Why I Question Gravity, But Not God
This one might challenge some assumptions, but I’ve never been able to fully accept what we’re told about gravity and the structure of the universe.
Tony - Ethereal Faiths
1 min read


I’m not against science, but I think there’s a difference between real observable science and institutional narratives. I trust the Bible more than I trust a system built on theories that constantly change.
Let’s start with gravity. It’s supposedly the force that holds planets in orbit and keeps us grounded on a spinning sphere. But when you test things for yourself — like looking across long distances of water or using a drone — you don’t see the curvature they say should be there. If gravity were so powerful, how come butterflies can fly and clouds can hover?
The Bible never describes the Earth as spinning through space. It calls it fixed, immovable, with a firm foundation. It also describes the sky as a firmament — something solid, separating the waters above from the Earth. That’s not how mainstream science describes it. And that’s a red flag to me.
Add to that the contradictions in physics. If we’re spinning at 1,000 mph at the equator, orbiting the sun at 66,600 mph, and hurtling through the galaxy even faster — how come we don’t feel anything? Why do airplane flights work the way they do if the ground is moving beneath them? Why can we see objects at long distances that should be hidden behind the curve?
To me, this isn’t about rejecting science. It’s about demanding integrity in it. When Scripture and science conflict, I side with the Word — because it hasn’t failed me.