Do atoms and microscopic particles also operate consistently?
In the same manner, inanimate objects of our universe fulfill consistent roles. Matter consists of minute microscopic particles called atoms. As you know, atoms consist of three parts the electron, the proton and the neutron comparable to the three-part plan of the universe (see illustration on p. 11 of the September/October 1993 “PLIM REPORT.”) When atoms combine into groups they are called molecules, and these molecules assemble in various combinations. Why do atoms consistently combine into the 92 natural elements? All the forms of matter known to science fall into a total of 92 types or categories, which we call elements. Think of this amazing infallibility! Whenever these invisible, microscopic atoms combine out of the millions of possible combinations, they never fail to combine into only one of 92 ways. By the laws of chance, they might combine into trillions of groups, but they do not! Not only that, but each time a group of atoms combine into a particular element, the element