Futurism
Pastor Kevin Note: Secular and most creation astronomers are continually surprised by recent discoveries about the structure and composition of comets and asteroids. Findings such as this article describe are inconsistent with the conventional decades-old view that these comets are comprised primarily of solid rock. However, space missions and telescope observations are coming back with evidence that comets and asteroids are actually loosely aggregated "rock piles," which easily break apart. This increasing body of evidence has caused some secular astronomers to now admit that comets and asteroids are loosely held together rock piles, but they have no scientifically sound explanation for how rocks of various sizes down to dust can possibly come together in the vacuum of space. There is only one theory that adequately explains these findings, the Hydroplate Theory (HPT) of Dr. Walt Brown. Brown postulates that comets, asteroids, and trans-Neptunian objects (TNOs) formed in space from water, rocks, and other debris (that included entrained organic material) ejected from the earth during the initiation of the global flood event. The Bible describes this as the day when “all the fountains [water] of the great deep were broken up” (Genesis 7:11). The HPT also explains why recent scientific discoveries about comets and asteroids show that their origin was recent; their lifetime is short, and how their composition and morphology, so shocking to astronomers, can be understood in light of the HPT. To learn more about the HPT explanation for comets and asteroids, we encourage you to watch Pastor Kevin Lea’s presentations, “Origin of Comets, Asteroids & Trans Neptunian Objects: Solving The Puzzle Above Us,” Part 1 and Part 2, at the Calvary Church Port Orchard YouTube channel (youtube.com/@CalvaryChurchPO). See also Bryan Nickel’s YouTube Channel, youtube.com/@BryanNickel_Hydroplate, for HPT animations of this and other topics addressed by the HPT and hydroplate.org for more information about the Hydroplate Theory. -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------
A comet, dubbed C/2025 K1 (ATLAS), spectacularly broke apart into three huge chunks — and anybody with an eight-inch telescope or bigger can catch the resulting fireworks show for the next several weeks, according to Sky & Telescope. The comet shouldn’t be confused with interstellar object 3I/ATLAS. K1/ATLAS originated from within the furthest stretches of the solar system, and not interstellar space. Italian astronomer Gianluca Masi of the Virtual Telescope 2.0 Project, which allows public access to remotely-controlled telescopes, captured incredible pictures of the comet on Tuesday, clearly showing …