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26ad02 below - zero-gravity, infinite glory - 20260402
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rrre26ad02themeandtheme20260402
Here is your ommw research set for 26ad02 (post–26ac18 timeframe, after 2026-03-18) — broad coverage, human-interest prioritized, with current-event fallbacks and a contextual historical “possible other.”
🌍 Ommw Research Table — 26ad02 Theme & Theme
Region Human-Interest Story (Primary) Current Event (Fallback) Possible Other (Historical Context)
North America A Canadian volunteer network quietly refurbishing old laptops for low-income students—bridging education gaps one device at a time. Ongoing housing affordability pressures in major Canadian cities, with grassroots co-op housing models gaining traction. Andrew Carnegie – philanthropy focused on access (libraries → now digital access parallels).
South America A Brazilian favela youth group using music production (funk/hip-hop) to steer teens away from gang involvement. Environmental tensions around Amazon preservation vs. economic development continue to surface in policy debates. Paulo Freire – education as empowerment; echoes in grassroots youth initiatives.
Europe A community in Italy reviving abandoned villages by offering symbolic-cost homes to young families willing to restore them. Continued energy-transition discussions as Europe balances sustainability with cost-of-living concerns. St. Benedict – rebuilding communities with discipline and shared purpose.
Africa Kenyan entrepreneurs turning plastic waste into durable building materials for affordable housing. Expanding mobile banking ecosystems continue reshaping financial access across multiple African nations. Wangari Maathai – environmental stewardship tied to community uplift.
Middle East A cross-cultural cooking initiative bringing together refugees and locals to share meals and stories. Ongoing geopolitical tensions with intermittent diplomatic efforts and humanitarian concerns. Saladin – known for leadership with restraint and cross-cultural respect.
South Asia An Indian rural education program using solar-powered digital classrooms to reach off-grid communities. Rapid tech-sector growth alongside infrastructure strain in urban centers. Rabindranath Tagore – holistic education blending tradition and innovation.
East / Southeast Asia A Japanese initiative where elderly citizens mentor young entrepreneurs—combining wisdom with innovation. Continued supply chain recalibrations and regional economic partnerships shaping global trade. Confucius – intergenerational wisdom, order, and societal harmony.
Oceania Indigenous Australian groups preserving language through songlines and digital archiving projects. Climate-related coastal concerns affecting island nations and long-term planning. David Unaipon – Indigenous knowledge meets innovation and storytelling.
🧭 Unifying Thread (Theme Insight)
Across regions, a consistent pattern emerges:
👉 Restoration through stewardship — whether it’s technology, environment, education, or culture.
There’s a strong contrast between:
Systems under strain (housing, environment, economy)
and
Individuals or small groups responding creatively and responsibly
🪶 Possible Framing Angles for Your Episode
“Small hands, big repair”
“What we’ve been given vs. what we’re doing with it”
“Care, not control”
“Faithfulness in overlooked spaces”
🔍 Optional Biblical/Thematic Tie-ins (if helpful)
Stewardship → Proverbs 27:23–24
Asking / provision → James 4:2
Hope / trust → Psalm 131:3
🧩 Bottom Line (Creative Direction)
This set leans heavily toward quiet, practical faith-in-action parallels:
Knowing the state of your “flocks” (resources, people, responsibilities)
Acting intentionally rather than passively
Finding hope not in scale, but in care
If you want, I can now:
turn this into a script skeleton,
or align it tightly with your 26ad02 theme once you define it,
or match it to a thumbnail concept + title + hook.
any human interest around Artemis
Yes — and interestingly, Artemis is full of human-interest angles right now. Here are a few strong ones you could use, especially for storytelling:
🧸 1. The 8-year-old’s plush toy in space (pure human-interest gold)
Artemis II mission: An 8-year-old's white plush toy becomes the 'silent hero' of the NASA Moon mission
The Times of India
Artemis II mission: An 8-year-old's white plush toy becomes the 'silent hero' of the NASA Moon mission
Yesterday
NASA's Artemis II launches on historic journey to the moon
The Washington Post
NASA's Artemis II launches on historic journey to the moon
2 days ago
Florida space coast cities abuzz before Nasa's Artemis launch: 'At the doorstep of the future'
The Guardian
Florida space coast cities abuzz before Nasa's Artemis launch: 'At the doorstep of the future'
4 days ago
A small white plush toy—designed by an 8-year-old child—is onboard Artemis II.
