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TRUTH-TELLING
IN A
TIME OF TRAGEDY
What Words Dare
We Speak, When
We Dare Not Be Silent?
R.
Albert Mohler, Jr., President
The Southern Baptist Theological Seminary
Preached
September 13, 2001
Alumni Memorial Chapel
Two
Days After the Terrorist Attacks
In New York and Washington, D.C.
Preachers
are expected to speak when no one else has any idea what to say.
This is not an enviable position. Standing at the graveside, the
dying bedside, the scene of the accident, the preacher is supposed
to know what to say, when nothing seems right to say.
Sometimes,
saying nothing is best. We can be too hasty to speak, too eager
to explain, too superficial in our answer, or too arrogant in our
presumption. At other times, silence would be mere cowardice and
the abdication of calling and responsibility. To fail to speak in
these moments is to deny one's calling and to fail the supreme test
of authentic ministry.
The
Book of Ecclesiastes reminds us that there is "a time to be
silent and a time to speak" [Ecclesiastes 3:7b]. It is often
hard to know the one from the other. In most cases, we should carefully
speak and prayerfully answer and fearfully explain. This is one
of those moments.
Thousands
of preachers will stand in pulpits this Sunday and speak with trembling
lips to congregations loaded with expectancy. It could hardly be
otherwise. The pictures are replayed in our minds and on our television
screens again and again and again. We are watching the unbelievable
transformed into the undeniable.
Modern
airliners filled with passengers fly through a beautiful sky right
into two of the tallest buildings on earth. We watch transfixed,
and watch over and over again. The human mind can take only so much
reality at any one time. We soon saw images of a burning Pentagon
building and then the unimaginable-two 110-story skyscrapers falling
into the ground, reduced to a horrific mound of rubble and debris.
We
knew that thousands of human beings were dying as we watched. We
had seen persons jump from windows, preferring the quick death of
a fall to the terror of the fire. And then we saw the collapsing
towers, one by one, with disintegrating concrete, glass, and steel
reduced to particles of dust and fragments of debris.
The
symbolism was unavoidable. These two towers represented the might
and energy of the American economy, sending a message to the world
of our national power and influence. Like modern towers of Babel,
they represented our ambition to build great towers that would touch
the sky and defy gravity. Now, millions of pieces of paper floated
through the sky like grotesque confetti.
The
Pentagon is so powerful a symbol that the name needs no further
explanation. The Pentagon can unleash the power of the world's greatest
military force. Now, the Pentagon sits like a wounded giant on the
ground. The world's last remaining superpower doesn't look so powerful
through a veil of smoke.
We
know that the world will never be the same after this. We do not
want to exaggerate, but exaggeration seems almost impossible. There
are no words adequate to convey the horror, the grief, the outrage,
or the sense of disbelief.
Oddly
enough, at the very same time we cannot help talking. We are glued
to our televisions and computer screens, afraid to miss what may
come next. We are a nation of voyeurs watching a pornography of
death and destruction. It hardly seems right to watch, and it hardly
seems right not to watch.
This
is a crucial test for the Christian church. We must measure our
words carefully. We must think biblically and seek a proper perspective
into which we can put all of this. This is not easy, but authentic
ministry often comes down to saying what you know to be true when
people are desperate to hear it and no one seems to know where else
to look.
Look
with me to the Gospel of Luke, chapter 13, starting at verse 1:
1 Now on the
same occasion there were some present who reported to Him about
the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mixed with their sacrifices.
2 And Jesus said to them, "Do you suppose that these Galileans
were greater sinners than all other Galileans because they suffered
this fate?
3 "I tell you, no, but unless you repent, you will all likewise
perish.
4 "Or do you suppose that those eighteen on whom the tower
in Siloam fell and killed them were worse culprits than all the
men who live in Jerusalem?
5 "I tell you, no, but unless you repent, you will all likewise
perish."
6 And He began telling this parable: "A man had a fig tree
which had been planted in his vineyard; and he came looking for
fruit on it and did not find any.
7 "And he said to the vineyard-keeper, 'Behold, for three
years I have come looking for fruit on this fig tree without finding
any. Cut it down! Why does it even use up the ground?'
8 "And he answered and said to him, 'Let it alone, sir, for
this year too, until I dig around it and put in fertilizer;
9 and if it bears fruit next year, fine; but if not, cut it down.'
"
This
is one of those hard passages of Scripture. Tragedy and theology
intersect in the teaching of Jesus, and end up in a parable. The
background events are genuinely tragic. The context is a call to
repentance, national and individual. Most importantly, Jesus has
just warned the people of the danger of missing His own messianic
identity.
"When
you see a cloud rising in the west, immediately you say, 'A shower
is coming,' and so it turns out. And when you see a south wind blowing,
you say, 'It will be a hot day,' and it turns out that way. You
hypocrites! You know how to analyze the appearance of the earth
and the sky, but why do you not analyze this present time?"
[Luke 12:54b-56]
Now,
in chapter 13, Jesus is presented with news of a tragedy-indeed
an atrocity. Pontius Pilate has caused innocent Galileans to be
killed apparently within the precincts of the Temple, and their
blood was mixed with the blood of their sacrifices.
A more
heinous crime in Israel could hardly be imagined. Murder is mixed
with the desecration of the Temple. Jesus should be outraged, and
undoubtedly He is, but He turns the issue on those who raise it.
"Do you suppose that these Galileans were greater sinners than
all other Galileans because they suffered this fate?"
