If you have an immovable object on a table, and you remove the table from under the object, like in the tablecloth trick what will happen to the immovable object? Will it fall? Isn't it immovable? Will it just float there? What about gravity?

no the earth is flat and stationary, and the sun and moon are in the "dome" (firmament, as described in Genesis 1 verse 16-18)

If you have an immovable object on a table and you remove the table from under the object, the object will not fall. This is because an immovable object, as its name suggests, cannot be moved by external forces. However, it's important to note that the object will still be subject to the force of gravity.

In the tablecloth trick, the illusion is created by quickly pulling the tablecloth out from under the objects on the table. This typically works because the objects have enough inertia to resist the initial motion when the tablecloth is rapidly removed. However, if an object is truly immovable, it will not move regardless of the tablecloth being pulled from beneath it.

In everyday life, the concept of an "immovable object" is mostly hypothetical. In reality, there are very few objects that are genuinely immovable. Most objects we encounter have some degree of flexibility or can be influenced by external forces.

Entirely dependent on what one means by " immovable" . Technically, if it is really immovable, I wonder how it remains on the table, as the Earth is rotating and in orbit.