Wednesday, June 17, 2026

RNS Weekly Digest - Astronaut Victor Glover is still trying to find the spiritual words to describe his Moon mission

Astronaut Victor Glover is still trying to find the spiritual words to describe his Moon mission

On a humid evening in late March, Victor Glover huddled with his fellow Artemis II astronauts to have what the spacefarers called their “ultimate dinner.” It was their last full meal before embarking on their historic journey around the Moon — the first human-crewed visit to Earth’s silver satellite since 1972.

After Glover finished his spread of lamb chops, spinach and sweet potatoes, the cook returned with something else: Communion elements. The cook, a Christian himself, then sat next to Glover and Canadian astronaut Jeremy Hansen as the men paused to pray before observing the Christian sacrament together.

“I prayed and I pleaded that God accepts that I do this for the mission,” Glover, who worships with Churches of Christ congregations in Texas, told Religion News Service
in a recent video interview.

It was a quiet moment of religious ritual shortly before a rocket launch so explosively loud that, even a mile away, the boom rivaled the sound of standing near a screaming jet engine. The Space Launch System that carried the Orion spacecraft then catapulted Glover, the pilot for the mission, and his fellow Artemis II crew members into space, where they soared around the Moon and back in a gaping 252,756 mile arc that took them farther away from the Earth than any human beings in history.

But as millions back home marveled at the nine-day mission’s breathtaking photographs and technical accomplishments, Glover said the journey was also steeped in spiritual significance, from blastoff to splashdown.

 Religion & Politics

Bosnian Muslim boys and men dressed in Bosnian national soccer team jerseys pray at a Friday prayer, ahead of the soccer match of the FIFA World Cup 2026 between Canada and Bosnia, in Sarajevo, Bosnia, Friday, June 12, 2026. (AP Photo/Armin Durgut)

In Opinion
And finally, She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

When Lovina Zook put her traditional, dark green Amish dress back on for the video that catapulted her into online fame, butterflies flooded her stomach.

“There was a sense of panic that I’m going to be trapped again,” Zook said. 

Zook, now 23, had left her Iowa community of Swartzentruber Amish, one of the faith’s most conservative affiliations, just before she turned 18.

Years later, in 2024, she decided to make a video following the “everyone has a backstory” trend on TikTok, where she had started posting casually after growing up in a religious tradition that forbade her from using technology.

At first, she said, she didn't know what her backstory was. Then, it clicked.
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RNS Morning Report - She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

RNS Morning Report Desktop
She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.
 
RNS National Reporter Fiona Murphy is fascinated (and targeted online) by trad wife content. One day, an ex-Amish influencer caught her eye.
 
Lovina Zook has become an unlikely TikTok star, using technology once forbidden to her and building an audience of 3.4 million followers. Now in her second trimester of pregnancy with her first child and living in North Texas with her husband, Eli Zook, who is also ex-Amish, Zook films herself cooking Amish food and reinterpreting a tradition she fled, while complicating the internet’s “trad wife” fantasies and outsiders’ romantic ideas about the Amish.
 
“That dress now does not symbolize hurt,” Zook told Murphy in a recent interview. “Now that dress symbolizes freedom.”
 
 
 
 

Top Stories

[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

(RNS) — Lovina Zook is using technology once forbidden to her to reinterpret a tradition she fled, complicating both the internet’s ‘trad wife’ fantasies and outsiders’ romantic ideas about the Amish.
[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

An Episcopal camp offers queer Christians an affirming haven in Idaho

(FāVS News) — The Episcopal Diocese of Spokane has hosted Queer Camp at Lake Coeur d’Alene since 2024, offering LGBTQ+ Christians and allies an affirming retreat in a state that introduced 27 anti-LGBTQ+ bills last year.
[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

Faith is integral to a country’s fortunes, says research review 

(RNS) — Religion is playing a far greater role in economic growth and prosperity than many people realize, affecting key economic behavior including education, family size and savings, according to the Berlin-based think tank the Rockwool Foundation.
[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

Photos of the Week: Ratha Yatra in NYC, World Cup begins

(RNS) — Each week RNS presents a gallery of photos of religious expression around the world. This week’s photo selection includes a Ratha Yatra in New York City, the beginning of the World Cup and more.

Opinion

[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

The theology lesson in Steven Spielberg’s ‘Disclosure Day’

(RNS) — From ‘Close Encounters’ to ‘E.T.’ to ‘Disclosure Day,’ we might begin to understand Steven Spielberg’s religious journey.
[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

Catholic rally celebrating nation’s founding offers a vision of America’s future

(RNS) — The Zeale for America 250 rally offered a window into a movement that blends Catholic devotion, conservative activism and Trump-era politics into a single narrative of American history and national renewal.

ICYMI

[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

A Native naming ceremony welcomes newly discovered spider into community of the land

PORTLAND, Ore.  (RNS and NPR) — After its discovery by a local scientist, a new spider species received a ceremonial welcome by the Yakama Nation. 
[MORNING REPORT] She left Amish life. Now millions watch her cook in Amish dress.

Hare Krishnas celebrate a 50-year milestone with a parade of chariots in Manhattan

(RNS) — More than 25,000 devotees of the International Society of Krishna Consciousness (ISKCON) attended the parade, according to organizers.

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