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The Daily Devotional
Monday, April 13, 2026
A New Trajectory: Finding Peace When the Mission Fails
“We are afflicted in every way, but not crushed; perplexed, but not driven to despair; persecuted, but not forsaken; struck down, but not destroyed.” — 2 Corinthians 4:8-9
Reflection
On April 13, 1970, roughly 205,000 miles away from the safety of Earth, a sudden, violent bang echoed through the Apollo 13 spacecraft. Alarms blared. Warning lights illuminated the cabin. Oxygen tanks were venting their precious contents out into the vacuum of space, and the command module was rapidly losing power. In a matter of seconds, a highly orchestrated, triumphant mission to land on the surface of the moon was completely shattered. The three astronauts aboard—Jim Lovell, Jack Swigert, and Fred Haise—were suddenly forced to abandon their lifelong dream of walking on the lunar surface. The mission had changed instantly. It was no longer about exploration; it was about survival.
The story of Apollo 13 is often remembered as one of the greatest feats of engineering and human endurance in history. To survive, the crew had to migrate into the tiny Lunar Module, designed to keep two men alive for two days, and stretch its resources to support three men for four days. They endured freezing-cold temperatures, severe sleep deprivation, and agonizing uncertainty. Yet, throughout this ordeal, they were not alone. Across the vast, dark expanse of space, they were tethered by radio waves to Mission Control in Houston—a room full of people working around the clock, calculating new trajectories, engineering makeshift air filters, and guiding them through the dark.
It is easy to draw a line between the cold, damaged hull of Apollo 13 and the fragile, often unpredictable nature of our own lives. Most of us will never travel to space, but all of us know what it sounds like when an alarm goes off in our lives. We all know the sudden jolt of an unexpected diagnosis, the sudden loss of a job, a fractured relationship, or a deep, disorienting failure. In a single moment, the "mission" we had so carefully planned is aborted. We find ourselves drifting in a cold place, perplexed, mourning the loss of our original destination, and wondering how we will ever make it back home.
Yet, it is precisely in the freezing dark of our aborted plans that the truth of the Apostle Paul’s words to the Corinthians comes alive. Afflicted, but not crushed. Perplexed, but not driven to despair. Living in the light of the resurrection does not mean we are spared from the explosions that rock our lives. Rather, resurrection faith is the quiet, stubborn confidence that even when our dreams are struck down, we are not destroyed. Jesus Christ, who endured the ultimate darkness and silence of the tomb, proves that God specializes in rescuing us from impossible odds. When our primary mission fails, God is already calculating a new trajectory of grace to bring us back to Himself.
To survive the journey home, the Apollo 13 astronauts had to do something incredibly difficult: they had to power down. They had to turn off the very systems that were supposed to make their journey comfortable and successful in order to save enough battery power just to survive reentry. When we are thrust into a crisis, we are often called to do the same. We must power down our pride, our obsession with control, and our relentless need to have everything go according to our original plan. Peace after fear comes when we strip away the non-essentials and rely entirely on the lifeline of our Creator. It requires us to listen intently to the voice of our own Mission Control—the steady, reassuring whisper of the Holy Spirit—guiding us step-by-step, day-by-day.
Your challenge today is to look at the disrupted plans or current anxieties in your life through the lens of a "successful failure," as Apollo 13 was later called. Where is God asking you to let go of your original destination so that He can preserve your soul? What anxieties do you need to "power down" today to conserve your spiritual strength?
When Apollo 13 finally approached Earth, it had to endure a agonizing period of radio blackout as it reentered the atmosphere. For several minutes, the world waited in absolute, breathless silence, wondering if the astronauts had survived. Then, suddenly, through the clouds, three beautiful parachutes blossomed in the sky. That is the promise of the resurrection. We may endure the terrifying silence. We may have to travel through the dark side of the moon. But we are never forsaken. We are held, we are guided, and ultimately, we are brought safely into the light.
Prayer
God of the cosmos and God of our own fragile hearts, we confess that we are often terrified when the carefully laid plans of our lives fall apart. When we feel adrift, cold, or afraid of what the future holds, remind us that You are the ultimate anchor of our souls. Give us the courage to power down our anxieties and our need for control, and tune our ears to the steady, guiding voice of Your Spirit. Help us to trust that even in our darkest moments of crisis, Your resurrection power is actively calculating a trajectory of grace to bring us safely home. Wrap us in Your peace today, and let us walk confidently in the light of Your unfailing love. Amen.
Devotional by: Kenny Sallee, ThM — Deming, NM, USA
The Bible texts are from the New Revised Standard Version (NRSV) Bible, copyright © 1989, 1993, the Division of Christian Education of the National Council of the Churches of Christ in the United States of America. Used by permission. All rights reserved.
