
A friend of mine sent an e-mail to me with the most amazing account. Did you know that the very first meal eaten on the surface of the moon was communion taken by Buzz Aldrin as he read a passage of Scripture from John 15? He was an elder in a Presbyterian Church in Texas, and this was something his pastor worked out for him to do.
I found this to be most inspiring and a great and glorious testimony to the wonder of the Lord Jesus Christ. You can read below the account Buzz Aldrin gives of that first meal on the moon. God bless you as you read. We serve a great and mighty God.
(This is an article by Eric Metaxas)
Forty years ago today two human beings changed history
by walking on the surface of the moon. But what happened before Buzz
Aldrin and Neil Armstrong exited the Lunar Module is perhaps even more
amazing, if only because so few people know about it. “I’m talking
about the fact that Buzz Aldrin took communion on the surface of the moon.
Some months after his return, he wrote about it in Guideposts magazine.
And a few years ago I had the privilege of meeting him
myself. I asked him about it and he confirmed the story to me, and
I wrote about in my book Everything You Always Wanted to Know About God
(But Were Afraid to Ask).
The background to the story is that Aldrin was an elder at his
Presbyterian Church in Texas during this period in his life, and knowing
that he would soon be doing something unprecedented in
human history, he felt he should mark the occasion somehow, and he asked his pastor to help him. And so the pastor consecrated a communion wafer and a small vial of communion wine. And Buzz Aldrin took them with him out of the Earth’s orbit and on to the surface of the moon.
He and Armstrong had only been on the lunar surface
for a few minutes when Aldrin made the following public statement:
”This is the LM pilot. I’d like to take this opportunity to ask every
person listening in, whoever and wherever they may be, to pause for a moment and contemplate the events of the past few hours and to give thanks in his or her own way.” He then ended radio communication and there, on the silent surface of the moon, 250,000 miles from home, he read a verse from the Gospel of John, and he took communion. Here is his own account of what happened:
”In the radio blackout, I opened the little plastic packages which contained the bread and the wine. I poured the wine into the chalice our church had given me. In the one-sixth gravity of the moon, the wine slowly curled and gracefully came up the side of the cup. Then I read the Scripture, ‘I am the vine, you are the branches. Whosoever abidesin me will bring forth much fruit. Apart from me you can do nothing.
I had intended to read my communion passage back to earth, but at the last minute [they] had requested that I not do this. NASA was already embroiled in a legal battle with Madelyn Murray
O’Hare, the celebrated opponent of religion, over the Apollo 8 crew reading from Genesis while orbiting the moon at Christmas. I agreed reluctantly.
I ate the tiny Host and swallowed the wine. I gave thanks for the intelligence and spirit that had brought two young pilots to the Sea of Tranquility. It was interesting for me to think: the very first liquid ever poured on the moon, and the very first food eaten there, were the communion
elements.
And of course, it’s interesting to think that some of the first words spoken on the moon were the words of Jesus Christ, who made the Earth and the moon – and Who, in the immortal words of Dante, is Himself the “Love that moves the Sun and other stars.”
WOW!!!!


