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October 5-11, 2008 Issue |
Posted 9/30/08 at 11:00 AM
Oct. 1, 1958,
the National Aeronautics and Space Administration — better known as NASA —
began operations. Several Catholics who came to work at the new administration
saw their work in space exploration as part of their life’s vocation to go to
heaven.
In recent years, space shuttle
astronauts Thomas Jones, Kevin Chilton, Sid Gutierrez and Bob Cabana have carried
on the tradition.
Jones is one of few who have spoken
openly about his faith. He authored the 2006 book, Sky
Walking: An Astronaut’s Memoir.
As one of six crew members aboard
the space shuttle Endeavour, Jones
spent spare time reading the Bible, praying his Rosary, and even received the
Eucharist while in space.
In a 2004 article, Jones recounted
receiving the Eucharist on the shuttle’s flight deck.
“Kevin shared the body of Christ
with Sid and me, and we floated weightless on the flight deck, grateful for
this moment of comradeship and communion with Christ,” wrote Jones. “Our silent
reflection was interrupted by a sudden burst of dazzling white light. The sun
had risen just as we finished Communion, and now its pure radiance streamed
through Endeavour’s cockpit windows and bathed us
in its warmth … I rolled away from my crewmates, unable to stem the tears
evoked by that singular sunrise.”
The Catholic character of astronauts
has persevered, despite the fact that NASA does not provide a Catholic chaplain.
“They call on people like us,” said
Msgr. Thomas Bevan, pastor of St. Patrick’s Catholic Church in Cumberland, Md.
Msgr. Bevan served as Jones’
childhood pastor and remains a friend. When Jones was preparing for his first
space flight, he invited Msgr. Bevan down to the launch. There, on the beach
near the launch pad at Cape Canaveral, Msgr. Bevan led a prayer service for the
astronauts and their families.
He said that the service seemed to
bring a great deal of comfort to Jones and his wife.
“Tom’s wife was scared to death. She
got sick to her stomach. That’s what the spouses live with,” said Msgr. Bevan.
“The prayer service helped to place it in context.”
“I went away from the prayer service
with a lot of my worries lifted away,” agreed Jones.
Several other priests have served
this “space flock.”
Between 1977 and 1996, Father Tom
Butler, a Carmelite priest, served NASA employees and astronauts at St.
Bernadette’s Church in Houston. After the space shuttle Challenger
disaster in 1986, Father Butler organized an ecumenical service with other
ministers in town.
Father Butler made astronaut and
parishioner Bob Cabana an extraordinary minister of holy Communion prior to his
shuttle flight.
“After that, if a parishioner was
going up, I would make them a Eucharistic minister,” said Father Butler.
The Early Days
From
the very beginning, Catholics played key roles at NASA.
That
includes individuals such as Gene Kranz, Glynn Lunney, Ronald Richard, and
astronauts Bill Anders and Eugene Cernan.
One
of the earliest to become involved was engineer and designer Max Faget. A
former submariner in the U.S. Navy, Faget joined Virginia’s Langley Research
Center as a research scientist. He had already worked on the design of the X-15
supersonic aircraft. In 1958, Faget became one of the original 35 engineers who
formed the Space Task Group (that later became the Johnson Space Center). He
was one of the instrumental members of the team that created the Mercury, Gemini and Apollo
spacecrafts.
He
even filed a patent for a space shuttle design in 1972.
“At
the time, the rocket bodies had a sharper, pointier body,” said former flight
director Lunney. “That became untenable because of the heat that would come at
it. Faget was one of those who flipped the intuition around and came up with
the idea of the blunt body. It was a breakthrough.”
Another
early contributor was Ronald Richard, who worked at the Jet Propulsion
Laboratory between 1962 and 1966. During his time there, Richard worked on the Mariner
series of spacecraft, designed to explore the inner solar system to obtain
information about Mercury, Venus and Mars.
Richard
now serves as a part-time tutor and member of the board of governors at Thomas
Aquinas College in Santa Paula, Calif.
Two
Catholics, Gene Kranz and Glynn Lunney, were deeply involved in saving Apollo 13,
which experienced an explosion on board, preventing it from landing on the moon
— Kranz for his role in directing the
rescue effort, and Lunney for developing a plan to save the astronauts.
Kranz
joined the NASA Space Task Group at Langley. He was assigned as a Mission
Control procedures officer. He was put in charge of preparing Ed Harris to
portray him in the movie Apollo 13.
Kranz
spoke of the influence his Catholic education had on him and the way he did
business.
“After
the Apollo 1 fire, we wrote out a values statement that talked
about the characteristics for professional ethics,” said Kranz, referring to
the 1967 disaster that claimed the lives of three astronauts. “If you read
behind the lines, you’ll see a lot of influence from the Ursulines, the Oblates
and the Jesuits who taught me.”
That
values statement was known as the “Foundations of Mission Control,” and it
became a seminal document guiding those working in operations. It included the
importance of qualities such as discipline, competence and teamwork.
For
example, the description under the heading “discipline” read: “being able to
follow as well as lead, knowing we must master ourselves before we can master
our task.”