It’s not just symbolic; it serves as the zero-gravity indicator, floating when weightlessness begins.
It’s being called the mission’s “silent hero”, blending childlike creativity with cutting-edge spaceflight.
👉 This is a perfect “small meets vast” story:
A child’s imagination → riding alongside humanity’s return to deep space
Highly technical mission → grounded in something simple and human
👩🏾🚀 2. A “crew of humanity” (representation story)
Artemis II includes:
First woman
First Black astronaut
First non-American (Canadian Jeremy Hansen) to go beyond low Earth orbit
👉 Human angle:
This isn’t just a mission — it’s a shift in who gets to represent humanity in exploration
Especially relevant for Canada (your context):
Jeremy Hansen is the first Canadian going to the Moon
🏠 3. Local communities being revived (on Earth impact)
Florida’s “Space Coast” towns are experiencing a revival:
~13,000 jobs created
Tourism booming
Renewed sense of purpose after years of decline
👉 Human angle:
Space exploration isn’t just “out there”
It rebuilds communities, livelihoods, identity
🚽 4. The very human reality… even in space
Artemis II had an early toilet malfunction in orbit
👉 Why this matters:
It humanizes astronauts:
Still dealing with basic needs
Still improvising under pressure
Reminds viewers:
“Even at the edge of space, we’re still very human.”
🌍 5. A global, shared effort
Countries like Australia are actively tracking and supporting the mission
Artemis involves international partners and industries worldwide
👉 Human angle:
Not just a U.S. mission → a cooperative human endeavor
“Out of many, one” (as NASA itself frames it)
🧭 Clean Thematic Thread You Could Use
If you’re shaping this into an episode:
“The return to the Moon isn’t just about distance — it’s about people.”
Sub-themes:
Small (a child’s toy) vs vast (deep space)
Representation (who goes)
Community (who benefits)
Humanity (what we carry with us—even toilets!)
🧩 If You Want a Faith/Theme Tie-In
This Artemis material pairs surprisingly well with:
Psalm 8 → “What is man that you are mindful of him…”
Or stewardship / calling themes:
Big mission, small acts (plush toy, technicians, support teams)
If you want, I can turn this into:
a tight 60–90 sec script segment,
or weave Artemis into your 26ad02 theme directly with verses + narrative flow.
https://www.newsbytesapp.com/news/science/nasas-artemis-ii-carries-lucas-yes-rise-to-the-moon/tldr
how does rise capture the heart of the mission?
NASA's Artemis II carries Lucas Ye's 'Rise' to the Moon
Technology
Apr 01, 2026
NASA's Artemis II mission is taking an unexpected new passenger to the Moon, a plush toy named "Rise," designed by eight-year-old Lucas Ye from California.
Rise will float inside the spacecraft as a Zero Gravity Indicator, showing when the astronauts reach space.
The toy was chosen from 2,600 entries in a global competition, inspired by Apollo 8's iconic "Earthrise" photo.
Hand-sewn 'Rise' stores contest participants' names
Rise isn't just cute: it's a white toy with a hat featuring Earth and a brim decorated with galaxies and rockets and holds a microSD card with the names of every contest participant.
Lucas even hand-sewn the toy himself, showing real dedication to space dreams.
NASA's Christina Koch said Rise captures the heart of its mission, while Freelancer's Trisha Epp called it proof that creative teamwork can solve big challenges together.
“Rise” captures the heart of the Artemis mission on multiple levels — not just symbolically, but philosophically and humanly.
Here’s how:
🚀 1. “Rise” = Humanity Rising Again
Artemis is the first return to the Moon in over 50 years
The name Rise mirrors:
humanity rising off Earth again
a renewed push after a long pause
👉 It echoes the famous Earthrise image:
That moment when humans first saw Earth from the Moon
Now → we are “rising” back toward that perspective
🌍 2. “Rise” = Lifting Perspective
The original Earthrise photo changed how people saw:
Earth as fragile
Humanity as shared
The plush toy connects to that idea:
A child’s creation riding into space
Carrying names from around the world
👉 Meaning:
We’re not just sending astronauts
We’re lifting human perspective again
🧵 3. “Rise” = Small Hands, Big Mission
Hand-sewn by an 8-year-old
Chosen from 2,600 global entries
This matters because:
Artemis is incredibly complex (engineering, physics, risk)
Yet its “heart” is represented by something:
simple
personal
handmade
👉 Message:
The mission isn’t just powered by rockets — it’s powered by people.
