The
Moon (&
God) - VERY
INTERESTING -
July 20, 1969
What
was the first
liquid and
food consumed
on the moon? I
' m betting
that most are
unaware of
this story.
Forty-five
years ago, two
human beings
changed
history by
walking on the
surface of
the moon.
But,
what happened
before Buzz
Aldrin and
Neil Armstrong
exited the
Lunar Module
is perhaps
even more
amazing, if
only because
so few people
know about
it. I ' m
talking about
the fact that
Buzz Aldrin
took communion
on the surface
of the moon.
Some
months after
his return, he
wrote about it
in Guideposts
magazine.
The
background to
the story is
that Aldrin
was an elder
at his
Presbyterian
Church in
Texas during
this period in
his life;
and, knowing
that he would
soon be doing
something
unprecedented
in human
history, he
felt that he
should mark
the occasion
somehow. He
asked his
minister to
help him and
so the
minister
consecrated a
communion
wafer and a
small vial of
communion
wine. Buzz
Aldrin took
them with him
out of the
Earth ' s
orbit and onto
the surface of
the moon. He
and Armstrong
had only been
on the lunar
surface for a
few minutes
when Aldrin
made the
following
public
statement:
This
is the LM
(Lunar Module)
pilot. I ' d
like to take
this
opportunity to
ask every
person
listening in,
whoever and
wherever they
may be, to
pause for a
moment and
contemplate
the events of
the past few
hours and to
give thanks in
his or her
own way. He
then ended
radio
communication,
and there, on
the silent
surface of the
moon, 250,000
miles from
home, he read
a verse from
the Gospel of
John, and he
took
communion.
Here
is his own
account of
what happened:
"In
the radio
blackout, I
opened the
little plastic
packages which
contained the
bread and the
wine. I
poured the
wine into the
chalice our
church had
given me. In
the one-sixth
gravity of the
moon, the wine
slowly curled
and
gracefully
came up the
side of the
cup. Then I
read the
scripture: '
I am the
vine, you are
the branches.
Whosoever
abides in me
will bring
forth much
fruit ...
Apart from me
you can do
nothing. '
"I
had intended
to read my
communion
passage back
to Earth, but
at the last
minute they
had requested
that I not do
this. NASA was
already
embroiled in
a legal battle
with Madelyn
Murray O '
Hare, the
celebrated
opponent of
religion, over
the Apollo 8
crew ' s
reading from
Genesis while
orbiting the
moon at
Christmas. I
agreed
reluctantly."
"I
ate the tiny
toast and
swallowed the
wine. I gave
thanks for the
intelligence
and spirit
that had
brought two
young pilots
to the Sea of
Tranquility .
It was
interesting
for me to
think that the
very first
liquid ever
poured on the
moon and the
very first
food eaten
there were the
communion
elements."
"And,
of course, it
' s
interesting to
think that
some of the
first words
spoken on the
moon were the
words of Jesus
Christ, who
made the Earth
and the moon -
and who, in
the immortal
words of
Dante, is
Himself the
"Love that
moves the Sun
and other
stars."
How
many of you
knew this? Too
bad this type
of news doesn
' t travel as
fast as the
bad does.
Share
with others
you know . . .
. . .
The
nicest place
to be is in
someone ' s
thoughts, the
safest place
to be is in
someone ' s
prayers, and
the very best
place to be is
in the hands
of God. Amen.
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