NASA Astronaut Took Communion in Space — And It Terrifies a Godless Culture
Victor Glover didn’t just orbit the Earth. He carried his faith with him.
While serving aboard the International Space Station, NASA astronaut Victor Glover openly practiced Christianity, including taking communion while in orbit. In a realm often portrayed as the pinnacle of human intellect, technology, and self-sufficiency, Glover made a quiet but radical declaration: man does not transcend God by leaving Earth.
That truth unsettles modern culture.
We are told that science replaces faith, that education dissolves belief, and that the more we understand the universe, the less we need God. Yet one of the most elite pilots and engineers on the planet — entrusted with billion-dollar equipment and human lives — publicly affirmed that faith was not something he outgrew, but something that sustained him.
Communion is not symbolic comfort. It is a declaration of dependence. It proclaims that no matter how far humanity travels, redemption does not come from progress, power, or innovation — it comes from Christ alone.
This is why the story matters.
Christianity has always thrived in places of resistance. Early believers worshiped under threat of death. Today, faith is pressured to retreat quietly from public life, especially in institutions deemed “advanced.” Glover’s testimony defies that demand. He did not hide his faith to appear credible. He carried it openly into orbit.
And that is what truly challenges the modern narrative.
Because if faith can coexist with the highest levels of science, discipline, and achievement — then the claim that belief is ignorance collapses. The problem is not evidence. The problem is pride.
Victor Glover reminds us of an ancient truth: the heavens do not erase God — they declare Him. And no amount of altitude removes humanity’s need for grace.





