On
January 8 the first lunar rocket since 1972 was launched from the United States
at Cape Canaveral, a joint venture between Boeing and Lockheed Martin. It is an unmanned, robotic, mission. Only the
US has ever landed a man on the moon and that was over 50 years ago. This could
be the year we return. NASA hopes to
launch the first manned mission to the moon in November and hopes not just to
visit, but to live there by the end of the decade. China hopes to have humans living
on the moon by 2040.
I
remember those first manned missions, launched long before personal PCs, smart
phones and the internet were thought of. By today’s standards that world looks
archaic. But the accomplishments by NASA and a group of astronauts with the “right
stuff” is still impressive.
My
wife and I married on December 21, 1968, the day Apollo 8 was launched to carry
the first men to orbit the moon. They
reached the moon 3 days later. On Christmas Eve, just before they disappeared
to the other side of the moon and lost radio contact with the earth, Borman and
his crew read the Genesis account of creation.
(Genesis 1:1-10). In the distance
the earth appeared as a fragile planet on the moon’s horizon. Six and ½ months
later we sat in front of our black and white TV and watched Neil Armstrong leap
from the last rung of the lander to take “one small step for man, one giant
leap for mankind.” On board the lander,
while they waited, Buzz Aldrin observed Christian communion.
James
Irwin served as the commander and pilot for the lunar lander on Apollo 15. He became the 8th astronaut to
step foot on the moon. After his return
Irwin founded the High Flight Foundation as a non-denominational evangelical
organization based in Colorado Springs.
He said, “Some people make light of it and ask. ‘How can a technical
person, an astronaut, believe in the Bible?’
I guess I also was a skeptic in my early days, but I have come to
believe what the Bible says as being true.”
The
last man to walk on the moon was Gene Cernan, commander of Apollo 17 in
December 1972. As he departed the moon
he said, “We leave as we came, and God willing, we shall return, with peace and
hope for all mankind.” Cernan later described
his experience. “I felt the world was just too beautiful to have happened by
accident. There has to be something
bigger than you and bigger than me. … There has to be a Creator of the universe
... .”
I
do not doubt that God welcomes us to explore His universe, to experience the majesty
and mystery of the moon and beyond. But, when we do, it is important that we do
so with the humility and faith demonstrated by these men who accomplished what
no one has been able to do since.
The
Scripture says, “When
I [c]consider Your heavens, the work
of Your fingers,
the moon and the stars, which You have set in place;
what is man that You think of him,
and a son of man that You are concerned about him? Yet
You have made him a little lower than God, and You crown
him with glory and majesty! You have
him rule over the works of Your hands; You have put everything
under his feet, ... Lord, our Lord, how majestic is
Your name in all the earth!” (Psalm 8:3-9).
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