August 27, 2012

One Giant Loss for Mankind

by Clint Archer

When Neil Armstrong died on Saturday, at the age of 82, mankind lost one of its most iconic heroes.

neilarmstrong1Armstrong represents the archetypical explorer. He was our generation’s Columbus, Scott, Hillary, Einstein, our pioneer and discoverer. And that’s what it used to take to instil awe and respect in the public. Admiration used to require obvious courage, manifest altruism, and observable success in overcoming formidable challenges.

Armstrong glued a whole planet’s population to their radios (and a few TVs) by successfully accomplishing a feat that was dangerous but necessary, for us. His small step was done for mankind. That’s what made the quote so inspiring. He risked his life on the Apollo 11 mission, catapulted into the unknown, and used his flight skills to manually land the Eagle, with only thirty seconds of fuel left, on the Sea of Tranquillity. And he did it for us.

Today, celebrities tend to be people famous for being famous–and not much else. Feats of daring courage and visionary discovery are no longer requisite traits needed to command our admiration. Case in point: the most Googled name this year so far is… Justin Bieber.

Yup.

Justin.

Bieber.

Well, to each his own. Role models come in all calibers.

But any time we contemplate our human heroes and what they have done, we need to remember what Jesus did. Our faith is not simply based on what Jesus taught, but what he did. What He accomplished. For us.

Isaiah 53:7 “He was oppressed, and he was afflicted, yet he opened not his mouth; like a lamb that is led to the slaughter, and like a sheep that before its shearers is silent, so he opened not his mouth.” 

Our Savior lived a perfect, sinless life. He went to the cross with determination, and He bore our sins.

moonlandingAs we read this week about Neil Armstrong and the historical feat for which he is known, let’s enjoy that the spotlight is momentarily on someone who has earned it. But let’s also keep some perspective. I think it’s what Armstrong would have wanted.

His understated celebrity was served well by his trademark humility, a trait which puts to shame those who bask in the spotlight of lesser feats.

Here’s a tidbit of the man’s penchant for understatement. When asked what it was like to stand on the Moon he offered this charming reply:

It’s an interesting place to be. I recommend it.”

This is gentleman I would have liked to have met. I feel for his family’s loss. But any time we lose a hero of his stature it is a giant loss for mankind.

 

Clint Archer

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Clint is the pastor of Hillcrest Baptist Church. He and his expanding troop of Archers live near Durban, South Africa (and pity anyone who doesn't). When he is off duty from CGate, his alter ego blogs at Café Seminoid, clintarcher.com
  • Larry

    Maybe it’s me, and I’ll take it on the chin. Approx 2 hrs were spent walking on the moon, “checking things out.” Rocks were collected and a flag was left. Humans are curious and that was probably the impetus for going to them moon.

    Has hunger or poverty decreased:? How as the quality of life improved since we put a man on the moon? Wasn’t there some experiments done on the moon? Did going to the moon teach humans how to better relate to each other? How has humanity benefited since the “moon walk?”

    What were Neil Armstrong’s humanitarian pursuits outside of NASA?

    • pastorarcher

      Why go to the Moon? The same reason we’re going to go to Mars, dive deeply in the ocean, climb Mt Everest, and keep studying entemology: because it’s there. God can get glory, even when an activity doesn’t benefit man directly. The more we know about science, geography, and exploration, the more occasion we have for worshipping God for His creative abilities. -Clint.

      • Larry

        I hear ya Clint. It’s just that the Bible does not imply becoming versed in science, geography and exploration to worship God. In fact it says “The heavens “declare” the glory of God.”

        That’s a statement, rather than a suggestion to study the universe. The implication is just to “look around you.” Additionally Jesus said we worship in spirit and in truth. Think about the truth of God (in the scriptures) until it breaks forth in glorious praise.

    • http://www.facebook.com/christian.pacifism.3 Christian Pacifism

      The cost and other needs is a biq issue. President Eisenhower said that spending billions go go the moon was crazy. ‘Did going to the moon teach humans how to better relate…” Yes, there were strides forward. The crew of Apollo 11 related how every country where they went, people were said, “We did it!” And of course there was Apollo/Soyuz and the Space station.
      There were certainly benefits from the science and technology advances. Cost benefit ratio? I have no idea.
      This is also a good example of media hype. THREE men were on that first mission. TWO landed on the moon. I wonder how many remember Michael Collins and Buzz Aldrin [at least he made ‘Toy Story.’
      Do many know that Aldrin took communion on the moon? Or that he developed a drinking problem that he conquered a decade later?
      And the first landing prepared the way for more landings and more extensive research. Benefits? Not sure.
      I was a guinea pig spinning in a chair behind the Apollo 15 crew as they prepared for the first moonbuggy mission aboard the Weigtless Wonder aka The Vomit Comet.
      This is a picture of Worden that I took:
      http://img.photobucket.com/albums/v620/mikesnow/258044-R1-20-20.jpg

  • Brenda

    Thought this was interesting. If something had gone wrong, there would be no rescue. Here is a link to the speech transcript that was never used…
    http://watergate.info/1969/07/20/an-undelivered-nixon-speech.html

    • pastorarcher

      Thanks Brenda. Very interesting indeed.

  • Larry

    As well Clint, the average person (believer) is never going to climb Mt Everest or deep sea dive and see brilliant colors and vast sea life. However, kudos to Neil Armstrong, but I am not ready to label his accomplishments as beneficial to the human race. I’d rather look at a Nelson Mandela and co-sign his life and response to human exploitation, oppression and suffering, as beneficial to the human race. (Sorta Christlike)

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