Each year around graduation, I slide into a funk. While I’m excited with students’
accomplishments launching journeys into their dreams, I’m saddened to let go,
to give an embrace goodbye wrapped with best wishes into the future. With good intentions, we vow to grab a lunch
and visit over breaks, and many do, but I know with time the reality is … the
busy-ness of our careers and families will distance us. At this time of year, speakers elevated on
stages around the world ask audiences packed with millions to reflect upon who
made a difference in their lives. A
second question naturally follows. What
significant contribution are you going to make during your life?
Teetering adrift among a navy blue ocean of mortarboards, I
felt a surge of insignificance among the colossal number of graduates not
only at Queeny Park, but around the globe!
Thankfully, the conclusion of each school year invites me on
a long, reflective stroll. Faces flash
with memories of various events from the previous seasons. Quickly, they entangle memories of previous
years. Chuckles intermittently burst
from the silent path. Occasionally, a
tear forms from a missed opportunity or grace unused. This year, Carl Sagan, an esteemed astronomer
and self-proclaimed atheist joined me.
I’ve often discovered wisdom in Carl’s words. He’s failed to convince me there is no
Creator or Prime Mover. Though an
articulate critic of religious hypocrisy and brutality, Carl was a
compassionate advocate for peace. Upon
this night, I recalled his request of NASA and Voyager 1.
Voyager 1, a space probe launched September 5, 1977, flew by
Jupiter, Saturn, Neptune and the moons of Pluto before crossing the heliopause
leaving our solar system and entering interstellar space. Serendipitously, astronomers continue to
receive signal information from the Voyager 1 probe, today. When Sagan initially requested that engineers
turn Voyager’s cameras back toward earth to take pictures of its trail, NASA
refused. Sagan persisted. NASA eventually obliged, capturing the
classic “blue dot” images from deep space.
Carl’s words echoed back to life. “Consider
again that dot. That’s here. That’s home.
That’s us. On it everyone you
love, everyone you know, everyone you ever heard of, every human being who ever
was, lived out their lives. The
aggregate of our joy and suffering, thousands of confident religious,
ideologies, and economic doctrines, every hunter and forager, every hero and
coward, every creator and destroyer of civilization, every king and peasant,
every young couple in love, every mother and father, hopeful child, inventor
and explorer, every teacher of morals, every corrupt politician, every
“superstar”, every “supreme leader”, every saint and sinner in the history of
our species lived there-on a mote of dust suspended in a sunbeam.”
I imagine the Creator smiling in agreement with the astronomer
encapsulating how the pale blue dot “underscores our responsibility to deal
more kindly and compassionately with one another and to preserve and cherish
it.” At first glance, earth appears
inconsequential smaller than a speck of dust in the universe. For me, Carl’s words invited two perspectives
on just how significant people are. For me at graduation, I engaged his mindset …
Sagan’s intended picture to emphasize man’s vulnerability and fragile existence…
alone.
However, during my walk, I shook that perspective. In terms of significant players in the lives
of the graduates, I doubt many graduates, parents, and guests were thinking of
famous musicians, politicians, cinema stars, and professional athletes. Most honored parents, friends, teachers,
coaches, mentors, spouses, siblings and hopefully our Lord … and therein lies
tremendous significance … relationships
nurtured in love, compassion, hope, mystery, and trust giving essence to life!
“The kingdom of heaven
is like a merchant’s search for fine pearls.
When he found one really valuable, he went back and put up for sale all
that he had and bought it.” Mt 13: 45-46 Jesus
is the merchant. He purchased … with the
entirety of his life’s actions and death … the pearl of the universe, the same
pearl Carl also discovered, but failed to recognize the gentle hands of our
Lord cradling it.
In gratitude, I reminded Carl before we parted for the evening. Perhaps, God’s grace nudged the hands in
convincing scientists to turn the Voyager around to snap some pictures of the “mustard
seed” of the universe. From that seed,
the earth, grows the Kingdom planted and nurtured by the Father, as Carl says, in a sunbeam. Despite all the ugliness associated with man,
with religion … there is also hope, goodness, significance even in the
smallest, simplest acts rippling through our universe. The
light shines on in the darkness, a darkness that did not overcome it. John 1:5
2 comments:
Just to be clear, Carl died of pneumonia, a complication of the bone-marrow disease myelodysplasia, on December 20, 1996, at age 62. He was not at Queeny Park for the 2016 commencement address nor physically walking with Tim Morrison. BP
All good stuff! Thanks, Tim.
I remain surprised... In late grade school and high school, reading 'Cosmos' helped prove to me that God exists and created all this. Yet Mr. Sagan convinced himself otherwise...sad for him and I feel blessed.
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