Recalling the Voyage of Magellan

 

This Vale of Tears is filled with terrors and woe, but God granted us the courage and the intelligence to surmount them.  Something to recall as we stand on the edge of interplanetary travel.  Prior to the battle of Lepanto, the fleet’s priest chaplains all preached sermons on the theme of no Heaven for cowards.  Nothing of note is ever accomplished in this world without that essential virtue.

CS Lewis in the The Screwtape Letters nailed it:

We have made men proud of most vices, but not of cowardice. Whenever we have almost succeeded in doing so, the Enemy permits a war or an earthquake or some other calamity, and at once courage becomes so obviously lovely and important even in human eyes that all our work is undone, and there is still at least one vice of which they feel genuine shame. The danger of inducing cowardice in our patients, therefore, is lest we produce real self-knowledge and self-loathing with consequent repentance and humility. And in fact, in the last war, thousands of humans, by discovering their own cowardice, discovered the whole moral world for the first time. In peace we can make many of them ignore good and evil entirely; in danger, the issue is forced upon them in a guise to which even we cannot blind them. There is here a cruel dilemma before us. If we promoted justice and charity among men, we should be playing directly into the Enemy’s hands; but if we guide them to the opposite behaviour, this sooner or later produces (for He permits it to produce) a war or a revolution, and the undisguisable issue of cowardice or courage awakes thousands of men from moral stupor.

This, indeed, is probably one of the Enemy’s motives for creating a dangerous world—a world in which moral issues really come to the point. He sees as well as you do that courage is not simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing point, which means, at the point of highest reality. A chastity or honesty, or mercy, which yields to danger will be chaste or honest or merciful only on conditions. Pilate was merciful till it became risky.

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Mary De Voe
Mary De Voe
Monday, June 2, AD 2025 12:24am

Magellan believed the world was round by the ships disappearing beyond the horizon. A lunar eclipse would also show that the earth is round.

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