Tag Archives: Trust

The Eagle Has Landed

President Nixon talking with astronauts of Apollo 11 on the moon
Forty eight years ago today, Buzz Aldrin and Neil Armstrong set foot on the moon, the culmination of John F. Kennedy’s challenge to land a man on the moon before the decade was out. Outrageous! Can’t be done! It was fake!

It was no fake, but the culmination of a colossal goal, fraught with , among other things, the deaths of three astronauts, inventing technology that didn’t exist, and fighting through endless battles with committees, ne’er do wells, skeptics, a sometimes unwilling congress, and the divisive strife of an unpopular war.

To say America and the world stepped out of its comfort zone is an understatement. We transformed whole cities, built massive launch and support facilities where none existed. Consider these innovations NASA headed up:

But this is about comfort zones, and moving away from them. If we as a nation had not moved boldly out of our collective comfort zone of the early 1960’s, we might never have achieved such a remarkable achievement as walking on the moon. It’s is easy to stay in them, they are, after all, comfortable. But we were never meant to stay in our cozy comfortable corners, just as ships were not built to stay in port; they were made for bold adventure, profitable commerce, and national protection.

Have you launched your Apollo to the moon? Do you even have a goal worthy enough and so outrageous that it will fail unless God is behind it? Well then, good for you! If not, how about taking at least a “one small step” by sharing Jesus without fear to that person who’s been on your mind? After all, we weren’t left here after our being made Christians by God to stay in our comfort zones.

Thin As Skin

You may have heard of the poll Reader’s Digest published sometime ago; The 100 most trusted people in America. Atop the list was, of all people,  Tom Hanks. Hanks is an excellent actor; one of my all time favorite movies is Apollo Thirteen, a story of true grit, valor, and the American can do spirit.  I don’t agree with his politics; so what, who cares?

If you are scratching your head, or perhaps nodding a tentative “Yeah, I can see that” head nod, so am I. Other paragons of virtue include  Jimmy (really?) Carter. In fact, of the top 20, 10 were actors and otherwise well known in front of a television camera.

How did we move our vision of trusted people from the virtuous to the popular?