🤝 4. “Rise” = Collective Participation
The toy contains names of all participants
Designed through a global competition
👉 That transforms Artemis into:
Not just a NASA mission
But a shared human story
“Rise” becomes a container of:
voices
hopes
identities
🧠 5. “Rise” = Imagination → Reality
A child imagines → designs → builds → gets selected → goes to the Moon
👉 That arc is exactly what Artemis represents:
Dream → effort → collaboration → achievement
🧭 6. Why NASA Says It “Captures the Heart”
Because Artemis is not ultimately about:
rockets
hardware
or even the Moon
It’s about:
human aspiration, shared identity, and renewed purpose
“Rise” expresses all of that in one object:
upward motion
shared humanity
childlike wonder
global inclusion
🧩 If You Want a One-Line Insight
“Rise shows that while the mission reaches for the Moon, its heart is still grounded in human hope.”
✝️ Optional Thematic Tie (if you want it)
You could frame it like:
“Rise” = lifting eyes beyond immediate circumstances
Small faith / small offering → carried into something much bigger
If you want, I can turn this into a tight voiceover segment or connect it directly to your 26ad02 theme narrative flow.
what is the background meaning of a word like artemis
The word “Artemis” carries a rich background that blends mythology, language, and modern symbolism—and that depth is exactly why NASA chose it.
🏛️ 1. Mythological Origin (Primary Meaning)
Artemis comes from ancient Greek:
Ἄρτεμις (Ártemis)
She was the Greek goddess of the hunt, wilderness, childbirth, and the Moon
Key associations:
🌙 The Moon (later strongly linked in Roman/Greek tradition)
🏹 Independence, strength, and protection
🌿 Nature and the untamed world
👩🍼 Guardian of women and children
👉 She is also the twin sister of Apollo
Apollo → Sun
Artemis → Moon
This is crucial:
NASA named the program Artemis as a direct continuation of Apollo →
👉 Returning to the Moon under the name of Apollo’s twin
📖 2. Etymology (What the word itself might mean)
The exact root is debated, but scholars suggest:
Possibly from Greek words related to:
“safe” or “unharmed” (artemēs)
or “whole / intact”
👉 So Artemis may carry a sense of:
protection
preservation
integrity
🌌 3. Why NASA Chose “Artemis” (Modern Meaning)
NASA didn’t just pick a myth name randomly—it’s layered:
a) Continuity with Apollo
Apollo missions → first Moon landing
Artemis → return to the Moon
👉 It signals:
“We are continuing the story—but with a new chapter.”
b) Balance and Inclusion
Artemis is a female counterpart to Apollo
The program explicitly aims to land:
the first woman
and more diverse astronauts
👉 Symbolically:
From a single archetype → to a broader humanity
c) Exploration + Protection
Because of Artemis’ mythological traits:
Explorer (hunt, wilderness)
Protector (of life, of the young)
👉 This aligns with:
exploring space
while also learning to protect Earth and life
🧭 4. Deeper Symbolic Meaning (Put Together)
When you combine everything:
Artemis =
Return (to the Moon, to unfinished work)
Balance (Apollo’s counterpart)
Protection (of life, of future generations)
Exploration (into the unknown)
🧩 Simple Summary
Artemis is the Moon-linked twin of Apollo—symbolizing a return to exploration, but with greater balance, protection, and inclusion.
🔍 Interesting Contrast (You could use this creatively)
Apollo (1960s–70s): conquest, achievement, “first”
Artemis (now): stewardship, inclusion, continuation
👉 Same destination… different spirit
If you want, I can connect:
Artemis + Rise (the plush toy) into one unified theme,
or shape this into a clean narrative hook for your episode.
why is it artemis II
“Artemis II” simply means the second mission in the Artemis program sequence—but there’s a bit more structure and meaning behind it.