While
they’re not sure that they could articulate it at the time, both Kranz and
Lunney say that their faith guided them in the important work that they were
doing.
“During
countdowns, when it got close, it was always time to say an Our Father,” said
Lunney. “It was always private.”
Church Contribution
The
science of astronomy owes a great deal to the Church. The subject was one of
the original seven subjects taught at the medieval universities founded by the
Church. Polish cleric Nicolaus
Copernicus’ heliocentric hypothesis shaped how we see the universe. His
findings formed the basis of the Gregorian calendar. Direct support for
astronomy goes back to 1582, when Pope Gregory XIII asked Jesuit mathematician
Christopher Clavius to help reform the calendar.
The
Church-supported stargazing that began in the 1500s has continued to the
present day, not only in Rome, but also in the United States.
The
Vatican Observatory, headquartered at the pope’s summer residence in Castel
Gandolfo, is one of the world’s oldest astronomical research institutions.
There’s also a research branch at the University of Arizona in Tucson. Its
astronomers have recorded more than 500,000 star positions.“The Vatican
Observatory has certainly had an active collaborative relationship with NASA
and many scientists who are supported by NASA,” said Brother Guy Consolmagno,
curator of the Vatican meteorite collection. “This can range from using our
telescopes to support NASA missions by, for example, observing faint objects
that are the target or possible target of spacecraft missions, or observing
one-of-a-kind events like transits and occultations [when a smaller
astronomical body passes behind a larger astronomical body] that can only be
seen from certain parts of the world, to making telescope time available at the
Vatican Advanced Technology Telescope [located at Mt. Graham International
Observatory in Arizona] to scientists who are supported by NASA grants, working
at NASA centers, or working on NASA-supported projects.”
Brother
Consolmagno said many scientists at NASA’s Goddard Space Flight Center are
supported through grants from the physics department of The Catholic University
of America.
The
Vatican’s meteorite collection is one of the Church’s treasures. Originally,
the collection had about 1,000 samples that were donated by various people over
100 years ago. The collection now has about 1,150 pieces of more than 500
different meteorites.
“The
samples are being well put to use with exchanges and interactions with others
who study meteorites,” said Father Christopher Corbally, vice director of the
Vatican Observatory Research Group. “Scientists in Britain, France, Italy and
the U.S. have studied them, and they have contributed much to our understanding
of how planets were built up out of the material that was floating around the
solar system.”
Finding God Out There
If
the Church did much to inspire modern astronomical research, the Catholic faith
does much to inspire wonder in the men and women who work at NASA.
As
Thomas Jones put it, “The Vatican Observatory, and those who work there, are on
the cutting edge of cosmology. When we look at the universe, we’re seeing not
only the natural world revealed through science, but also as it was created by
God. We not only have this human curiosity to explore the universe, but also
the receptivity to appreciate the beauty of it. That’s a human trait that’s
part of your soul.”
And,
when man first reached the moon, the Catholics at NASA understood it was a
moment of huge importance.
Kranz
told the story of the words he offered to his colleagues on a private
communications loop when they were going to the moon for the first time.
“I told my communication officers
that from the day of our birth, we were destined to be in this room on this
day,” recalled Kranz. “All my life I’ve felt that the Creator had a very
special role for me that I really didn’t have too much to do with.”
Tim Drake is based in
St. Joseph, Minnesota.
EDITORS NOTE: ‘That’s one small step for man, one giant
leap for mankind,’ said Neil Armstrong. It was the great success of NASA,
founded 11 years before. Today we honor the Catholics who were integral to NASA
— and the Vatican astronomers who made its work possible.
The Church And Space
The science of astronomy owes
a lot to the Church.
• It was one of the original seven subjects
taught at the medieval universities founded by the Church.
• Polish cleric Nicolaus Copernicus’
heliocentric hypothesis shaped how we see the universe. His findings formed the
basis of the Gregorian calendar.
• Direct support for astronomy goes back to
1582, when Pope Gregory XIII asked Jesuit mathematician Christopher Clavius to
help reform the calendar.
• The Vatican Observatory, headquartered at the
pope’s summer residence in Castel Gandolfo
outside of Rome, is one of the world’s oldest astronomical research
institutions.
• Father Christopher Scheiner (1575-1650) was the
first astronomer to study the sun systematically. Scheiner’s halo is named
after him.
• Father Angelo Secchi (1818-1878) surveyed over
4,000 stars. His four-fold division of spectral types is still used today.
• Fathers Francesco Maria Grimaldi (1613-1663)
and Giambattista Riccioli (1598-1671) made an early selenograph, a detailed map
of the moon’s surface.
3, 2, 1 ... LIFT OFF! On Oct. 1, 1958, the day
NASA opened its operations, the Register was 31 years old. On Oct. 1, 2008, we
planned to launch our own changes online at NCRegister.com. We’ll still give
you e-mailable versions of the stories you read here and searchable archives,
but now we’ll also give you each day’s Catholic headlines in our news blog.
SPACEMEN.
NASA Catholics include (l-r) Gene Kranz, Thomas Jones,
Kevin Chilton and Bob Cabana.
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