they are subject to standard botanical processes." He said, "Consider the lilies of the field, how they grow: they neither toil nor spin, yet I tell you, even Solomon in all his glory was not arrayed like one of these." Wonder is not a departure from faith. It is where faith begins.</p>
<div class="clearfix"></div>
<blockquote class="pull-quote">"Unless you change and become like little children, you will never enter the kingdom of heaven." — Matthew 18:3</p></blockquote>
</div>
<hr class="dk-rule">
<div class="content-section">
<h2>Six Days, One Story</h2>
<img src="img/ancient-egyptian-scroll-image.png" alt="" class="clipart-left">
<p>Everything on this site is framed through the lens of the biblical account of creation in Genesis — six days in which God spoke the universe into being, and one day of rest in which He delighted in what He had made. This is not a metaphor we are stretching to fit the facts. It is the framework that makes sense of them.</p>
<ul class="fact-list">
<li><strong>Day One — Light.</strong> Before there was a sun to produce it, before there was an eye to perceive it, God called light into existence. The phenomena of light — bioluminescence in the deep ocean, photon-detecting rod cells in the human eye, ball lightning that still refuses to be explained — all echo that first command.</li>
<li><strong>Day Two — Sky and Waters.</strong> The atmosphere, the deep ocean, the hydrothermal vents that sustain life without the sun — these are the realms of the second day, and they remain the most unexplored territories on Earth.</li>
<li><strong>Day Three — Land, Seas, and Plants.</strong> The forests with their underground fungal networks, the extremophiles thriving in impossible conditions, the ancient trees that have been growing since before the pyramids — all of it began here, when the dry land appeared and the earth was told to put forth green things.</li>
<li><strong>Day Four — Sun, Moon, and Stars.</strong> The galaxies, the neutron stars, the dark matter that outweighs everything visible — the fourth day gave us the lights by which we navigate and the cosmos by which we measure our smallness. The One who scattered the stars calls each one by name.</li>
<li><strong>Day Five — Sea Creatures and Birds.</strong> The vampire squid, the migratory monarch with its inherited map, the anglerfish glowing in the perpetual dark — these are the works of the fifth day, creatures whose designs continue to outstrip the human imagination.</li>
<li><strong>Day Six — Land Animals and Mankind.</strong> The human body with its trillion-cell republic, the inventions that flow from the image of a Creator pressed into His creatures, the bizarre animal behaviors that reveal a world of ingenuity — all of it speaks of a Maker who crowned His work with a species made in His own likeness.</li>
</ul>
<p>And when it was finished, He looked at all of it — every creature, every star, every law of chemistry and physics — and declared it very good. We are simply trying to see what He saw.</p>
</div>
<hr class="dk-rule-thin">
<div class="content-section">
<h2>The Problem with the Mundane</h2>
<img src="img/classical-grey-marble-nude-statue.png" alt="" class="clipart-right">
<p>Most of us move through a world of astonishing design and fail to notice it. We have been taught to see the predictable: the water cycle, the food chain, the Krebs cycle, the periodic table. These are all true, and they are all extraordinary — but we have flattened them into routine. We explain the robin's song as territorial behaviour and forget that the same God who gave the bird its territory gave it the song. We describe the eye's sensitivity to a single photon and call it an adaptation, rather than recognising it as a receiver designed for the first thing God ever commanded into existence.</p>
<p>The danger of wonder is that it disrupts this flattening. It refuses to let you walk past the ordinary without stopping. It makes the familiar strange again — which is to say, it makes the familiar <em>true</em> again. A child who learns that a single gram of forest soil contains ten billion bacterial cells does not yawn; she gasps. An adult who has been told this fact may file it under "interesting" and forget it by dinner. Wonder is the difference between those two responses, and the loss of wonder is one of the great spiritual calamities of adulthood.</p>
<p>This site is an argument for getting it back.</p>
</div>
<hr class="dk-rule">
<div class="did-you-know">
<img src="img/treasure-chest-clip-art.png" alt="" style="float:right; margin: 0 0 8px 12px; max-width:60px;" class="clipart">
<h4>Did You Know?</h4>
<p>The Bible contains some of the most wonder-inducing passages ever written about the natural world — and they were composed thousands of years before modern science confirmed any of them. Job 38 alone asks about the springs of the sea, the boundaries of the oceans, the storehouses of snow, and the paths of lightning. God was inviting His people to wonder long before we had the instruments to investigate.</p>
</div>
<div class="content-section">
<h2>Explore the Site</h2>
<p>Each section of Dangerous Wonder is a doorway into a different facet of God's creation — and each one is more astonishing than the last. Here is what awaits you:</p>
<div class="toc">
<ul>
<li><a href="natural-world.html"><strong>The Natural World</strong></a> — Forests, oceans, creatures, and the hidden logic of living things (Days Three and Five)</li>
<li><a href="inventions.html"><strong>Inventions</strong></a> — The things humans have built because they are made in the image of a Maker (Day Six)</li>
<li><a href="phenomena.html"><strong>Phenomena</strong></a> — Light, physics, chemistry, and the strange things that still defy our models (Day One)</li>
<li><a href="maps.html"><strong>Maps &amp; Places</strong></a> — The geography of creation, from underground cities to the edge of the known (Days Two and Three)</li>
<li><a href="human-body.html"><strong>The Human Body</strong></a> — The most densely engineered object in the known universe, fearfully and wonderfully made (Day Six)</li>
<li><a href="space.html"><strong>Space</strong></a> — Stars, galaxies, and the deep architecture of the cosmos, where the heavens declare His glory (Day Four)</li>
</ul>
</div>
<p>Wander. Get lost. Follow a link to a page you didn't know existed. Let the facts lead you to wonder, and let the wonder lead you to worship. That's the whole point.</p>
</div>
<hr class="dk-rule-thin">
<img src="img/rainbow-colored-frog.png" alt="" class="clipart-wide">
<div class="content-section">
<h2>How to Explore (and What You Might Find)</h2>
<img src="img/antique-golden-spine-book-image.png" alt="" class="clipart-right">
<p>Some things on Dangerous Wonder are easy to find. They are on the pages you'd expect, in the sections you'd look in first. But we also believe that a good reference book rewards the careful reader — the one who reads footnotes, who notices the small print, who clicks on things just to see what happens.</p>
<p>There are hidden things on this site. There are Easter eggs in the source code. There are links that only appear if you look closely at the image captions. The best way to explore Dangerous Wonder is the same way you'd explore a used bookstore: slowly, without a list, ready to be surprised — and ready, at every turn, to be reminded that the world you have been walking through is far more remarkable than you have been led to believe.</p>
<p><em>Welcome. Stay curious. Stay dangerous. Give God the glory.</em></p>
<span class="easter-egg">you found the first one. there are eleven more.</span>
</div>
</div>
<footer class="site-footer">
<div class="page-wrapper">
<p id="visitor-count" class="visitor-counter">You are visitor #000,000</p>
<p><small>Last updated: <span id="last-updated"></span></small></p>
<p>&copy; 1999&ndash;2026 Dangerous Wonder. All rights reserved.</p>
<p class="footer-badge">Best viewed at 1024&times;768. Made with care, not with frameworks.</p>
</div>
</footer>
<script src="js/main.js"></script>
</body>
</html>