On Apple’s Tribute to Steve Jobs One Year Later

Pulling into the Gate in Amsterdam Airport

I remember landing in Amsterdam on October 5, 2011 after being in the air for almost 10 hours. I turned on my iPhone and AP news alerts started pinging my phone as happens when a “world event” takes place. I read through the Fox News, CNN, Sky News alerts and articles, and read through my Twitter and Facebook feeds. As we pulled up to the gate I had already received the text below from Deborah (yes I have all my text messages from years ago), a message received in my hand sitting on a runway in the Netherlands thousands of miles away from Auburn, Alabama.

Text Message From Deborah
Text Message From Deborah

As we pulled up to the gate I took the photo above of the Delta flight parked next to our gate, pulled it into my Camera+ app, put a boarder around it and posted it to Instagram. At this point I had already checked my email, responded to a few emails, and looked up our connecting flight information. All from a small piece of metal, glass, and plastic that didn’t exist a few years earlier.

This may sounds like a lot of poetic musings for a phone, but for some reason my mind wasn’t ready for this particular piece of news that morning, and it confused me. I was on my way to Africa, and the only reason I was going to have any personal connection with my wife halfway around the world was because Steve Jobs had decided he was going to invent and create what I was holding in my hand.

Here was a man who shared no convictions with my faith, a brilliant man who had no understanding beyond the pluralistic view of Christianity known for centuries mixed with his version of Buddhism. He just couldn’t go beyond his own understanding and even made this statement to Isaacson:

“The juice goes out of Christianity when it becomes too based on faith rather than on living like Jesus or seeing the world as Jesus saw it,โ€ he told me. โ€œI think different religions are different doors to the same house. Sometimes I think the house exists, and sometimes I donโ€™t.”

Yet I still felt some connection, even if a minor one, with Jobs, sitting on a runway in Europe, as if the plane full of people melted away leaving me and my connection with Jobs sitting in my hand. He shared none of my beliefs, yet he changed the world, my world, and still does on a daily basis. After I got home from Africa I read, back to back, the biography on Steve Jobs and the biography on Dietrich Bonhoeffer by Metaxas. What an amazing contrast of times and cultures, beliefs, and both had the ability to change the world. Ultimately in death, as we all will do some day, either looking to what lies ahead, one perhaps clinging to life here on earth, so did these two great men.

I boarded the plane to Africa, still thinking about Jobs’ fate and wrote this as we took off.

The biggest surprise to me so far [on this trip], was upon landing, finding out that Steve Jobs died. I was truly saddened to hear this. I know we are all temporary to this world, but this man, who for all accounts wasn’t a believer, changed the world. He forever changed the way the world communicates, how we are connected with each other, and the reason I can talk to Deborah from this plane in Europe while she is in Auburn.

He affected so many people through his innovations. How are we to greave his death? I’m saddened over his death as if he was someone I knew personally, and at the same time I really don’t know why either. Death seems so imminent for all of us, especially when you hear about Jobs dying at 59. I know why we die, the fall created this and Christ had to die for us, but it’s still so hard to understand. I didn’t even know Jobs, but I will miss him. The new iPhone announcement yesterday had people wanting to see Jobs at the event, people who never knew, other than God, that he would die the very next day. I pray for his soul.

I’m not even really sure why I write this today other than to acknowledge the gravity this one person had on our world. A person I vastly disagree with on almost all aspects of life, yet he was someone who had a positive impact on so many people.

Jobs once said “simplicity is the ultimate sophistication,” which really became his whole life philosophy, and was carried on today by Tim Cook and Apple with the video on their front page and the letter below. What other for-profit company would take down their entire front page just to show a 2 minute tribute video. Simplicity and sophistication.

๐Ÿ”ต Cat:

40 responses to “On Apple’s Tribute to Steve Jobs One Year Later”

  1. Larry Who Avatar

    General Ulysses S. Grant was a great leader who turned the Union army around in the Civil War. His understanding of how to win this horrible war made him an American hero, which eventually propelled him into the White House. He was a man who adored his wife and children, had compassion on the Southern forces at Appomattox, but yet, he was an unbeliever. Even on his deathbed, he rejected the gospel.

    To be honest, I’m more saddened to know the story of General Grant’s unbelief than I am of Steve Jobs. Jobs’ character was not 1/100th of Grant’s character. And yet, most likely, both men fell short in their races for eternity.

    Just so you know, I have an iPhone and love Apple products.

    1. Scott Fillmer Avatar

      Larry, yup, agree completely, and I don’t think even Jobs would claim a virtuous character as Grant certainly had as you point out. -S

  2. segmation Avatar

    I think it is interesting how Steve Jobs affected most of our lives and how many as of remember where we were the day Jobs died, don’t you agree?

    1. Scott Fillmer Avatar

      yeah, that’s kinda weird but it was like one of those world news events where we remember where we were at the time indeed.

  3. earwaxdissertation Avatar

    Though Jobs may have not have been a believer in a religion, he seemed a huge believer in the human potential which is what many people sadly lack. Life is hard. One gets beaten down, sidetracked, and institutionalized so easily. It takes a strong person of faith to believe in what may seem impossible esp. if it is something that may benefit mankind.
    But who knows what is in a persons heart at their point of death. Who is to say some Christians (or followers of any religion) don’t start having doubts and spiritual upheavals on their deathbed. We wont know til we are staring death in the face.
    Still, as I used to tell my best friend in college, you could be the best looking person, the most intelligent person, the richest person, but it doesnt mean crap if you are still an asshole.

  4. largerthanlifeblog Avatar

    Thanks for writing and sharing this post about the extraordinary human being, for whom, we have the privilege to lead an “Appled life” and it did matter when he passed away. And tons of congrats on FP!

    Sayori

  5. freebirdmani Avatar

    It is a give and take relationship between our plane of life. Sometimes we only see what we are sold and not the whole stories behind it. I am sure everyone has a story of their life where some reach those heights and some die while reaching there. As a matter of fact we all are famous but depends on how we want to live, share or change our lives. Some people do simple things and some people work in APPLE or MS or whatever big names you can think of. Change is an option given to us all – the choice is ours of how we change lives. Some people see things beyond one life, one family and one community.

    RIP Steve Jobs

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