Certain
new theologians dispute original sin, which is the only part of Christian
theology which can really be proved. Some . . . in their almost too fastidious spirituality, admit divine
sinlessness, which they cannot see even in their dreams. But they essentially
deny human sin, which they can see in the street. G.K. Chesterton, Orthodoxy
The reality of Evil is one of the great universals, one of the greatest facts of human existence. The recent mass murder at Marjory Stoneman Douglas High School in Parkland, Florida is just the most recent reminder that
there are always people who feel the need to visit inexplicable pain and
suffering on their fellow men and woman.
The Temptation of Christ, Ary Scheffer |
Even if we do find a way to offer more protection to school children,
however, or come up ways to shield other vulnerable people, there will always
be another Nikolas Cruz, and another after that, looking to inflict unprovoked,
senseless wickedness on humanity at large.
The problem goes back to original sin, as Chesterton points out in the
quote at the top of this post. No public policy or law can ever fully protect
us from the murderous rages of our fellow men and other manifestations of moral
darkness; the Evil will be with us until the last of us returns to our Maker,
as it has been with us since our first parents first heeded the sinuous
whispers of the serpent in the Garden of Eden.
Not that this is news: our fathers in faith knew it 3,000 years
ago. In Psalm 10, for instance, we
see:
In arrogance the wicked
hotly pursue the poor;
let them be caught in the schemes which they
have devised.
For the
wicked boasts of the desires of his heart,
and the man greedy for gain curses and renounces
the LORD. (Psalm 10:2-3)
Not
only that, it is clear that the wicked often seem to get away with their
misbehavior, and sometimes even appear to flourish:
His ways prosper at all times; thy judgments are
on high, out of his sight; as for all his foes, he puffs at them.
He thinks in his heart, "I shall not be
moved; throughout all generations I shall not meet adversity." (Psalm 10:5-6)
To
us fallen people in a broken world it does often appear that crime pays, and
that vice is rewarded. It can leave us wondering what role a supposedly just
God plays amid the carnage. This, in fact, is an argument often put forward by
unbelievers (generally known as The Problem of Evil): if God is good and
loving, why does he allow such horrible things to happen to good people?
This argument makes a certain amount of
sense, but only if we believe that this world is all there is. If the problem is
something beyond us (such as original sin and the resulting loss of grace), it
is only reasonable that the true solution lies beyond us as well, just as a God
capable of creating this universe must necessarily operate outside and beyond
it. Psalm 10 looks to this God, not the
strawman policeman god of the atheists’ objection:
Thou dost see [Lord]; yea, thou dost note
trouble and vexation, that thou mayest take it into thy hands;
the hapless commits himself to thee; thou hast
been the helper of the fatherless.
Break thou the arm of the wicked and evildoer;
seek out his wickedness till thou find none.(Psalm
10: 14-15)
Of course, saying “it’s all in God’s
hands” can sound like an evasion, an airy dismissal of brutally concrete
suffering and injustice. One of the
reasons why pictures such as the photos of anguished parents and other loved
ones that came out of Florida last week are so effective is that they put actual
human faces on the tragedy; there are no corresponding photographs of Godly
Wrath in the hereafter. It is therefore
all too easy for doubters to mock our prayers and dismiss altogether the
reality of divine retribution.
Joel Auerbach/AP photo |
Sometimes, however, we can catch a glimpse
of the bigger picture through the material clutter of this world. For instance, I was especially struck by one
in particular of the news pictures from the Florida high school shooting, a heart-wrenching photo which
showed two anguished women embracing at the scene of the crime. One of the women
was distinguished by a large cross of ashes on her forehead. The killing took place on Ash Wednesday, and
the woman in the picture had quite clearly been to church that morning to “get
her ashes” and to be reminded that she, along with the rest of creation, would
someday return to dust. The fact of our own finitude in this world and the ultimate destruction all our works
is also part of the message of Psalm 10:
The LORD is king for
ever and ever;
the nations shall perish from his land.
O LORD, thou wilt hear the desire of the meek;
thou wilt strengthen their heart, thou wilt
incline thy ear
to do justice to the fatherless and the
oppressed,
so that man who is of the earth may strike
terror no more. (Psalm 10: 16-18)
“The
Nations”, that is, all that seems most solid and powerful in this world, “shall
perish”, and “man who is of the earth” can strike his terror for a mere instant
before he’s gone. What’s really solid
and powerful is The Lord, the Champion of the meek, the fatherless, and the
oppressed, and he is “King for ever and ever”.
For that reason the ashes we wear on Ash Wednesday are a sign of
Hope. Along with the powers and princes
and bullies of this world, the pain and suffering of this world will also turn
to dust and be gone.
Even more, these Lenten ashes, palm ashes
imposed in the Sign of The Cross, give us a reason for hope greater than the human
author of Psalm 10 could know. These ashes remind us that the God who is above
and beyond did more than just incline his ear,
but emptied
himself, taking the form of a servant, being born in the likeness of men. And
being found in human form he humbled himself and became obedient unto death,
even death on a cross. (Phil 2:7-8)
The Cross points to the Infinite God who took on our limited humanity,
and took all our pain and suffering on his own shoulders. Not only does He truly accompany us in our
misfortunes, He makes even the most horrendous of the injustices we suffer in
this world a pathway of Grace, a path to Him. This is why we call those who suffer and die in his service martyrs, from the Greek word for "witness". They witness with their lives that God truly blesses us in our suffering.
Again, the point is not that we shouldn’t work against particular manifestations
of evil in this world. It would have
been a much better thing if the Florida shooter had been stopped, better still
if he had never conceived the desire to destroy innocent life. It’s just and appropriate for us to work to
prevent such things from happening again.
The point is that we can never realistically hope to make this world a
place completely free from evil: The Fall has given us a propensity to sin, and
the father of sin will be with us until the end. Our true Hope lies in Heaven.
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