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Medway Messenger column, 14th September 2001: 9/11 - Judgement And Mercy |
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[This is the article I wrote in the wake of the September 11th tragedy, replacing my original article for that week. It was, however, savagely edited by someone at the paper while the regular editor was away on honeymoon. They completely cut out all that I wrote about mercy. Hopefully the complete article below will appear more balanced and Christian.] Where were you when you
heard that JFK had been shot? That was the question of my parents’ generation.
I don’t know: I was only three years old at the time, and my family would not
own a television set for another two years. Where
were you when you learned that Princess Diana had died? That’s easier: I had
just moved into Medway, was living in temporary accommodation in Lordswood, and
was due to start work here the next day. Now
the new question for our generation is, where were you when you heard of the
plane attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon? I was sitting here at
my desk, when my wife came in from work. I had not long emailed my regular
column to the paper. “Isn’t it terrible, these terrorist attacks in
America?” she called out. “What
attacks?” I asked. We turned on the TV and found ourselves affixed with a
morbid glue to ITN. If only it were a Bruce Willis movie. That
original column seems less important now. Maybe it will be printed one day –
who knows? I just had to write something different. My thoughts are all over the
shop; perhaps yours are, too. But here goes. Before
anything else, let me plead with you not to assume that your Muslim neighbours
are all secret terrorists. Whatever my own (quite fundamental) disagreements
with the Muslim faith, I know enough to realise that many Muslims share the same
abhorrence of terrorism. Do not stereotype them, do not stigmatise them, and do
not take out your anger on them. But
then let me move on to the questions I am often asked as a Christian about
justice, punishment, and forgiveness. In the Church we are often caricatured as
being weak and namby-pamby when we speak up for forgiveness. The Bible speaks of
justice as well as forgiveness. Criminals must be brought to book. But it is for
justice, not revenge. President
Bush was right to say in one of his early addresses to the American people that
there should be no distinction between the actual terrorists and those who
harboured them. To the Christian, motive and attitude of heart are just as
crucial as outward action. Jesus said that those who harbour anger are as liable
to judgement as murderers, and those who lust in their hearts are as much
sinners as adulterers. But
one distinction can be drawn between the terrorists and others involved in the
planning of these unspeakably evil acts. Let me put it in a provocative way for
a Christian: there is no forgiveness for the terrorists. Why
do I say that? We presume that the terrorists all perished on the hijacked
planes. Unless there was a last-minute repentance, they will face the judgement
of God. The Bible teaches that ‘it is appointed for mortals to die once, and
after that the judgement’. But
their co-conspirators are still alive, we assume. They still have opportunity
for repentance and forgiveness. Whether they do so is another matter, but there
have been some remarkable precedents in history. Take
the end of World War Two. Hitler and Eva Braun committed suicide, and as far as
we know there was not an ounce of repentance from the evil man himself. I may be
wrong, but I do not expect to see him in Heaven. But
at the Nuremberg war trials, something remarkable happened. An American Army
padre named Henry Gerrick was appointed to be a chaplain to those accused of war
crimes. The Nazis had killed his only two sons: imagine how he felt in having to
minister to them. Of
the twenty-one prisoners, sixteen requested his services. He gathered them
together and told them of a God of mercy, whose Son Jesus Christ had died for
their sins. Some, like Goering, sneered, despite the pleas of his own daughter.
But others, including von Ribbentrop, Keitel, and Frick, went to the gallows,
accepting their earthly punishment but saying their confidence was placed in the
mercy of God and the death of Christ. It
is in that mercy that we all find our only hope in eternity.
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Copyright © David D Faulkner, 2006 except where other sources are attributed or noted as inspiration. |