Sequel to “Nothing Is Stupid”
We spend most of our lives noticing, things.
Things we can see.
Things we can hold.
Things we can measure, weigh, polish, stack, or admire.
A mountain ridge at sunrise.
The smooth curve of a shell.
The warmth of a cup in our hands.
Even the smallest grain of sand feels like something solid and definite.
Our attention is naturally drawn to what is there.
But every so often, a quiet realization appears that turns the thought upside down.
Much of what surrounds us—and even much of what seems most solid—is built with what we casually call nothing.
Not nothing in the sense of nonexistence. Not an absence of creation. But the astonishing “no-thingness” woven throughout the physical world itself.
The space between things.
A stone feels dense in the hand. Steel feels firm. Oak feels strong. Our own bodies feel solid enough to bruise, tire, and grow old. Yet beneath what our senses confidently report, the physical world is not packed into a solid block of uninterrupted substance.
There is structure.
There is order.
There is design.
But there is also room.
Openings between particles. Intervals between structures. Space woven through matter like breath through music.
What appears solid to us is, at deeper scales, beautifully arranged rather than tightly packed. Creation is not a crowded heap of substance pressed together. It is a carefully ordered framework with room built into it.
That is part of what makes “nothing” so wonderful.
We admire the stars and forget the darkness that surrounds them. We marvel at matter and overlook the quiet intervals that allow matter to exist in relation to other matter. We notice the notes and rarely the silence between them.
Yet without that silence, music collapses into noise.
Without spacing, writing becomes a blur.
Without intervals, motion itself becomes impossible.
Jehovah did not design a universe squeezed into a suffocating mass. He made one with breadth, distance, proportion, and balance. One where light travels, where structure forms, where systems interact in remarkable harmony.
The object is wonderful.
But the room given to the object is wonderful too.
Even the Scriptures quietly acknowledge this surprising feature of creation.
“He stretches out the northern sky over empty space, suspending the earth upon nothing.” — Job 26:7
That simple statement carries an astonishing thought. The earth itself exists in an expanse that appears empty. No pillars. No visible supports. Just the vast framework Jehovah created, where worlds can exist and move in perfect order.
We tend to admire the furniture in a house while forgetting the rooms that make the house livable. Yet the room matters. The openness matters. The proportions matter.
Creation is similar.
It is not merely a collection of remarkable objects. It is the placement of those objects within a carefully ordered framework that allows them to exist, move, interact, and endure.
Nothing, then, is not trivial.
Nothing is wonderful.
Wonderful because it reveals that Jehovah’s wisdom is not only seen in the things He created, but in the spaces He arranged between them. He does not merely fill the universe—He composes it.
The more closely we look, the less empty “nothing” seems.
It begins to feel deliberate.
It begins to feel wise.
It begins to feel like yet another quiet place where Jehovah’s mind has left its signature.
© 2026 David Paull. Copyright is claimed in the original selection, arrangement, and expressive presentation of this blog and its images. Individual images retain their original ownership or licensing status.