So NASA says the sun formed from a cloud of dust and gases. The static electricity from all of this debris caused a center of gravity to appear. Very similar to how the Earth was formed also. So my static electricity building up to create gravity in an object theory isn't as far fetched as some might think.
But the one thing that has always thrown me for a loop was the burning of hydrogen at the sun's core. I finally found a website that worded things a little different. The sun isn't actually burning the hydrogen as in flames, heat and destruction. It's burning through the hydrogen by compressing it into helium. So the gravitational field of the sun is pulling hydrogen towards its core and compressing it into helium. And the transference from hydrogen to helium creates heat and light. Because the hydrogen which has no nuclei is all of a sudden is given one. So it's basically being crushed until it implodes. Burning through 5 million tons of hydrogen per day. But still having enough to last for another 4 billion years. The heat and light from the implosion travels up and out in every direction.
But no probes nor humans have made it to the core of the sun. So this is still all a theory to me. Who knows it could have a spinning metal core just like Earth. Or two spinning metal cores, spinning around one another.