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May you be blessed by the Lord,
The maker of heaven and earth.
The heavens belong to the Lord
But to us he has given the earth.
We really can't say that the Artemis II astronauts trod the heavens of the Lord, but they have had a more lambent experience of those heavens than we resident earthlings who seldom venture far from our familiar terrain.
Is anyone else besides me struck with awe, seeing the photos of the heavens? Can anyone even imagine what it would be like to float around in the heavens?
Our Creator God has given us the earth. Recently, four humans left the gifted earth in a NASA moon mission, packed themselves into a 10'x16' capsule-room, and made multiple moon and earth flybys, in the heavens which belong to the Lord.
The above Psalm (Ps. 115:15-16) comes around in Lauds every liturgical cycle. It lifts the heart in gratitude and awe for this wonderful cosmos – including planets, galaxies, and stars - in which we live.
Once again after witnessing the astronauts' grand journey around the moon and again around the earth am I continually spellbound. I marvel at the sight of the earth sitting relaxedly upon the moon, the photo which was captured from Artemis II.
The PBS Nova program April 15 (link below) helped to explain some of the physics of the space shuttle event: tons of hydrogen gas exploding the shuttle engines to lift off and return the capsule Orion and the astronauts safely to earth.
I marvel at how NASA's GPS got them to land in a specific spot in the Pacific Ocean, when my GPS couldn't even get me to my cousin's wedding.
Of all the awe we experienced, the crew described an ineffable sense of the "overview effect." It is said that "the overview effect is a cognitive shift reported by some astronauts while viewing the Earth from space. Researchers have characterized the effect as 'a state of awe with self-transcendent qualities, precipitated by a particularly striking visual stimulus.'"
I marvel at science and God's gifts of the heavens and the earth. Next time I tell someone I love them to the moon and back, I hope they know that that is really a whole lot.
--Jan
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