Is he alone who has courage on his right hand and faith on his
“Is he alone who has courage on his right hand and faith on his left hand?”
Thus spoke Charles Lindbergh, the man who crossed the vast and silent Atlantic alone, carried not by companions but by the twin wings of courage and faith. His words rise from that sacred solitude where fear and hope wrestle in the human heart. For Lindbergh knew, as all heroes must, that true strength is not found in numbers, but in the steadfast company of one’s own virtues. A man who walks with courage beside him and faith within him is never truly alone, even when surrounded by nothing but the endless sky.
This quote was born from one of the most daring acts in human history — Lindbergh’s solo flight across the Atlantic Ocean in 1927. Thirty-three hours of isolation, with no voice but the wind, no sight but water and cloud. The darkness stretched on without end, and yet within that darkness burned a light that never faltered: the light of purpose, of belief. When he asked, “Is he alone?” he was not questioning his solitude, but affirming his companionship with spirit. Courage steadied his hand upon the controls; faith whispered to his heart that he would endure. Together, they were his unseen allies — more faithful than any crew.
In truth, this question reaches beyond the skies and speaks to all who stand before the impossible. The ancients understood this mystery well. The Greek hero Odysseus, though lost upon strange seas and beset by gods and storms, was never truly alone, for he carried within him the courage of his journey and the faith of his return. Likewise, the prophets and saints of every age walked into deserts and mountains, leaving behind all human aid, yet they were not forsaken — their courage was their staff, their faith their fire. Lindbergh’s words echo this eternal truth: that the greatest companionship is born within the soul.
To have courage is to confront the unknown without trembling. To have faith is to trust that, even in the dark, the path still leads somewhere meaningful. When these two walk beside a person, loneliness becomes sacred solitude, and fear transforms into freedom. Lindbergh, alone above the world, found that he was in the company of something vast — a presence beyond sight or sound, felt only by the heart. The ocean beneath him was not emptiness but eternity, and in that eternity he felt the hand of destiny guiding his flight.
This lesson has been repeated in every generation by those who dare greatly. Consider Rosa Parks, who sat alone on a bus in quiet defiance, her hands trembling perhaps, yet held steady by the same two companions — courage and faith. In that moment of isolation, she was surrounded by the power of what is right. Though the world outside was hostile, the world within her was unshaken. Like Lindbergh, she proved that one person, guided by conviction, is never alone.
So too must we learn this truth in our own time. The world teaches us to fear solitude, to seek constant affirmation, to measure our strength by how many stand beside us. Yet the wise know otherwise: that the heart, when fortified by faith and courage, is stronger than an army. The storms of life will come — loss, doubt, hardship — and in those moments, one must stand as Lindbergh stood in his cockpit: steady, silent, and certain. For no darkness can conquer the one who believes in the light that burns within.
The lesson of this quote is timeless: cultivate your courage and nourish your faith, for they are the truest companions you will ever have. When fear surrounds you and help seems far, remember that these two forces live within your grasp — courage on your right hand to act, faith on your left to endure. Trust them as Lindbergh trusted his wings, and they will carry you across whatever ocean lies before you.
And so, remember this: no one is alone who walks with courage and faith. The body may travel in solitude, but the spirit is never without allies. The brave heart is always in the company of the eternal. Like Lindbergh in his lonely flight, each of us must dare to rise above the horizon of fear, knowing that though the world below may vanish into cloud and shadow, we are never truly alone — for courage flies beside us, and faith lights the sky ahead.
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