For eight years, Kepler sought unceasingly, with unremitting toil, to solve the law of planetary motion. During those years, he tried nineteen different hypotheses. One after another of these he was compelled to lay aside as not conforming to the motion of the planets. His courage and patience transfigured failure into success.
When, after days of study and nights of observation, the months showed a theory untenable, he turned from it without regret, knowing that there was one less theory to try. At last, he was compelled to give up every theory of the circle as the explanation of orbital motion. He then chose the next to the circle in simplicity, the ellipse. Here he found all the conditions met.
The problem at last was solved, and he cried,
“O almighty God, I am thinking Thy thoughts after Thee!”
When he had established his second and third laws, and written his exposition of them, he said:
“My book is written to be read either now or by posterity; I care not which. It may well wait a century for a reader, since God has waited six thousand years for an observer.”
Other articles by Frank Zimmerman:
- Prophecies of Christ’s First Advent
- Christian Persecution in Iran
- Thoughts on God’s Rulership
- Disasters
- Good and Bad Marriages
- The Doubter’s Bible
- What is the 1888 Message?
- The Boy Who Went to Heaven
- The Wheat and Tares
- What the Battle is About
- Being Ignorant of God’s Righteousness
- From a Far Country (plus Observations)
- Temperance and Romans 14
- Arminius and Adventism
- The Saviour’s Sabbath Miracles