A Lament

The heart is more deceitful than all else
And is desperately sick;
Who can understand it?  Jeremiah 17:9

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A white supremacist rally turned deadly in Charlottesville, Virginia, on Saturday. One person was killed when a driver plowed into a crowd of people. …  http://www.cbsnews.com/videos/white-supremacist-rally-turns-deadly-in-charlottesville-virginia/

Charlottesville.  It is an unspeakable horror.

And the desperate cry is because it is not alone.

Nice.  London.  Belgium.  9/11.  Orlando.  San Bernardino.  Ferguson.  Dallas.  Sandy Hook.  Ukraine.  Syria.  Auschwitz.

This list goes on.  And on.  (Some will be offended on what is left out.  Don’t be offended; add to the list.)

Geographic names have become pseudonyms for terror and evil.

O God, do not remain quiet;
Do not be silent and, O God, do not be still.
For behold, Your enemies make an uproar,
And those who hate You have exalted themselves.
They make shrewd plans against Your people,
And conspire together against Your treasured ones. Psalm 83:1-3

“The human heart is deceitful above all else, and is desperately sick.  Who can know it?”  We are knowing and experiencing this universal human infirmity all too well.

The horror invokes passionate response, as well it should.

Passion is a wrenching of the soul.  A cry.  A scream.

Passionate response is not always well focused.  Such is the nature of passion.

Thus says the Lord,
“A voice is heard in Ramah,
Lamentation, bitter weeping.
Rachel is weeping for her children;
She refuses to be comforted for her children,
Because they are no more.”  Jeremiah 31:15;  Matthew 2:18

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In Genesis, Rachel dies giving birth while on the road to Bethlehem. In the midst of her suffering, the midwife tries to comfort her with the news that she is having another son. In this way, her child is both her cause of weeping and her hope for the future.

In Jeremiah’s day, Rachel weeps over her children once more, this time because they are being led into captivity and exile near the very spot where she is buried. She is then comforted with the promise that her children will return. Once again, her offspring are both her cause of weeping and her hope for the future.

In Matthew’s day, Rachel weeps yet again: this time over the slaughter of the children at Bethlehem. No words of comfort are given her in Matthew, but the very next verse speaks of Herod’s death and the return of Joseph, Mary, and Jesus to the land of Israel. Just as in Jeremiah’s day, the situation seems bleak, but the hope of salvation lives on.

David Lang, https://www.accordancebible.com/Why-Is-Rachel-Weeping-At-Ramah-Part-3

This is not the time for words of comfort.  This is not the time for comfort.

This is the time for anguish.  For weeping.  To refuse to be comforted.

Nor is it the time to lash out.  To respond with hatred, vitriol or vile.

This is the time for lament.  For sorrow.  For grief.  To suffer loss.

Lament does not want answers.  Lament has no capacity for answers.  All attempts at answers seem cheap, trite, shallow, even if correct, and no matter how well-meaning.  Lament wants only to wail.

So I lament.  I lament the loss of life.  I lament racism, hatred and bigotry.  I lament the utter lack of reasoned, civil discourse.  I lament the blame casting, stereotyping, and accusatory cacophony.  I lament our inability to coexist, let alone constructively engage, with people with whom we disagree.  I lament the misuse of technology and media tools to fracture and attack rather than meaningfully engage.  To build bunkers rather than communities.

The universal instinct is to fight back.  To right wrongs.  Never again.  But will unbridled response, merely passionate response, unfocused response, work?  Will it diminish evil, or add to it?  Increase peace, or hatred and acrimony?

Not to say we are to be complacent in the face of evil.  But that a better response comes from a deeper place.  A place of “gentleness of wisdom.”  Rage begets rage.  We need something better.

13 Who among you is wise and understanding? Let him show by his good behavior his deeds in the gentleness of wisdom. 14 But if you have bitter jealousy and selfish ambition in your heart, do not be arrogant and lie against the truth. 15 This wisdom is not that which comes down from above, but is earthly, natural, demonic. 16 For where jealousy and selfish ambition exist, there is disorder and every evil thing. 17 But the wisdom from above is first pure, then peaceable, gentle, reasonable, full of mercy and good fruits, unwavering, without hypocrisy. 18 And the seed whose fruit is righteousness is sown in peace by those who make peace.  James 3:13-18

I lament that there are not more peacemakers, and that I have not done more to be one.

5 thoughts on “A Lament

  1. Matt Jumper

    As Christians we need to be on our knees in prayer and on our feet in following the Holy Spirit’s prompting. Many of us, including me, are woefully deficient in these areas.

  2. Anne Elliott

    Duane, thank you for deeply challenging me. I need to get out of ‘my corner’ and be a taker down of walls not a builder of any.

  3. David Aria

    Horribly sad. There is obviously some deep rooted hatred that America still has not extinguished…..It’s shocking to me…..And two servicemen / police were killed in the helicopter working the event. One thing we need: It is a pastor hotline. All pastors and priests from all churches in the city should go and advocate for peace the next time this happens. There should be a huge email – text – phone call blast to all the pastors. We had Nazi’s, counter-Nazi’s, public safety and media, but the church was nowhere to be found. After people die, the cross shows up on the side of the road. Where was the cross BEFORE the people died?

    1. duane Post author

      Hi David. Thank you for your thoughtful reply. I agree the Church should step in to such places, before, during and after. I would not count out the possibility that she has. I would not expect the media to report it, if even aware of it. I know folks in the Church who are trained to respond and be deployed in crisis situations, and have done so.

      The photo of the cross at the top of this page is actually from Maidan Nezalezhnosti, Kiev, Ukraine, and not Charlottesville. In Kiev, the Church, both evangelical and orthodox, was very present throughout that crisis. I trust she was in Charlottesville, as well, and that she will continue to be in the coming days.

      May God lead and equip all of us, and may we respond, to be his instruments of peace.

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