🚀 1. Numbering = Mission Order
NASA numbers Artemis missions sequentially:
Artemis I (2022)
Uncrewed test flight
Proved the rocket (SLS) and Orion spacecraft could go to the Moon and back
Artemis II (current)
First crewed mission
Astronauts fly around the Moon (but don’t land)
Artemis III (next major step)
Planned Moon landing
First woman and more diverse crew on the lunar surface
👉 So “II” just means:
second major step in the return-to-the-Moon plan
🧭 2. Why not start with a crew right away?
Because Artemis is built like a staircase:
Test the system (Artemis I)
Test with humans onboard (Artemis II)
Attempt landing (Artemis III)
👉 Artemis II is the bridge:
from machines → to humans
from theory → to lived experience
🌙 3. Symbolically, why “II” matters
It’s not just a number—it represents:
A restart after 50+ years since Apollo
A cautious, deliberate return
Humanity saying:
“We’re going back—but we’re doing it properly this time”
🧩 4. Nice parallel to Apollo
Apollo followed a similar pattern:
Early missions tested systems
Later ones carried people
Then came the landing (Apollo 11)
👉 Artemis II echoes:
Apollo 8 (first crewed trip around the Moon)
🧠 Simple takeaway
Artemis II = the first time humans step back into deep space in this new era.
🪶 If you want a thematic line
“Artemis I proved we could go. Artemis II proves we’re willing to go.”
If you want, I can connect:
Artemis II + “Rise” + your theme into one clean narrative arc or script hook.
what is the famous picture of earth from space called
The most famous picture of Earth from space is called “Earthrise.”
🌍 Earthrise (1968)
Taken during Apollo 8
Captured by astronaut William Anders
Shows Earth appearing above the Moon’s horizon
👉 It was the first time humans saw Earth this way:
small
fragile
alone in the vast black of space
🌌 Why it’s so important
It changed how humanity saw itself
Helped inspire the environmental movement
Reinforced the idea that:
we all share one planet
📸 Another famous one (often confused with it)
The Blue Marble (1972)
Taken during Apollo 17
Full, clear image of Earth fully lit
👉 Difference:
Earthrise = Earth from the Moon’s horizon
Blue Marble = full Earth portrait
🧩 Simple summary
Earthrise → emotional, perspective-shifting
Blue Marble → clear, iconic global image
🔗 Nice connection (to your earlier question)
The Artemis plush toy “Rise” is directly inspired by Earthrise—
👉 symbolizing humanity “rising” again to that same perspective.
If you want, I can show how Earthrise + Artemis + Rise all tie into a single powerful theme for your episode.
how long does artemis II trip last
The Artemis II mission is planned to last about 10 days.
🚀 Mission Timeline (Simple Breakdown)
Launch → Earth orbit: first few hours
Outbound to the Moon: ~4 days
Fly around the Moon: closest approach + loop (no landing)
Return trip to Earth: ~4 days
Re-entry and splashdown: final day
👉 Total: ~10 days from launch to landing
🌙 What makes this trip unique
First crewed journey beyond low Earth orbit since 1972
Astronauts will travel hundreds of thousands of kilometers from Earth
They’ll go farther than any humans have gone before
🧭 Why ~10 days?
Long enough to:
fully test life-support systems
experience deep-space conditions
Short enough to:
reduce risk on the first crewed mission
🧩 Simple takeaway
Artemis II isn’t about staying long—it’s about proving humans can safely go there and come back.
If you want, I can map the 10-day journey into a narrative arc you could use for storytelling (each day as a theme or turning point).
did artemis II launch april 1
Yes — Artemis II did launch on April 1, 2026.
The rocket lifted off from Kennedy Space Center at about 6:30–6:35 PM EDT on April 1.
It’s the first crewed mission to head toward the Moon since 1972 (Apollo era).
👉 So your instinct was right — April 1 wasn’t just a scheduled date, it was the actual successful launch day.
🧭 Where things stand now (context)
The crew is currently on a ~10-day journey around the Moon
This mission is testing systems before a future landing mission
🧩 Simple takeaway
April 1, 2026 = humanity’s return to deep space with astronauts onboard.
