Canada’s David Saint-Jacques joined the exclusive club of space explorers when
he blasted off to the International Space Station on Dec. 3, almost 46 years
after NASA ended the Apollo program that put men on the moon. On Dec. 19, 1972,
the last Apollo mission ended with the splashdown of the Apollo 17 capsule. It
was an historic achievement, though by this time — after five previous moon
landings in three years — the excitement of moon landings was waning. The last
moon mission, however, held a deeper meaning for Fr. Harold O’Neill, who was a
professor of dogmatic theology at St. Augustine’s Seminary in Toronto. At the
time he wrote this for The Register, he was studying at the University of
Regensburg in West Germany, where he drew inspiration from a lecture by
Professor Joseph Ratzinger, who later became Pope Benedict XVI.