Prayers from on high: Religious expression in outer space during the Apollo era, 1968–76

Q2 Arts and Humanities
K. Edwards
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Abstract

In the wake of the Apollo 8 mission on 21–27 December 1968, infamous atheist activist Madalyn Murray O’Hair threatened a lawsuit against the National Aeronautics and Space Administration (NASA). O’Hair, who had successfully fought against mandatory Bible reading and prayer in the public schools earlier in the decade, argued that NASA’s administrators knowingly violated the separation of church and state by allowing astronauts Frank Borman, William Anders and James Lovell to read from Genesis during their Christmas Eve broadcast from the moon’s orbit. The threat instantly garnered public attention due to O’Hair’s notoriety, particularly among evangelical Christians. Although the lawsuit was quietly dismissed a year later, letter-writing campaigns defending religious expression in outer space continued unabated, even after the last Apollo astronaut set foot on the moon’s surface in 1972. This article examines defences of prayer and Bible reading in outer space during the later Apollo missions from 1968 to 1976. It argues that these efforts reveal a favourable shift in evangelical attitudes towards the space programme – attitudes that were divided sharply prior to Apollo 8 were subsequently more unified as evangelicals combined the fight for prayer in outer space with other major battles over religious freedom. O’Hair’s lawsuit linked Apollo with evangelicals’ earthly concerns, prompting them to interpret American outer space exploration as an endeavour inextricably endowed with religious purpose. The emotional letters-of-thanks they penned and the strongly worded petitions protesting O’Hair they signed in the years following the Apollo 8 mission make a compelling case for incorporating the space programme more prominently into the broader historical discussion of evangelicalism in twentieth-century America.
天上的祈祷:1968-76年阿波罗时代外太空的宗教表达
1968年12月21日至27日,阿波罗8号任务完成后,臭名昭著的无神论活动家玛达琳·默里·奥海尔威胁要对美国国家航空航天局提起诉讼。奥海尔在本世纪初曾成功地反对公立学校强制要求读圣经和祈祷,他认为美国宇航局的管理者故意违反政教分离,允许宇航员弗兰克·博尔曼、威廉·安德斯和詹姆斯·洛弗尔在圣诞夜从月球轨道上广播时朗读《创世纪》。由于欧海尔的臭名昭著,这一威胁立即引起了公众的关注,尤其是在福音派基督徒中。尽管诉讼在一年后悄然被驳回,但捍卫在外太空宗教表达的书信运动仍有增无减,甚至在1972年最后一名阿波罗宇航员踏上月球表面之后。这篇文章考察了1968年至1976年阿波罗任务后期在外层空间祈祷和读圣经的辩护。它认为,这些努力揭示了福音派对太空计划态度的有利转变——在阿波罗8号之前,态度分歧很大,后来随着福音派将在外层空间祈祷的斗争与其他争取宗教自由的重大斗争结合起来,态度变得更加统一。奥海尔的诉讼将阿波罗与福音派信徒对世俗的担忧联系在一起,促使他们将美国的外太空探索解释为一项与宗教目的密不可分的努力。在阿波罗8号任务之后的几年里,他们写的饱含感情的感谢信和他们签署的措辞强烈的抗议奥海尔的请愿书,令人信服地证明了将太空计划更突出地纳入20世纪美国福音派的更广泛的历史讨论中。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
European Journal of American Culture
European Journal of American Culture Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
0.60
自引率
0.00%
发文量
17
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