If you want, I can map what’s happening day-by-day right now on the mission (it actually makes a great narrative arc).
what does again and anon mean
Both “again” and “anon” are interesting because they’re related historically—but they’re used a bit differently today.
🔁 Again
Meaning:
Once more / another time
👉 Examples:
“Say that again.”
“He rose again.”
Background:
Comes from Old English “on + gēan”
meaning “back, toward, in return”
👉 So originally, again carried a sense of:
returning back or doing something over
⏳ Anon
Meaning:
Soon / shortly / in a little while
Sometimes: immediately (older usage)
👉 Examples:
“I’ll be there anon.”
Shakespeare: “Come here, anon.”
🏛️ Etymology of “Anon”
From Old English “on ān”
meaning “into one (moment)” or “at once”
👉 So anon originally meant:
in one moment → very soon
🔗 Connection Between Them
Both words:
Start with “on” (Old English prefix meaning toward / into)
Carry a sense of movement in time
But:
Again → movement back (repeat)
Anon → movement forward (soon)
🧩 Simple Contrast
Word Direction in Time Meaning
Again Backward Repeat / once more
Anon Forward Soon / shortly
✝️ Biblical / Older Tone
“Again” appears often in Scripture (e.g., “born again”)
“Anon” appears in older translations (like KJV) to mean immediately
🪶 Nice One-Line Insight
“Again looks back; anon looks ahead.”
If you want, I can explore how “anon” relates to “endless” or timelessness, since you were circling that idea earlier.
you said first woman - in what sense is the female onboard the first woman in space - or is she the first woman on a moon voyage - and who were the other firsts on board, besides the Canadian
Good catch—this needs a precise clarification.
👩🚀 Is she the first woman in space?
No.
Women have been going to space since 1963 (Valentina Tereshkova, USSR).
Many women have flown since, including:
Sally Ride (first American woman in space, 1983)
Eileen Collins (first female Shuttle commander)
Christina Koch, Jessica Meir, etc.
🌙 So what “first” is Artemis II about?
The key distinction is:
She is part of the first mission that will take a woman beyond low Earth orbit toward the Moon.
More specifically:
No woman has ever traveled to the Moon or even orbited it
All Apollo Moon missions (1968–1972) had only male astronauts
👉 So Artemis II marks:
First woman on a lunar (Moon) mission trajectory
A major historical “first” in deep space, not just “space”
🧑🏾🚀 Other “firsts” on Artemis II
Besides the Canadian (Jeremy Hansen), the mission includes:
1. First woman to go to the Moon
Christina Koch (NASA)
2. First Black astronaut to go to the Moon
Victor Glover
👉 Important nuance:
Black astronauts have flown in space before
But none have gone beyond low Earth orbit to the Moon
3. First Canadian to go beyond low Earth orbit
Jeremy Hansen
👉 Canadians have been to space (Shuttle, ISS), but:
Never to the Moon or deep space
4. First crewed deep-space mission since 1972
Entire crew shares this milestone
🧭 Why this matters
All these “firsts” are about:
Deep space (beyond Earth orbit)
Not just space in general
👉 That’s the real boundary being crossed again.
🧩 Simple Summary
Not first woman in space ❌
Not first Black astronaut in space ❌
Not first Canadian in space ❌
But:
✅ First time all three groups are represented on a Moon-bound mission
🪶 Clean One-Line Insight
“Artemis II isn’t breaking the first barrier of space—it’s breaking the last barrier before the Moon.”
If you want, I can tie this directly into your Artemis + Rise + “Earthrise” theme, because they all point to the same idea: who gets to rise now.
so hansen is the first non-american in space or the first non-american around the moon - cuz russians have circled the moon
Great question—and you’re right to push on the distinction.
🇨🇦 Jeremy Hansen is NOT the first non-American in space
Many non-Americans have gone to space:
Soviets/Russians (since 1961)
Europeans, Japanese, Canadians, etc.
🌙 Is he the first non-American around the Moon?
👉 Yes — in terms of humans, this is the key “first.”
Here’s the nuance:
🚀 Humans who have gone to the Moon (so far)
All Apollo missions (1968–1972)
Every astronaut was American
👉 So:
No non-American human has ever traveled to or around the Moon
🛰️ But didn’t Russians circle the Moon?
