Showing posts with label Neil Armstrong. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Neil Armstrong. Show all posts

Wednesday, July 18, 2018

Why Neil Armstrong Was More Excited to Visit Israel Than to Visit the Moon - JONATHAN FELDSTEIN CHARISMA NEWS

(Photo by Ganapathy Kumar on Unsplash)
This week in 1969, American astronaut Neil Armstrong made history by becoming the first person to set foot on the moon. His timeless and famous remark at the time, "That's one small step for man, one giant leap for mankind," will go down as one of the most iconic phrases of all time.

Yet, when Armstrong visited Israel in 1994 he was brought to a place in the Old City of Jerusalem and asked Meir Ben Dov, his host and noted archeologist, if Jesus himself actually would have walked there.
"I told him, 'Look, Jesus was a Jew,'" recalled Ben-Dov. These are the steps that lead to the temple, so he must have walked here many times."
Armstrong asked if these were the original steps, and Ben-Dov said that they were.
"So Jesus stepped right here?" asked Armstrong.
"That's right," answered Ben-Dov.
"I have to tell you," Armstrong said to the Israeli archaeologist, "I am more excited stepping on these stones than I was stepping on the moon."
Indeed we know that for a Christian visiting Israel is a life-changing and faith building experience. This is played out in numerous ways including visits to the Old City and specifically the Temple Mount where Jesus preached and worshipped, to the sites where He was crucified and buried, to the Jordan River where he was baptized, and of course to the Galilee and Nazareth, his hometown.

There are countless affirmations of Christians visiting Israel and having divine experiences, and Neil Armstrong's comments and frame of reference, considering that he was the first man to step on the moon, affirm this reality. But, ask any Christian who has been to Israel and at least 9 out of 10 times, you'll hear a similar affirmation and the desire to visit Israel again. And again.
Run for Zion Was conceived in order to provide such an opportunity for Christians to have this same experience, albeit in a unique and boutique way. 

More than simply a tour of the Land, Run for Zion provides a series of meaningful and hands-on experiences, one might even say a "feet-on" experience. At its core, Run for Zion has the special privilege of promoting unique opportunities for Christians to run in Jerusalem, anywhere from a full to a half-marathon or 10K. For non-runners wishing the same experience, there's also the opportunity to walk through Jerusalem's historic streets and experience the same things, albeit more slowly.
Although it's common for runners to listen to music to pass the time and motivate them along, in Jerusalem, runners often run with no music, in order to avoid distractions from the views and experiences. Running through the Old City itself is powerful, but one gets to run around the Old City and appreciate its view from the south and from the east, which is the view Jesus would have seen in approaching the holy city from the Mount of Olives.

Affirming that Jesus was a Jew in the land and was very clear to reiterate God's promise of Genesis 12:3, obligating his disciples to bless Israel, Run for Zion also provides meaningful and tangible opportunities for all participants to bless Israel and its people. Participants will have the opportunity to have friends and family sponsor their participation, the proceeds of which will go to a wide range of services that help millions of Israelis of all different backgrounds.

And because God's promise of Genesis 12:3 is a reciprocal formula, Run for Zion will also play an important role, not just by being the beneficiary of the financial blessing, but in blessing those who bless Israel by providing significant subsidies to participants. This will reduce financial barriers that might prevent somebody from being able to travel to Israel and increase the total number of people who are able to share this experience.

Running through Jerusalem's ancient streets will certainly be the anchor and main draw, whether it be for athletes who run regularly, or for students to middle-aged people who may run or walk briskly a few times a week for exercise. Maybe even some mall walkers will take the leap of faith and come to Jerusalem. However, more than the run itself, there will also be meaningful and interactive tourist experiences along with unique programs, worship, speakers and an opportunity to interact directly with the people and programs that are the recipients of the financial blessing.
If you're a runner, walker or aspire to be one, and you're a Christian who wants to visit and experience Israel, Run for Zion may be for you and provides an easy way to participate. If your church, college or other group wants to bring a team to participate together, Run for Zion offers that seamlessly.
If you're neither but want to bless Israel and stand alongside Run for Zion in its ability to maximize the blessings for Israel and all participants, there is a special need. There are Christians living in Muslim countries for whom life is not easy, and many of the countries in which they live do not recognize Israel and its right to exist, much less that Jerusalem is its capital. For most of these, visiting Israel is only a fantasy. Run for Zion has been approached to help Christians in these countries participate and has taken on the responsibility to offer additional subsidies to such people as well as to help secure visas. On their own, these tasks would not only be impossible but dangerous.
Please visit RunforZion.com to find out details, inquire about participating or make a donation so others can.
And like Neil Armstrong, more than "one small step for man," let this be your one big leap for faith. 
Jonathan Feldsteinwas born and educated in the U.S. and immigrated to Israel in 2004. He is married and the father of six. He is president of RunforZion.com. Throughout his life and career, he has been blessed by the calling to fellowship with Christian supporters of Israel and shares experiences of living as an Orthodox Jew in Israel. He writes a regular column for Standing With Israel at charismanews.com and other prominent web sites. He can be reached at firstpersonisrael@gmail.com.

