To reject the doctrine of creation leaves us unable to join up the dots of God’s logic, given to prevent us making shameful mistakes like the one that Job was making. A child can tell us that the Creator is greater than the things he creates, and if God has made our eyes so that they cannot look directly into the sun, then he has done it in order to teach us. We are foolish not to learn such lessons, but of course they are lost on a generation that has rejected the doctrine of creation. With God is even greater majesty and he has given us another faculty, the imagination, which is able to tell us – though not precisely – something about that unseen majesty. But in order to have this view – and imagination does not mean make believe; imagination in everyday life strives to form picture of the world as real as possible – we have to put together all the evidence and move from one stepping stone to the next in a way that God has put within our logical powers.