I'm not much into astronomy, but I was recently visiting the Huis Marseille -- a photography museum here in Amsterdam -- and I was absolutely blown away by an image of extremely distant stars and galaxies, as captured by the Hubble space telescope. Take a look at the vivid color and intricate natural design in the photograph below:

And now, read the write-up of the image, as copied from the placard that accompanied the image at the museum:
Ultra Deep Field image of 10,000 galaxies in the Fornax constellation, a composite of 800 images taken between 24 September 2003 and 16 January 2004. For these images, the telescope was pointed towards a relatively empty part of the sky. After an exposure time of a million seconds (more than 277 hours), the space there proved not to be empty at all, but to be littered with distant (deep) galaxies. -- Released 9 March 2004
If you want to be even more deeply impressed by this Ultra Deep Field, click here for a full-size (3100 x 3120 pixels) copy of this image. It's absolutely incredible to see the beauty and complexity of our universe -- especially considering that this is a part of the night sky that would naturally appear to be "empty" to the human eye!
To me, it feels like a call to worship: a graphic demonstration of Psalm 19:1, where it says, "The heavens declare the glory of God; the skies proclaim the work of his hands." Glory, indeed... Glory appears to be an understatement.