Posted on 08/01/2020 9:19:31 AM PDT by Monty22002
Live feed starting at 4:30 CDT.
Amen!
Almighty ruler of the all
Whose power extends to great and small,
Who guides the stars with steadfast law,
Whose least creation fills with awe
Oh grant Thy mercy and Thy grace
To those who venture into space.
Robert A. Heinlein (1947)
__________________________________________
I have never seen this. I LOVE IT! Thank you for sharing.
Will the Navy recover the crew from the Gulf or will SpaceX use their own teams?
They are leaving now.
SpaceX DM-2: NASA Astronauts Earth from Space seen from Crew Dragon Returns Home
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xllfBA0bIZs
bfl
You must be an ancient like me. When I was a youngster, broadcast sign-off ended with a dramatic reading of “High Flight” and uber cool film of our air assets in flight.
>>You must be an ancient like me. When I was a youngster, broadcast sign-off ended with a dramatic reading of High Flight and uber cool film of our air assets in flight.<<
Right after the Indian who cries (who we now know was not American Indian at all).
:)
I remember when I was a kid and for some reason watched TV until after The Late Late Show. When the station ended its broadcasting day it would do a beautiful Navy Choir acapella rendition of the Sailors Prayer Hymn (unsure if that is the name) that verse would belong to.
"Eternal Father, Strong to Save" is a British hymn traditionally associated with seafarers, particularly in the maritime armed services. Written in 1860, its author William Whiting was inspired by the dangers of the sea described in Psalm 107. It was popularised by the Royal Navy and the United States Navy in the late 19th century, and variations of it were soon adopted by many branches of the armed services in the United Kingdom and the United States.
In 1940, the US Episcopal Church altered 3 verses of the hymn to include travel on the land in the 2nd verse (referencing Psalm 50) and in the air in the 3rd verse (again referencing Genesis). This was published as Hymn No. 513 while the original lyrics were also published as Hymn No. 512 in The Hymnal 1940. The Hymnal 1982, which is in current use by most Episcopal congregations in the US, has further revised this version (as Hymn #579) with opening line "Almighty Father, strong to save..." by adding the word "space" to the final verse, so it ends "Glad praise from space, air, land, and sea", acknowledging the possibility of space travel.
Live feed has started, getting ready to detach.
Hatch closed
Thanks for the link! Really enjoying the coverage! It’s fascinating! Very well done!
BTTT!!!
Vestibule depressurization started.
Thank you for the history of that stirring and lovely hymn.
The best performance is by the Naval Academy’s MENS choir at the chapel in Annapolis.
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=1795Xg4CRC8
This is not at the Naval Academy but pretty damn stirring. Leaves a lump in my throat whenever I hear it.
Thank you so very much for the awesome patriotic history lesson; prayers that it touch many a weary soul and turn them toward Christ.
I’ve been watching U.S. manned (and unmanned) spaceflight tests and missions since 1968 from age 3.
Dear Lord God, please protect and bring our astronauts safely home. Amen.
Amen
OK, who didn’t stow the hand towel??
Seriously, astronauts safely on their way home. Cool pics.
Well done!
The hand towel gave me a giggle.
Undocking went off without a hitch. Now praying the splashdown tomorrow goes as well.
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