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A priest who's interested in the conquest of space? Not so strange really, if you think about it. After all, we share the same sky with our ancestors: they imagined it peopled by divinities and containing heavenly worlds our scientists send satellites, probes and even manned rockets to investigate. When Gagarin said he hadn't seen God on his trip round the Earth, he was clearly demonstrating the difference between the two ways of looking at the sky. Yet on Christmas Eve, the American astronauts prayed as they flew around the moon. And Aldrin took communion before walking on the moon's surface. Not forgetting the candles the engineers in Kourou kept burning during Ariane's first launches, or the Orthodox priest's prayers at the now Russian cosmonauts' departure. So is it really so astonishing that a theologian should wonder what God's might have to do with the conquest of space?