Josi Joseph | The Eternal Motion: Where Science and Spirituality Meet | Global TV

Posted on: October 30, 2025

“Motion is science and spirituality in one breath. It is the singularity from which all became apparent. Since no energy can ever be created or destroyed, it was, it is, and it will be — the same eternal flow that animates every atom and every soul. It is the non-created Creator — the force without beginning or end, the silent motion that became existence itself.”

By Josi Joseph, Psychologist, Group Editor +91 94468 48191

There is something that has always fascinated me — the mystery that connects everything. When I look at the world, from the smallest particle to the vastness of galaxies, I see one thing that never stops: motion. Everything moves — the planets, the rivers, the trees, the seasons, even our thoughts. All are in motion.

From the beginning of time, human beings have asked one question: What holds everything together? Scientists, saints, and seekers have searched for this truth in different ways, yet I believe they have all been looking at the same thing from different sides — motion.

This motion is not just physical; it is existential. It is the very nature of being. Existence means motion. When motion stops, existence ceases. When motion stops, life ceases. The one permanent truth, the one unbroken rhythm in all existence, is the motion that never stops. In that sense, motion is the foundation of all that is.

Science began its journey by observing motion. Newton taught us that every object in the universe moves according to laws — simple, beautiful, predictable. Later, Einstein came and showed that even space and time are not still — they bend, stretch, and expand. The universe itself is in motion, endlessly unfolding.

Modern science tells us that the universe is expanding and evolving. Yet when I think deeply, I see that evolution is not the opposite of creation — evolution is creation in motion. The world was not made once and left behind; it is being made every moment, through motion.

Science tells us that there was a moment when everything began — a single point of unimaginable density and energy. From that moment of birth, the universe has been in constant motion — expanding, evolving, transforming. This motion implies a force — not one acting from outside, but one that arises from within — a unifying force.

One of the most profound scientific truths is that no energy is ever created or destroyed — it only changes form. The same energy that lit the first star continues to pulse through every living cell, every thought, every heartbeat.

That means there is something eternal flowing through everything — an unbroken force, an everlasting vibration. Science calls it energy. Spirituality calls it divinity. But both speak of the same reality.

This idea transforms how I see creation and evolution. For centuries, people have argued about whether the world was created or evolved. But to me, these are not opposites. Creation and evolution are the same process — seen from two perspectives. Creation is the first motion; evolution is its continuation. Evolution is creation in motion.

When I reflect on this, I see a profound harmony between the Bible’s “Let there be light” and the Big Bang’s first burst of energy. Both describe a beginning of motion — the moment when stillness became existence.

All religions, in their deepest core, point toward this same realization:

The Vedas say, Aham Brahmasmi — I am Brahman, the divine within.

Christ says, The Kingdom of God is within you.

The Tao speaks of the Way that flows through all things.

The Qur’an says, God is nearer to you than your jugular vein.

Each expresses the same living truth — the divine motion within us. When we realize that, we see that the universe is not outside us; it moves through us, and we move through it. In that moment, the walls between science and religion, between you and me, between the visible and invisible, all dissolve.

Yet even as I reflect on all this, I know there is something beyond — something that cannot be captured by equations or scriptures. The realm of the Creator can never be the same as the realm of creation.

The world of an ant cannot comprehend the world of a human being; likewise, creation cannot fully grasp the realm of the Creator. The brush cannot understand the painter; the melody cannot grasp the musician. The Creator’s realm is not another layer of the universe — it is the source of all layers.

That is the logic of transcendence — the humble acceptance that beyond science and spirituality, there is still more. Something wordless, boundless, and yet deeply real.

This realization changes how I live. When I understand that life itself is motion — continuous, divine, and shared — I stop fighting it. I stop demanding that things stay the same. I begin to move with life, not against it.

In this flow, conflicts fade. The need to control or prove disappears. Happiness is no longer something to chase; it becomes a natural state when we live in congruence — with ourselves, with others, and with existence itself.

To live rightly, then, is to move in harmony — to be at peace with the motion of existence. When we do that, life becomes light — effortless, peaceful, and deeply joyful.

We have spent centuries dividing truth — science on one side, spirituality on the other. But truth has never been divided. It moves, it evolves, it unites.

The universe began in motion. And through that same eternal motion, we are all returning — not backward, but inward — to the very source from which we came.

To live is to move with that source — consciously, joyfully, harmoniously.

And perhaps, when humanity begins to see life this way, science will find God — and God will smile through science.

2 thoughts on “Josi Joseph | The Eternal Motion: Where Science and Spirituality Meet | Global TV

  1. I add something more. We have seen that in stillness, life ceases. In movement — in motion — creation happens. It is a simple natural law. Existence itself can be understood through this logic. From the moment the first cell of a fetus becomes active, life begins to grow. Motion continues — from birth until death — even within the tiniest particles that we call “dead.” A single seed expands into thousands, each carrying the rhythm of motion within. All creation flows from motion — born from what appears to be stillness, yet is the motionless motion, the eternal seed. The first seed was, is, and will be — forever.”

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