Saturday 18 May 2013

Go on an adventure!

I am now reading 'Moon Dust' which I am enjoying, though I have only just begun it. It is a sort of biographical historical account of the apollo missions and the men who came back from the moon, how they relate to the world after their journey. It is a wonderful coincidence as I had given a sermon last sunday on Genesis 1 and Used the Apollo 8 Christmas Message as a background to the sermon. I found the book the following morning lying on a table in the backroom. I had seen it there a week earlier - often people discard their old books at Café Forever, and I am so grateful to the deliverer - whether God or man. I would also recommend it - though I am not finished - the writer has an amusing, humorous style whilst adding loads of technical details that show the difficulties that existed in the era of moon travel and the mental states of those men alive today.
I have started reading again - for the past 5 years - since Hannah's birth I have been quite busy and so I have rarely got into much of a book - I had done an awful lot of reading between 2000 and 2006 and I think I needed a break anyway! I have just consumed the biography of Dietrich Bonhoeffer by Eric Metaxas  which has been an excellent read. I have enjoyed learning so much of the German resistance, almost ignored by western films and books - I grew up thinking that all German people must be just like Hitler, thanks to films like 'Kellys Hero's', and 'The Guns of Navarrone'. Metaxas looks at the faith of Bonhoeffer, his upbringing, his struggles with the decision to assassinate 'the fuerher' and his relationships with his friends and those who would harm him, and basically his attitude towards life and death. It also takes into account the culture of Germany and the world at the time, and describes Hitlers methods and his henchmen. It is a thick book, really! But I assure you if you get your hands on a copy it is not slow to read  - at least for me it wasn't.

Front Cover
I chose the Apollo 8 mission as the source for the bible reading for the church. It is almost as if that opening chapter of the worlds most read book was to be delivered in 1969 from the moon in order that it would have it's full impact. These men have travelled 250 000 miles on a rocket. As far as I can see, there was only one other manned flight of an Apollo mission and very few others beforehand that orbited the earth, Apollo 1 caught fire during a test phase and burned up it's 3 crew members inside. It was a daring mission, the most daring adventure ever, to get into an untested spacecraft consisting of 6 million parts to launch into space and go to the moon and back. It is in every sense ASTRONOMICAL! What I found so amazing about the Christmas message is that here they are, so far away from earth and all they can comment on is how good the earth is. They are grateful for it, incredibly grateful, they make me feel very fortunate to be on it. It was at the time the most watched TV broadcast ever. Millions of people the world over saw it, millions of people the world over heard Genesis 1. At the highest point of adventure they realise that they are there by mercy alone.

It makes me think about orbit - what do I orbit around? When I come into contact with others do I talk about grace? Do I take daring adventures trusting in others, going as far as I can? This is well worth watching over and over again.

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