Stuck in 2020

My wife and I recently read Rocket Men: the daring odyssey of Apollo 8 and the astronauts who made man’s first journey to the moon, by Robert Kurson.  (Thanks, Mark Moffat, for the tip!)

Page 282 describes the astronauts, on their way home, crossing the point “at which Earth’s gravity [becomes] dominant.” From there the spaceship gradually accelerated until, days later, entering the earth’s atmosphere, they topped out at 24,500 mph.

“But that was a long way off,” Kurson writes, “and for now, when the crew looked out their windows, with no landmarks in sight, they seemed to be standing still.” That was an illusion. They were not motionless, they were flying at 5,720 mph.

“A good metaphor for life,” my wife said when she came to that page. Sometimes it feels like you’re stuck when you’re actually flying. Maybe you’ve had seasons like that.

Baby bird from America

In 1993, I spent two weeks in Ukraine teaching Cross-Cultural Communication of the Gospel at Donetsk Christian University, invited by Dr. Ray Prigodich, DCU academic dean at the time. It was my first overseas trip—after fifteen years as a missionary long overdue—and full of wonder and worry: the wonder of a foreign culture, the worry of a new assignment. My classroom skills were limited, my experience even less.

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6 thoughts on “Stuck in 2020”

  1. “Fly me to the moon” sounds like a good response to 2020. I hope you all are doing well!

    1. Thanks, Dave! Yes, we are well. Miss seeing you every week.

  2. Great analogy … ! A timely reminder that we live our lives before “Him with Whom we have to do!” With Him whose day is like a thousand years!
    Oh, so finite before such an Infinite One!
    Don

    1. Yes, Don, thank you for sharing that truth!

  3. Over 5000 mph felt like standing still! Wowowow…
    Liking the comments, “Oh, so finite before such an Infinite One”.
    Amen
    And “fly me to the moon”! Haha!
    Fitting, painting of a green garden, with plants at different stages of growth…beautiful gift
    It must be amusing to Him seeing us build spacecraft powerful enough to reach nearby planets. Isaiah 40:22
    Hope to read the book soon, sounds really good.

    1. Thank you for those thoughts, Karen. And I love the reference to Isaiah 40:22, “He sits enthroned above the circle of the earth, and its people are like grasshoppers. He stretches out the heavens like a canopy, and spreads them out like a tent to live in.” Very fitting! 🙂

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