A
repost from ten years ago …
Here’s something you did not know.
Go back fifty years ago, to July 20, 1969.
Go up about 240,000 miles or so, to the surface of the
Moon.
Yes, I’m talking about Apollo 11, the first manned
landing on the Moon.
Two hours and forty minutes after the Lunar Module
landed at the Sea of Tranquility, after a lengthy powering-down procedure and
various check lists to make sure all systems were okay, Buzz Aldrin found a
rare moment of quiet. Since Neil Armstrong had been chosen to take the first
step onto the lunar surface and had the whole “what are you going to say?”
thing weighing on his shoulders, Aldrin wondered how best he could celebrate
the moment, and spent a decent amount of time searching for the perfect
gesture. A few weeks before the launch, he came to a decision.
Eight months prior Apollo 8 became the first manned
craft to fly around the Moon. On Christmas Eve, 1968, rounding the lunar far
side, the three astronauts in the Command Module, Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, and
Bill Anders, took turns reading the opening verses of the Book of Genesis. NASA
was still coping with the “controversy,” and Deke Slayton, head of the
astronaut office, warned Aldrin against any overt broadcast of religious
observance over the air.
While Armstrong was finishing up his tasks in the LM,
Aldrin brought out a plastic bag from his personal pouch and removed a small
flask of wine, a chalice, and some wafers, and set them down on a small ledge.
In the one-sixth gravity the wine poured smoothly into the chalice; over the
mike Aldrin asked for anyone listening to pause for a moment and give thanks in
his or her own way. Then, reading his printed handwriting on a card he prepared
on Earth, he spoke a few words from the Book of John:
I am the wine and you are the branches
Whoever remains in me and I in him will bear much
fruit
For you can do nothing without me
Aldrin then took the wine and the wafer. I do not know
if Armstrong partook or not. I do not know if Aldrin suffered any repercussions
for ignoring Slayton’s warning. I do not know if Aldrin is a Catholic and if
the communion was liturgically valid. Nor do I care, really. What I really find
amazing is that it was even done at all, whether considered a mere gesture or a
valid sacrament. It gives me a certain, odd type of hope in mankind, it gives
me what I suppose is a glimpse into that tiny and fragile part of us that is so
cherished by God.
Source: A Man on the Moon (1994) by Andrew Chaikin,
204-205
Did not know this...PRAISE GOD! Too bad that this was never mentioned in any of the 50 year celebrations of the historic event. Thank you, Hopper
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