Abstract The cosmological controversy between the geocentric and heliocentric models have traditionally been framed as a conflict between religious dogma and scientific progress. This paper challenges that narrative by proposing a “Thronaxis Cosmology” in which Polaris—rather than Earth or Sun—functions as the defining cosmological locus. Through analysis of Hebrew astronomical terminology (moznayim), biblical throne language and eschatological texts, the study argues that theThe heliocentric model functions as a religious system shaped by the legacy of solar worship rather than a neutral, empirically grounded scientific framework. The paper introduces the “Fixed–Fixed” classification to describe the unique cosmological status of the Earth–Polaris relationship, in contrast to the “wandering” planetary bodies associated with the planao motif of deception in Scripture. This analysis reveals continuity between ancient Greco-Roman solar cults—particularly their veneration of Apollo/Helios/Mithras—and modern cosmology’s dependence on Sun- centered assumptions. The cosmological debate, therefore, emerges as fundamentally theological: a conflict between YHWH-centered biblical theism and solarized forms of Pagan cosmology that was rebranded as neutral and objective science. The eschatological reorientation described in Revelation 21–22, in which God’s throne descends to a renewed Earth without sun or moon, further affirms the throne-centered structure of the cosmos and provides the soteriological trajectory that heliocentrism cannot accommodate. In addition to its theological and historical analysis, this study incorporates multiple lines of empirical evidence. These include the consistent alignment of Earth’s magnetic North with the North Celestial Pole, the fixed positional stability of Polaris demonstrated through centuries of navigational practice, and the perfect circular rotation of the starry heavens around this stationary point as captured in time lapse recordings. Together, these features offer reproducible observational confirmation of the throne-oriented axis central to Thronaxis Cosmology
Kenyatta University (Sun,) studied this question.