Trip Around the Sun

Visits to 52 Religions in a Year

by Chuck Borough


Formats

Softcover
£18.58
Softcover
£18.58

Book Details

Language : English
Publication Date : 10/09/2004

Format : Softcover
Dimensions : 6x9
Page Count : 576
ISBN : 9781418471002

About the Book

Chuck Borough is a scientist.  The claims of his childhood religion have been frustrating.  It has not been hard to see significant advantages among friends and relatives who find it easy to accept these claims. Still, the claims themselves appear entirely unable to bear even the slightest scientific inquiry.

Chuck decided to take a trip around the sun.  He would have one full year without the influence of his religion.  In 52 weeks, he would visit and inquire during the meetings of 52 other religions, Christian, Muslim, Jewish, Buddhist, Atheist, etc… There was no plan for a book.  The journal of reports of these visits and his thoughts during the adventure are this book.


About the Author

“Chuck is a good little student, but he is often caught daydreaming.” (Sixth Grade teacher.)

He is a scientist, (physicist,) and for 32 years, he led that life for the United States Navy. 40 years ago, he led a different life, that of a missionary in the wonderful hills of West Virginia. There have always been two parts of him that could not meld without friction. The reluctance of science to accept anything without evidence and the discomfort of religion with any attempt to require evidence was a significant contradiction for two apparently important endeavors.

Managing rocket sled testing, night-vision programs for fast ships, hot air balloon trials of missile seeking systems, he dealt with lasers and infrared systems, explosives at Grand Central Rocket and with virtually every fast ship of the Navy. All these things required a way of thinking not allowed during religious inquiry. There seemed always a need for a “separation of parts.” As missionary, he became ever more convinced that the technical “truths” of the things he taught were highly at question. Still, he was witnessing changes in lives and families that were impossible to fault. He often wondered how “good” and “truth,” when they apparently were not in agreement, could be dealt with.

This year was his, this year away from his church. It was not to be a year without religion, but one free in thought and social interplay with people of many beliefs. He would visit 52 different religious or non-religious organizations in 52 weeks, a Trip Around the Sun. He would ask any question he desired to ask, and make any statement he desired to make, not fettered by expectations of “faith unquestioning.”

If you choose to get into the other seat of that hotrod and take this trip, you will not find the answers; you will find the questions. The adventure has been the most valuable year in his memory.

Chuck has certainly drawn some conclusions for himself, but each one on The Trip Around the Sun will draw his or her own conclusions, and they will not match his.