Thursday, January 12, 2017

Moon-Walkers' Heavenly Perspective - Charles Gardner ISRAEL TODAY

Moon-Walkers' Heavenly Perspective

Thursday, January 12, 2017 |  Charles Gardner  ISRAEL TODAY
Following in the steps of Jesus was more exciting than walking on the moon. These are the words attributed to Neil Armstrong, the first man to set foot on the moon’s surface, during a visit to Israel.
And fellow astronaut Buzz Aldrin, who accompanied him for the Apollo 11 lunar landing, was similarly taken up with a heavenly perspective. Shortly after touching down where no man had been before, he took communion with bread and wine he had carried from earth in special plastic packages, and ensured that among the first words ever spoken there were those of the Creator of the Universe, Jesus Christ, when he read a passage from John’s Gospel. (The bread and wine are symbols of the sacrifice Jesus made – through his broken body and shed blood – in dying for our sins on the cross).
Buzz had wanted to share his experience with the world at the time – back in 1969 – but NASA (the National Aeronautics and Space Administration) were embroiled in a legal controversy over broadcasting the Christian beliefs of their pilots, and he was persuaded to tone down his enthusiasm. He went ahead with the ceremony nevertheless, but with radio contact switched off.
Completing a trio of famous astronauts with a strong faith in the Creator is John Glenn, who recently died, aged 95, and who was the first man to orbit the earth in space.
When Neil Armstrong visited Israel in 1994, he asked his host, archaeologist Meir Ben Dov, if there was a place where Jesus would undoubtedly have walked when he was on earth. Dov, one of the excavators of the Temple Mount, was sure that he would have used the southern steps as he walked up to the Temple. So when Armstrong got there, the man who is more famous for his statement “This is one small step for a man, one giant leap for mankind” is understood to have bent down and kissed the ground, saying that this was an even more exciting moment for him than walking on the moon.
This rings so true. I can’t speak for the moon, but I know that there is something out of this world about Israel – and Jerusalem in particular. As the Bible says, it truly is God’s city, and when you know that it is where Jesus walked, your faith really does come alive in a new way.
Back to Buzz Aldrin and the controversy surrounding Apollo 11. A previous mission, Apollo 8, was the first manned spacecraft to orbit the moon. On Christmas Eve 1968, in what was the most watched television broadcast in the world at the time, the crew read in turn from the opening verses of the Bible (Genesis chapter 1). Bill Anders, Jim Lovell and Frank Borman unashamedly recited the first ten verses (focusing on creation) to a world still mercifully free of political correctness.
Aldrin had planned to do something similar by sharing communion with the world over the radio, but NASA were in the middle of a legal battle with arch-atheist Madalyn Murray O’Hair who was determined to remove Christian influence from schools and other public organizations.
So, just before the two men stepped onto the lunar surface, Aldrin reluctantly switched off radio communication and took communion while also reading a verse from John’s Gospel. Later explaining what he did, he said: “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 (quoting Jesus), ‘I am the vine; you are the branches. Whosoever abides in me will bring forth much fruit. Apart from me you can do nothing.’
“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 through Aldrin’s momentous decision, the first ever ceremony to be performed on the moon was in honour of his Lord, who created it all!
Madalyn O’Hair’s atheistic life mission ended tragically in 1995 when she was murdered, along with her son and granddaughter, by fellow anti-God activist David Waters. Surviving son William J Murray, who thus lost his mother, brother and daughter, had been disowned by his family after becoming a Christian in 1980.
Meanwhile John Glenn, whose historic space flight aboard Friendship 7 in 1962 catapulted him to heroic stature, was also a man of deep Christian faith. And when he again left the bounds of earth on December 8, 2016, he passed into the arms of his Saviour, Jesus Christ.
He said he prayed every day during those pioneering space flights, which were inherently risky, and shortly after orbiting the earth he delivered a sermon entitled Why I know there is a God that described how his mission had strengthened his belief, and pointing out “the orderliness of the whole universe about us, from the smallest atomic structure to the most enormous thing we can imagine.”
In 1998, aged 77, Glenn returned to space on the Space Shuttle Discovery’s STS-95 mission, becoming the oldest person to travel in space. Afterwards he told reporters: “Looking at the earth from this vantage point, looking at this kind of creation and not to believe in God is, to me, impossible. To see [earth] laid out like that only strengthens my beliefs.”
Sources
  • For Buzz Aldrin’s story – www.reallifestories.org founded by Rev Ralph Burden
  • For Neil Armstrong’s Israel visit – Christian Friends of Israel’s David Soakell in his weekly newsletter Watching Over Zion, December 8 2016
  • For John Glenn’s story – Mark Ellis, senior correspondent for ASSIST News Service and founder of www.Godreports.com
Image Credit: NASA via Flash90
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