If you want to fall in love again, just look at the stars. From this newly developed perspective of our stationary earth, we now see the stars as this beautiful clockwork piece steadily rotating above us.
The brilliant glow of the stars and their fixed patterns put us in awe with their mysterious twinkling in the firmament above. Are they really in water? What are they? How do they stay put? So many questions…
The beauty of star gazing on a clear night sky, as a truth-seeker willing to accept the evidence that we are on a stationary, immovable plane and it is the heavens that rotate above, is that we fall into an awe-inspired trance just by gazing upward.
Without fanciful visions of distant planets or a black space void filling our head, we are struck by sheer admiration and wonder.
This amazing feeling is just like falling in love all over again.
What are the stars? Are they gods? Are they our ancestors? All we can say for sure is they are near and dear to us and ever watching over us.
I bow at the feet of the divine in this mystical display of an ever-rotating time piece. When life seems unstable and unpredictable, I can remember the Sun will always rise again and the stars ever fixed will blanket the night sky. This is the sort of security we all seek in a loving relationship - consistency and commitment - well that is exactly what the night sky grants us.
So next time you gaze at the twinkling and wandering stars above, let yourself be swept off your feet and fall in love with the perfect time piece of creation. As truthers who are parents we can preserve this great feeling in our children and not fill their minds with ridiculous nihilistic ideas of spinning in a causeless space void.
Instead show them the truth - the consistency and reliability of the constellations. Teach them the stars are close to us and here for you. Teach them that even if life on Earth gets tough, that they can rely on the consistency of the stars above.
Teach them the stars are there for them. They are not imperceptible distances away and unreachable, but they are close and worth knowing. We might not know much else for certain, but that's okay because children will have their own ideas. Let them explore their own cosmic downloads of what the stars mean to them, without destroying it by replacing it with NASA's narcissistic lie of a spinning space ball and distant unknowable galaxies.
Teach them, "The stars are here for you, my dear." Then watch their bright eyes twinkle as they fall in love with the night sky too.
Sincerely,
Cedra
Recommended texts for 5-9 year olds as well as 3-5 year olds . Grandpa trying to wake up grandma and kids ... grandkids are waiting for the truth.
Yes, like Franklin wrote, it is beautiful to read. Thank you.
At 72 years of age, I am not a homeschooling parent, but I do appreciate what you are doing.
And as a believer in the God of the Bible I would be able to tell my grandchildren that the stars are in the sky because our God created them, for them, to enjoy and to wonder at the One who was good enough to make the stars (and sun and moon) for them.
We learn in the Creation account, that on the fourth day, God said,
"Let there be lights in the expanse of the heavens to separate the day from the night, and let them be for signs and for seasons and for days and years; and let them be for lights in the expanse of the heavens to give light on the earth"; and it was so. God made the two great lights, the greater light to govern the day, and the lesser light to govern the night; He made the stars also. (Gen 1:14-16)
So, the greater and lesser light (sun and moon) and the stars were made by God to give light on the earth He had created, for signs and for seasons and for days and years. They did not and could not come about by chance.
Keep up your good work, Stephania.