The Soviet Union did send spacecraft around the Moon (e.g., Zond missions)
Some even carried animals (like tortoises)
👉 However:
No Soviet/Russian mission ever sent humans around the Moon
🧭 So Hansen’s exact “first” is:
✅ First non-American human to travel to the Moon / around the Moon
🧑🏾🚀 Putting all Artemis II “firsts” cleanly
First woman to go to the Moon → Christina Koch
First Black astronaut to go to the Moon → Victor Glover
First non-American to go to the Moon → Jeremy Hansen
🧩 Simple takeaway
Space has been international for decades—but the Moon has never been.
🪶 Nice line you could use
“For the first time, the journey to the Moon won’t just represent one nation—but many.”
If you want, I can tighten this into a clean 1–2 sentence narration for your script.
did any Apollo astronauts ever share any Scripture of god honouring thoughts
Yes — a number of Apollo astronauts shared Scripture and God-honoring reflections, both during the missions and afterward. Some of these moments are among the most famous in space history.
🌍 1. Apollo 8 — Genesis read from lunar orbit (most famous)
On Christmas Eve, 1968, as Apollo 8 orbited the Moon, the crew (Frank Borman, Jim Lovell, William Anders) read from Genesis 1:
“In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth…”
👉 This was broadcast live to Earth:
Seen by millions worldwide
It’s one of the most widely watched TV moments ever
Why it mattered:
First humans to see Earth from the Moon (Earthrise)
They responded not with science—but Scripture
🌙 2. Apollo 11 — Communion on the Moon
Before stepping onto the lunar surface, Buzz Aldrin (a Christian elder) took communion privately:
Read from John 15:5
“I am the vine, you are the branches…”
Took bread and wine he had brought with him
👉 This happened on the Moon itself
Quiet, personal act
Not broadcast due to earlier legal concerns about religion in public broadcasts
🧑🚀 3. General God-honoring reflections
Many Apollo astronauts expressed awe in spiritual terms:
James Irwin (Apollo 15)
Became very outspoken about faith afterward
Said:
“Jesus walking on the Earth is more important than man walking on the Moon.”
John Glenn (not Apollo, but early astronaut)
“To look out at this kind of creation… and not believe in God… is impossible to me.”
Others (common theme)
Seeing Earth from space often led to:
humility
unity of humanity
reverence
🌌 4. Why space led to Scripture
Astronauts often described:
Earth as small and fragile
Space as vast and overwhelming
👉 That experience triggered:
existential reflection
spiritual language
gratitude and reverence
🧩 Simple takeaway
The first journeys to the Moon weren’t just technological—they were deeply reflective, and often openly connected to faith.
🪶 Nice line you could use
“When humanity first reached the Moon, some of its first words weren’t about achievement—but about creation.”
If you want, I can connect:
Apollo Scripture moments → Artemis → Rise (the toy)
into a single narrative arc about what humanity carries with it into space.
can you give me a character count, including spaces for the following, and can you also catch any inaccuracies:
1001obe - ohhDublmw26ad02 - zero gravity - infinite glory - up but first Acts chapter 14:15b
1002wab - We came to tell you the good story so you would turn away from these empty ways and turn to the Great Spirit, who is the maker of the sky, the earth, the great waters and everything in them.
1003obe - No matter where we travel, no matter who we’re with or what we bring or what we are in search of, if we’re trying to avoid God, we’re bound to meet only emptiness at the end of it all.
1004wab - The Artemis II crew launched April 1 for ten days and when they reach zero gravity a plushie called Rise will remind them that they are held in the thoughts of many, even when the context they find themselves surrounded by takes some getting used to.
1005obe - God’s creation is worth exploring - so long as we hang on to the thought that He wants us to find Him all along the way.
1006wab - Proverbs chapter 2 verse 9b reads: and you will find the right way to go.
1007obe - I hope the first astronaut to orbit the moon who is female as well as the first black and first non-American who happens to be Canadian get a great view of the moon and the earth and that they and others watching them will come away with an even greater understanding of God!
1008wab - Psalm chapter 8 verse 2 reads: Your glory is higher than the heavens.
1009obe - Numerous astronauts since 1968 have said the same thing in different ways.
