In the modern world, we’ve become very good at “rebranding” symbols. We take ancient signs, slap them on logos or t-shirts, and strip away their original intent until they become mere visual noise. But there is one symbol that deserves far more respect than it currently gets: the rainbow.
It isn’t just a trick of physics or a colorful backdrop for a photo op. It is a sign of an ancient promise, and we need to stop treating it like an ordinary decoration. To understand why it matters, we have to look at the world that existed before the first rainbow ever appeared.
The World That Was: A Lost Environment
Before the Great Flood, the Earth was a fundamentally different place. It is highly likely the planet was encased in a massive “Vapor Canopy”—a layer of water in the upper atmosphere that created a pressurized, oxygen-rich environment.
Think of it as a planet-wide hyperbaric chamber. This canopy would have provided two vital protections:
- Radiation Shielding: It filtered out the harmful ultraviolet and cosmic radiation that causes cellular aging and genetic mutation. This is why ancient records describe humans living for nearly a thousand years.
- Atmospheric Pressure: The weight of all that water in the upper sky compressed the air below. Higher pressure allows blood to saturate with oxygen more efficiently, promoting rapid healing and massive growth.
This environment explains how the Earth could support such massive animal life. The dense air provided the lift needed for giant creatures to fly and the oxygen required to fuel their enormous frames.
The Great Change and the Evidence Beneath Us
When the “windows of heaven” were opened, that canopy collapsed. For forty days and nights, the very shield that protected the Earth became the instrument of its judgment. We don’t have to look far to see the scars of this event; the evidence is all around us if we interpret the data correctly.
Take Alberta, for example. We find sea life fossils in the middle of the prairies and deep within the foothills—thousands of miles from any ocean. Furthermore, our massive oil sands and oil deposits are essentially the “graveyards” of the pre-Flood world.
Oil is formed when massive amounts of organic matter—lush plants and animals—are buried rapidly under extreme pressure. The sheer scale of the Alberta oil deposits suggests a catastrophic burial of a world that was far more biologically dense than our own. These aren’t just fuel sources; they are the remains of the world that existed before the rainbow.
Many claim these things take millions of years, but the evidence suggests otherwise. Look at the fossilized soft-felt hat found in Australia—it turned to solid stone in less than ten years because it was submerged in mineral-rich water. Fossilization isn’t about time; it’s about conditions. The Flood provided the perfect conditions to turn a world into stone and oil almost overnight.
More Than Just a Spectrum
When the water finally settled and the skies cleared, the physics of our world had changed. The atmosphere was thinner, the radiation was higher, and human lifespans began to drop. It was in this “new” air—where direct sunlight could finally hit individual raindrops—that the first rainbow appeared.
The rainbow was established as a covenant. It was a literal “bow” set in the clouds—a sign from the Creator that even though the protective canopy was gone and the world had become a harsher place, it would never again face total destruction by water.
When you understand that context, the rainbow stops being “cute” and starts being solemn. It represents mercy, survival, and a divine guarantee. Using it for mundane or contradictory purposes feels like taking a sacred legal contract and using it as gift wrap.
Respecting the Promise
The rainbow belongs to everyone, but it doesn’t belong to every cause.
- It’s not a trend: Trends fade, but a promise is everlasting.
- It’s not a blank canvas: You cannot project whatever meaning you want onto it without ignoring the history written in the very earth we walk on.
- It’s a reminder: Every time it appears, it’s meant to make us stop and reflect on the moment the Earth changed forever.
We should leave the rainbow alone—not because we don’t like color, but because we should respect the weight of the promise it carries. Let it stay in the clouds where it belongs, serving its original purpose as a reminder of mercy in a world that lost its ancient shield.
Join the Conversation
This is a lot to take in, and it challenges a lot of what we are told about history and science. But the evidence—from the oil sands in my backyard here in Alberta to the “stone” hats of Australia—is hard to ignore.
If you want to dive deeper into the science of the Canopy Theory, discuss more geological evidence, or talk about what this means for us today, I’d love to have you in our community. I’m always willing to discuss these topics further over on the Swagnilla Ice Discord.
- Peasants: You can join the free areas of the Discord and join the public chat.
- Knights: You get full access to the paid areas of the server where we go into deeper detail on these theories as well as the Peasant tier’s benefits.
- Dukes: You’ll have access to the private channel where we test out beta ideas for the server as well as all previous tiers benefits.
Let’s keep seeking the truth together and reject the garbage of lies the world is offering.