
As NASA’s Artemis II mission advances back to Earth, astronaut Victor Glover—the Christian U.S. Navy pilot—is being applauded for glorifying God in space and for his response to a question about his race. When pressed with a race-centered question, Glover refused to shrink a historic moment into identity politics. Instead, he elevated the conversation. He stated, “It’s the story of humanity… not Black history” (Christian Post).
Glover acknowledged that representation matters but made it clear it is not the ultimate point. He replied that the mission belonged not just to “Black history” or “women’s history,” but to human history. Glover added that he hopes one day people will look past race, saying, “I hope we push that one day.”
Glover lives this out boldly. His stance reflects a deeper reality: science does not replace God—it reveals Him. He declared, “My career is fed by my faith… Anytime I do something risky, I pray—before every flight, especially when I sit on top of a rocket ship.” He does not separate faith from function. His life reflects Romans 1:16—“I am not ashamed of the gospel of Christ.”
“It was a rush,” he said of the launch experience. “I mean, I think we all had tears in our eyes. When we got to about five seconds in the countdown, the magnitude of that was pretty overwhelming.”
Glover’s message aligns with Scripture—humanity is one, designed by one Creator.This is why his witness matters. He didn’t just answer a question—he redirected the narrative.
Be bold like Glover. Whether in a boardroom or a classroom—or even a rocket—do not separate your faith from your calling. Stand firm in truth. Speak Christ without apology. The world does not need more labels—it needs the Gospel.
“The heavens declare the glory of God; and the firmament shows His handiwork.” — Psalm 19:1