Can a perfectly ordered universe exist without a ruler?
Every village has a headman. Every finely crafted needle has a maker. Every written letter has an author. How, then, can this unimaginably vast, flawlessly ordered kingdom—the cosmos—be without a ruler?
The meticulous harmony and precision observed throughout the universe point unmistakably to a single, all-powerful Creator. Order without authority, law without a lawgiver, and harmony without governance are not explanations but contradictions.
Consider a simple apple. Its existence depends not merely on a seed, but on an entire network of conditions: a tree, fertile soil, regulated air, seasonal balance, precise temperature, the energy of the Sun, the exact rotational speed of the Earth, and the stability of the entire solar system—and ultimately, the universe itself.
The One who creates a single apple must therefore be the One who creates the whole cosmos. Why? Because producing even a single part requires control over all interconnected causes. The part is inseparably integrated with the whole. Whoever creates the part must necessarily create the whole.
The same truth is revealed in something even smaller: a fly’s eye. The One who designed the extraordinary optical system of a fly’s eye—capable of receiving and processing light—must also be the One who created the source of that light: the Sun itself. There is no break in the chain between the smallest detail and the greatest structure.
From the apple to the Earth, from the fly’s eye to the Sun, from the cell to the universe, existence is bound together by a single, unbroken system. Nothing stands alone. Nothing is independent.
This profound unity in creation proves that the Creator is One. There is no division of authority, no partnership in creation, no fragmentation of power. One Architect designed the entire blueprint. One Craftsman governs the whole workshop. The Creator of the part is necessarily the Creator of the whole.

