There is a long and intricate history of the relationship between science and religion. An early and well-studied example includes Galilei Galileo’s trouble with the Roman Catholic Church when he was put on trial because of his advocacy of his heliocentric idea and his conflict with Pope Urban VII (see, e.g., Hellman 1998). Many of the more recent discourses on the interface between science and religion are related to the teaching of evolution, one of the cornerstones of contemporaneous science (see, e.g., Alters and Alters 2001; Bleckmann 2006; National Academy of Sciences and the Institute of Medicine 2008). In the meantime, significant advances have been made in astronomy and astrophysics, providing detailed and unequivocal evidence that the Big Bang happened about 13.8 billion years ago. Supportive results include the discovery of the cosmic microwave background in 1964, among other findings (Partridge 1995). Previous articles in the SKEPTICAL INQUIRER provide additional food for thought about modern-day cosmology as well as why Earth can’t be 6,000 years old (see Collins 2021).