What Astronauts See
When astronauts aboard the International Space Station orbit Earth, they witness something that reshapes how they understand light and darkness. From the ground, we watch the sun rise and set. We experience long shadows at dusk and total darkness at midnight. But from two hundred and fifty miles up, astronauts see the truth plainly: the sun never stops shining. Not for a single second. The darkness we experience on the surface isn't caused by any change in the sun. It's caused by the turning of the earth beneath it.
James wrote, "Every good gift and every perfect gift is from above, coming down from the Father of lights, with whom there is no variation or shadow due to change."
When we walk through seasons of darkness — grief, doubt, confusion — it can feel as though God has dimmed or turned away. But the shadow isn't in Him. The Father of lights shines with an unwavering constancy that no created light can match. Our sun will eventually exhaust its hydrogen and collapse. Stars die. Bulbs flicker and fail. But the One James calls the Father of lights never shifts, never fades, never casts a single shadow.
Every good thing in your life — every moment of beauty, every unexpected kindness, every breath of grace — flows from a Source that has never once changed. The light hasn't moved. It never will.
Scripture References
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