Fantastical Truth

Fantastical Truth


227. Is Christianity Preventing a ‘Star Trek’ Future? | with Dr. Sarah Salviander

August 27, 2024

Space. The next-to-final frontier. So what’s the final one? It’s the future. As sci-fi fans, Stephen and Zack enjoy debating space travel possibilities, Moon stations and Mars colonies (likelier now after the liquid water finding?), and of course those armies of the aliens. Now we’ll ask whether today’s scientists and speculators recognize Christianity’s crucial role in their disciplines, and whether they see a place for Christianity in their vision of the future.


Episode sponsors

  1. Enclave Publishing: Winter’s Maiden by Morgan L. Busse
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Mission update

Quotes and notes

“The chief aim of all investigations of the external world should be to discover the rational order and harmony which has been imposed on it by God and which He revealed to us in the language of mathematics.”

—Johannes Kepler


“To know the mighty works of God, to comprehend His wisdom and majesty and power; to appreciate, in degree, the wonderful workings of His laws, surely all this must be a pleasing and acceptable mode of worship to the Most High, to whom ignorance cannot be more grateful than knowledge.”

—Nicolaus Copernicus


Sarah SalvianderIntroducing guest Dr. Sarah Salviander

Dr. Sarah Salviander is a Bible-believing, power-lifting, cancer-surviving, PhD astrophysicist. She was raised atheist in a secular country: no churches or temples, no scriptures or holy books, no discussions about God or gods. Her north star was science, which led her into a PhD astrophysics program. But pondering the mystery of existence caused her naturalistic beliefs to crumble. And studying the evidence for Christianity convinced her it was true. She’s now a research scientist, professor, and writer, and lives with her family in Texas.



1. How Christians influenced modern science

  • Christians expected an orderly universe
  • Christians expected an expanding universe
  • How the study of the stars led to faith in the creator of the cosmos

2. What Star Trek imagines for human progress

  • Star Trek imagines a utopia brought about by warp drive
  • Star Trek doesn’t think religion has much of a place in the future
  • But somehow most Star Trek characters agree on basic morality

3. How we will live in a fantastical future

  • What we should expect about scientific and astronomical discoveries in the next decade or so
  • Does God forbid or otherwise prevent space travel? (Genesis 11, Isaiah 45:18, Matthew 24:31)
  • How naturalism and neo-pagan religions are becoming increasingly common within the scientific community
  • How Christianity will continue advancing science

Com station
Top question for listeners

  • What favorite star, exoplanet, or other part of the galaxy do you hope to visit someday?

Jake enjoyed episode 225:

Just finished the new episode y’all did about Lord of the Rings. I was 100% someone introduced to Middle-earth via the first Peter Jackson movie. I had a vague awareness of The Hobbit but no knowledge of LOtR. I remember leaving the theater from Fellowship, going directly downstairs from the theater in the mall into Barnes and Noble to buy the three-in-one trilogy book which I still own until this day. I had the trilogy read by the end of Christmas break and have read or listened to it all multiple times since then. I took Tolkien classes as an undergrad and graduate student and routinely reference Middle-earth in my classes as a teacher at a classical school. In fact, I have made it clear that if a book I teach is removed, I will campaign hard for The Hobbit to be its replacement.


Thank you, Peter Jackson.