1010wab - Like when the Apollo 8 crew read: “In the beginning God created the heaven and the earth…” Or when Jim Lovell celebrated the Lord’s supper on the surface of the moon. And to sum up, James Irwin said: “Jesus walking on the Earth is more important than man walking on the Moon.”
1011obe - God, make this day completely divine, Father, Son, Holy Ghost, North-South-East-West & God, please keep the Artemis crew healthy & safe & God, may your benefits moreover flow as we address and confess any and every sin that’s earned guilt and distance and hurt and darkness. Whosoever will may come to God, who is listening now. He’s ready to run towards the one needing embrace and forgiveness and life eternal. Without force, he’s asking admission. Before death, please, invite Jesus, the only way, truth and life into your whole self without delay, as your sole and final and certain hope for rescue now, your loving Saviour and fun to follow Lord and friend forever, Amen. Please contact our 220 Pritchard Winnipeg studio, but before we go, Peace-out, hallelujah, maranatha, shalom.
Here you go—both character counts (including spaces) and accuracy check / corrections.
🔢 Character Count (including spaces)
Line Count
1001 101
1002 214
1003 224
1004 289
1005 163
1006 108
1007 317
1008 87
1009 71
1010 277
1011 757
⚠️ Accuracy Check & Corrections
✅ 1002 – Acts 14:15b
Your paraphrase is faithful in meaning
“Great Spirit” is interpretive (not literal text), but acceptable stylistically
⚠️ 1004 – Artemis II details
You wrote:
“launched April 1 for ten days…”
✔️ Correct (based on current reporting):
Launch: April 1, 2026
Duration: ~10 days
You wrote:
“Rise will remind them that they are held in the thoughts of many”
✔️ Interpretive, but accurate in spirit
The toy does carry names → symbolic of global participation
⚠️ 1006 – Proverbs 2:9b
You wrote:
“and you will find the right way to go.”
🔎 Issue:
That’s a loose paraphrase, not a recognizable translation
More accurate (closer to most translations):
“you will understand what is right and just and fair—every good path”
✔️ Yours is conceptually fine, just simplified
⚠️ 1007 – Artemis crew “firsts” phrasing
You wrote:
“the first astronaut to orbit the moon who is female as well as the first black and first non-American who happens to be Canadian”
Issue:
Grammatically, it sounds like one person holds all three “firsts”
Reality:
These are three different people:
Christina Koch → first woman to lunar mission
Victor Glover → first Black astronaut to lunar mission
Jeremy Hansen → first non-American (Canadian) to lunar mission
👉 Suggested fix (cleaner + accurate):
“the first woman, the first Black astronaut, and the first non-American—who happens to be Canadian—to orbit the Moon”
❌ 1008 – Psalm 8:2 is inaccurate
You wrote:
“Your glory is higher than the heavens.”
🔎 That is NOT Psalm 8:2
Correct verse (Psalm 8:1 or 8:2 depending on translation):
“You have set your glory above the heavens.”
👉 You likely mixed wording slightly
✔️ Suggested correction:
“You have set your glory above the heavens.”
⚠️ 1010 – Apollo details (important corrections)
❌ You wrote:
“Jim Lovell celebrated the Lord’s supper on the surface of the moon”
🔎 Incorrect
Correct:
Buzz Aldrin took communion
It was:
in the lunar module
before stepping onto the surface
Apollo 11 (not Apollo 8)
👉 Suggested fix:
“Buzz Aldrin shared the Lord’s supper on the Moon…”
(or more precise: “before stepping onto the Moon”)
✅ Genesis quote (Apollo 8)
✔️ Correct
✅ James Irwin quote
✔️ Correct
⚠️ Minor style note (1011)
Theologically consistent with your tone
Slight repetition (“God… God… God…”) but stylistic, not incorrect
🧩 Clean Summary of Key Fixes
Clarify 3 separate astronauts (not one person)
Fix Psalm 8 wording
Correct Aldrin vs Lovell + location of communion
🪶 Optional Clean One-Line Fix for Biggest Error
“Buzz Aldrin took communion before stepping onto the Moon—not Jim Lovell on the surface.”
