There has been a
lot about airplane crashes and mishaps in the news, including about passengers
who seem to have lost their minds. Some of the accounts have happy endings,
some are tragic, others are bizarre.
When a pilot has
an emergency, whether on a large commercial airliner or a small private plane,
he or she declares, “Mayday. Mayday. Mayday.” After the Mayday call then the
pilot can transmit the nature of the emergency. Protocol dictates that Mayday
be declared in an emergency, otherwise Air Traffic Control may think the pilot
is just telling them of a problem and that ATC need not give emergency
attention to the aircraft, alert emergency personnel, and clear runways for an
emergency landing.
There are times
in which a pilot will tell ATC of a problem and ATC will respond with the
question, “Do you want to declare an emergency?” Sometimes the pilot will say
“Yes,” sometimes “No.” It is obvious in some instances that ATC thinks a Mayday
ought to be declared.
After Mayday has
been declared, ATC has two standard questions they ask. “How much fuel do you
have?” “How many souls on board?”
ATC wants to
know how much fuel so that it can inform emergency personnel on the ground so
they will know how much fuel they are dealing with in the event of a fire.
(This will also let ATC know how quickly they need to get the aircraft on the
ground or whether, circumstances permitting, the plane needs to burn off or
dump fuel prior to landing.)
Knowing how many
souls are on board is also transmitted to emergency personnel so that they will
know the number of people requiring rescue.
ATC does not ask
how many passengers there are. It does not ask how many crew members are on
board. It asks, “Souls on board?” This is simple and straightforward and avoids
confusion.
I recently heard
a recording of an exchange between ATC and the pilot of a large commercial
plane which had lost power to an engine shortly after takeoff and was returning
to the airport after declaring Mayday. ATC asked, “Please report souls on
board.”
The pilot
responded, “257 passengers.”
Vickie and I
looked at each other, and I said, “That isn’t going to work. ATC is going to
want clarification. That pilot should know better.”
Sure enough, ATC
followed up, “Please report souls on board.”
The pilot came
back, “265 souls on board.”
The pilot’s
first number of 257 failed to account for the crew.
An emergency is
not the time to ask others to do the math. One total number is what ATC and
emergency personnel are looking for, not 257 passengers and 8 crew members.
Where did this
practice of “souls on board” come from? It seems a bit archaic in our society
of nihilism where we are nothing but the products of time, plus matter, plus
chance.
“Souls on board”
is maritime term, a carryover from the world of ships and their crews and
passengers, just as we use the maritime terms captain, first officer, and crew
in aviation.
I suppose at
some point “souls on board” will be replaced by a sterile term that fails to
acknowledge that we are people who matter. Maybe it will be, “Please advise how
many identification numbers you have on board.”
When God formed
us in His image, he breathed into us “the breath of life” and “man became a
living soul” (Genesis 2:7). Now I think
there is much glorious mystery in the Beginning (Christ) in Genesis, and
however it is that we sense creation unfolded, we ought not to be distracted
that it occurred in and through Jesus Christ and that God made us in His image,
and that we are not the products of time plus matter plus chance; we are
valuable, we are loved, we are more than our physical parts – we are souls! We
are mysterious beings whose genesis is rooted in God.
We are so
mysterious that, as Pascal and others have observed, one moment we can be as
angels, and the next moment devils. We are so mysterious that we have a sense
that we ought to be something more than we are. Again, to reference Pascal’s
thinking, my dog has never wanted to be a lion or anything other than a dog,
the same with (as far as I can tell) cats, cows, and hamsters. Why is it that
men and woman generally desire to be more than what they are, than who they
are? Why do we have a sense of “greater things”?
Might it be that
this reflects a sense of loss and that we have a void that we need to fill?
A beggar would
not know what it is to experience the loss of a throne. A king who had been
deposed would know, would remember, would desire restoration to the glory he
once had.
We are not human
resources, we are not commodities, we are not identity numbers, we are
souls…even in our confused state, we are souls. We are not accidents looking
for a place to happen, nor should we be duped into eating whatever we are given
as hogs devour what is thrown into their pens. We are women and men created in
the image of God…we are loved…let us recover the truth about who we are and how
deeply our Father loves us.
To demonstrate
the maritime roots of “souls on board” we can gain inspiration from Captain Arthur
Henry Roston of the Carpathia. While another ship actually saw the distress
flares of the Titanic and ignored them, when the Carpathia picked up Titanic’s
distress radio signal Captain Roston had no doubt what he and his passenger
liner would do, they would speed to the rescue through dangerous waters. After
giving the necessary orders, Henry Roston was observed praying, he knew the
danger ahead for his vessel, and he knew the danger facing the souls of the
Titanic.
Every person whom
we meet today is a soul, a person whom God has given life to, a person for whom
Jesus Christ died. He or she is not a human resource, is not a commodity, is
not even a conservative or liberal or a particular skin color or ethnic group
or economic group – but rather a soul created in the image of God – no matter
how deeply and sadly that image may be marred and desecrated.
I am reminded of
Betsy ten Boom telling her sister Corrie that perhaps they would remain as
prisoners in the concentration camp until the guards could be taught to love.
Aleksandr Solzhenitsyn had much the same perspective on the guards in his Soviet
prisons, he saw how they were victims and had been dehumanized – beneath their
callousness they were still souls.
Here is what is
written on the tombstone of Captain Arthur Henry Roston:
In Loving Memory of
My Dear Husband
Sir Arthur Henry Rostron
K.B.I. R.D. R.N.R.
Aged 71 Years
Also Of
Ethel Minnie
The Beloved Wife Of The Above
Aged 69 Years
Sir Arthur Rostron
Captain of R.M.S. Carpathia
Saved 706 Souls From
SS Titanic 15 April 1912
There are souls on board all around us.
What will be written about us?
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