If Christ became sin for us when God said "let there be light" and the lamb was slain from the foundation of the world, and Christ died on the cross at Calvary, was he offered once, or twice?
Not Just any Oxygen
In the particle trinity which we deduced from the first two verses of Genesis, the Holy Spirit is Omega, Oxygen. However, the Holy Spirit can't be just any Oxygen, or everyone would be filled with the Holy Spirit all the time.
Chemistry and Physics in the Bible
People, even Christians, can't stand it when you use the Bible as a scientific text. Modern theology is based on rejecting the possibility that the Bible has any scientific merit.
Hypothesis 22
"Biblical literalists" are usually indignant and defend the atheist human origins narrative (SciPop) when shown that they don't have an inkling of the true extent to which the Bible may be taken literally.
Black Holes and Dark Matter
All current cosmological models show that somewhere between %80-85 of the mass of the universe is missing. Based on our understanding of particle physics we can move this number up to %90. Where is it?
Bible Versions
Different Bible versions, by which we mean English translations, differ broadly in how they render the original languages. A lot of people use this as an excuse to discount the Bible as being inaccurate and unreliable.
The Creation of Gravity
In a similar manner to that in which God said: Let there be light, the light was a reaction to nuclear fusion; when God said, Let there be a firmament in the midst of the waters, it was a reaction to the creation of of gravity.
Gravitational Drag Effect
Let's do a thought experiment. Thoughts experiments have been used by physicists for many years as a way to visualize concepts. It's a way to design experiments that we can use to test our hypotheses.
Math isn’t What You Think
Earth is the gravitational center of the universe. That's a controversial statement but it's incredibly simple to solve. However, the issues involves are complicated because no one really understands them.
Gravitational Lensing
We observe the gravity of the sun causing light from stars to bend. It's called gravitational lensing. This shows that light has properties of both waves and particles, but everything is energy when it comes right down to it.
