Your career as human beings and as Americans and as graduates of Yale is to stand on the fulcrum between fear and faith—fear at your back, faith in front of you. Which way will you lean? Which way will you move? Move forward. Ever forward.
Tom Hanks
Yale University Class Day 2011, 2011
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Hanks built his entire speech toward this stirring conclusion. After spending twenty minutes examining the eternal tension between fear and faith through history, humor, and parable, he distilled it into a single image: the graduates standing on a fulcrum, with fear behind them and faith ahead. Earlier in the speech, Hanks had called on the graduates to take concrete action by supporting veterans returning from Iraq and Afghanistan—matching their years of service with four years of their own dedicated effort. But in his final words, he broadened the charge to encompass their entire lives. The choice between fear and faith isn't made once; it's made every morning when you rise from bed. Hanks's closing—'Move forward. Ever forward.'—was both a command and a benediction, urging the Yale graduates to lean always toward faith, toward action, toward the future.