One sky is filled with prophecy—the thunder of sermons, the timelines of end-times teachers, the conviction that history is running out of time. The other sky is filled with rockets, telescopes, and scientific wonder—a universe expanding faster than we can imagine, waiting to be explored.
For centuries, these skies have seemed to collide: faith warning that the world will soon end, science dreaming of the centuries and civilizations ahead. Many believers feel torn between prophecy and progress. Many skeptics assume Christianity fears the future. And countless people—Christian and non-Christian alike—carry the weight of this tension like an albatross across their shoulders.
Albatross: Faith, Science, and the Future invites readers into a bold, hopeful vision for the twenty-first century and beyond. It confronts the fear and fatalism that have often haunted modern Christianity and asks:
- Can faith bless human discovery instead of fearing it?
- Can prophecy offer hope without demanding panic?
- Can science and spirituality walk together into the future rather than apart?
Drawing on history, theology, ethics, and the wonder of scientific exploration, Albatross offers a Christianity big enough for both galaxies and grace—a faith that celebrates human curiosity as part of God’s design rather than a threat to it.
Whether you are a Christian longing for a faith that embraces progress, a skeptic curious about spirituality’s place in the modern world, or simply a reader hungry for thoughtful, hope-filled perspectives on humanity’s future, Albatross invites you to imagine what might happen if faith shed its fears, lifted its eyes, and walked forward beneath two skies finally reconciled.
Part history, part theology, part inspiration, this book will help readers see prophecy not as a weight of doom but as a horizon of promise, freeing both faith and science to serve the flourishing of the world—and perhaps the worlds beyond.