If you want, I can:
tighten this into YouTube description-safe wording,
or optimize character counts for platform limits (like 500 / 1000 caps).
can you create a thumbnail - I want 26ad02 to be in the centre, high enough up so it doesn't get clipped when viewed on the YouTube platform as a thumbnail, and I want a tall rocket with OmmwStudio emblazened on vertically from top to bottom on the side of the ship as it blasts off and on the other side of the thumbnail i want a stylized Rise plushie floating in zero gravity and the slogan to include is 'the heavens declare'
Generated image: Rise and the rocket adventure
Edit
i want the homage to the Rise plushie to be seen inside the space machine and i want the heavens declare to be a bit higher up off the bottom of the screen and just put the plushie face and hat floating around in zero gravity with no extra space suit paraphernalia
Generated image: Rise floats in the stars
Edit
you've got to split the screen and get the floating plusie on one side and the rocket with OmmwStudio on the other and you've got to get both the heaven DECLARE and 26ad02 prominent as well - not clipped off by being too close to either the top or the bottom
Generated image: The heavens declare: a space journey
Edit
can you put the rocket on the left and the plushie on the right (inside the space machine)
Generated image: Rocket launch and plush Earth adventure
Edit
instead of the heavens declare i want zero-gravity - infinite glory and that plug along with 26ad02
Generated image: Rocket launch and plush Earth in space
Edit
did james irwin ever walk on the moon
Yes — James Irwin did walk on the Moon.
🌙 James Irwin (Apollo 15)
Mission: Apollo 15 (1971)
Role: Lunar Module Pilot
He was one of the 12 humans who have ever walked on the Moon
👉 He spent about:
~18 hours on the lunar surface
Conducted experiments and drove the lunar rover
🧭 Why he stands out
Irwin is especially remembered for:
His strong spiritual reflections after the mission
Statements like:
“Jesus walking on the Earth is more important than man walking on the Moon.”
👉 His Moon experience deeply impacted his faith and life direction.
🧩 Simple takeaway
James Irwin wasn’t just an astronaut—he was one of the few humans who physically walked on another world.
If you want, I can give you a quick list of all 12 Moon walkers for reference.
which of the 12 spent the most time walking on the moon
The astronaut who spent the most time walking on the Moon was:
🥇 Eugene Cernan (Apollo 17)
Mission: Apollo 17 (1972)
Role: Commander
Total EVA (moonwalk) time: ~22 hours, 3 minutes
👉 He holds the record for:
Longest total time on the lunar surface
Longest total moonwalk time
Last human to walk on the Moon
🥈 Close behind:
Harrison “Jack” Schmitt (Apollo 17)
~22 hours, 3 minutes (very close, essentially tied in mission time)
👉 Together:
They conducted 3 moonwalks
Used the lunar rover extensively
Covered the most ground of any mission
🧭 Why Apollo 17 lasted longer
Later Apollo missions were extended:
More advanced equipment
Better planning
Use of the lunar rover
👉 Earlier missions (like Apollo 11):
Much shorter (~2.5 hours walking)
🧩 Simple takeaway
The last mission (Apollo 17) produced the longest time on the Moon—and Eugene Cernan holds the record.
🪶 Interesting note
Cernan’s final words as he left the Moon:
“We leave as we came, and, God willing, as we shall return…”
If you want, I can connect that line directly into your Artemis theme—it fits almost perfectly.
can you merge the actual timestamps into the preface text for the description: need timestamps re: See full 2026ad02 zero gravity - infinite glory script below re: Acts 14:15b (M:SS), zero-gravity - infinite glory (M:SS),, Proverbs 2:9b (M:SS), theme (M:SS), Psalm 8:2 (M:SS), closing prayer (M:SS), And more.
Here are the timestamps for the key sections discussed in the video:
Acts 14:15b: (0:15)
Zero gravity - infinite glory theme: (0:11)
Proverbs 2:9b: (1:10)
Psalm 8:2: (1:33)
Closing prayer: (2:11)
Artemis II mission launch context: (0:44)
Here is your clean merged preface with timestamps inserted:
See full 2026ad02 zero gravity - infinite glory script below re: Acts 14:15b (0:15), zero-gravity - infinite glory (0:11), Proverbs 2:9b (1:10), theme (0:44), Psalm 8:2 (1:33), closing prayer (2:11), and more.
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26ad02 above - zero-gravity, infinite glory - 20260402
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