This
must have been a hard question to answer. Evidently, those who were
asked the question assumed that these victims had been allowed to
die because they were more sinful. Or, perhaps more to the point,
the living may have assumed that they were therefore more righteous
than the dead.
Jesus
then turns to another tragedy. A tower had fallen in Siloam, killing
eighteen men. Were these victims also more sinful than others, particularly
those who live in Jerusalem? "I tell you, no, but unless you
repent, you will all likewise perish."
The Christian Gospel and the Problem of Evil
Every
thoughtful person must deal with the problem of evil. Evil acts
and tragic events come to us all in this vale of tears known as
human life. The problem of evil and suffering is undoubtedly the
greatest theological challenge we face.
Most
persons face this issue only in a time of crisis. A senseless accident,
a wasting disease, or an awful crime demands some explanation.
For
the atheist, this is no great problem. Life is a cosmic accident,
morality is an arbitrary game by which we order our lives, and meaning
is non-existent. As Oxford University's Professor Richard Dawkins
explains, human life is nothing more than a way for selfish genes
to multiply and reproduce. There is no meaning or dignity to humanity.
For
the Christian Scientist, the material world and the experience of
suffering and death are illusory. In other religions suffering is
part of a great circle of life or recurring incarnations of spirit.
Some
Christians simply explain suffering as the consequence of sins,
known or unknown. Some suffering can be directly traced to sin.
What we sow, so shall we reap, and multiple millions of persons
can testify to this reality. Some persons suffer innocently by the
sinful acts of others.
But
Jesus rejects this explanation in the two cases here recounted.
We should note that the problem of evil and suffering, the theological
issue of theodicy, is customarily divided into evil of two kinds,
moral and natural. Both are included in this passage. The murder
of the Galileans is clearly moral evil, a premeditated crime-just
like the terrorist acts in New York and Washington.
Natural
evil comes without a moral agent. A tower falls, an earthquake shakes,
a tornado destroys, a hurricane ravages, a spider bites, a disease
debilitates and kills. The world is filled with wonders mixed with
dangers. Gravity can save you or gravity can kill you. When a tower
falls, it kills.
People
all over the world are demanding an answer to this question. It
comes only to those who claim that God is mighty and that God is
good. How could a good God allow this to happen? How can a God of
love allow killers to kill, terrorists to terrorize, and the wicked
to escape without a trace?
No
superficial answer will do. Our quandary is well known, and the
atheists think they have our number. As a character in Archibald
MacLeish's play, J.B. asserts, "If God is God He is not good,
if God is good He is not God; take the even, take the odd . . .
." As they see it, God can be good, or He can be powerful,
but He cannot be both.
We will either take our stand with God's self-revelation in the
Bible, or we are left to invent a deity of our own imagination.
The Bible quickly excludes two false understandings.
First,
the Bible reveals that God is omnipotent and omniscient. These are
unconditional and categorical attributes. The sovereignty of God
is the bedrock affirmation of biblical theism. The Creator rules
over all creation. Not even a sparrow falls without His knowledge.
He knows the number of hairs upon our heads. God rules and reigns
over all nations and principalities. Not one atom or molecule of
the universe is outside His active rule.
The
sovereignty of God was affirmed by King Nebuchadnezzar, who confessed
that God "does according to His will in the host of heaven
and among the inhabitants of the earth; and no one can ward off
His hand or say to Him, 'What have You done?'." [Daniel 4:36]
Process theologians have attempted to cut God's power down to size,
rendering the Creator as one power among others. The evangelical
revisionists pushing open theism have attempted to cut God's omniscience
down to size, rendering Him as one mind among others.
Rabbi
Harold Kushner argues that God is doing the best He can under the
circumstances, but He lacks the power to either kill or cure. The
openness theists argue that God is always ready with Plan B when
Plan A fails. He is infinitely resourceful, they stress, just not
really sovereign.
These
are roads we dare not take, for the God of the Bible causes the
rising and falling of nations and empires, and His rule is active
and universal. Limited sovereignty is no sovereignty at all.
The
second great error is to ascribe evil to God. But the Bible does
not allow this argument. God is absolute righteousness, love, goodness,
and justice. Most errors related to this issue occur because of
our human tendency to impose an external standard-a human construction-of
goodness upon God. But good does not so much define God as God defines
good.
How
then do we speak of God's rule and reconcile this with the reality
of evil? Between these two errors the Bible points us to the radical
affirmation of God's sovereignty as the ground of our salvation
and the assurance of our own good. We cannot explain why God has
allowed sin, but we understand that God's glory is more perfectly
demonstrated through the victory of Christ over sin. We cannot understand
why God would allow sickness and suffering, but we must affirm that
even these realities are rooted in sin and its cosmic effects.
How
does God exercise His rule? Does He order all events by decree,
or does He allow some evil acts by His mere permission? This much
we know-we cannot speak of God's decree in a way that would imply
Him to be the author of evil, and we cannot fall back to speak of
His mere permission, as if this allows a denial of His sovereignty
and active will.
Our
confession of faith states it rightly: "God from eternity,
decrees or permits all things that come to pass, and perpetually
upholds, directs, and governs all creatures and all events; yet
so as not in any way to be the author or approver of sin nor to
destroy the free will and responsibility of intelligent creatures."
God
is God, and God is good. As Paul affirms for the church, God's sovereignty
is the ground of our hope, the assurance of God's justice as the
last word, and God's loving rule in the very events of our lives:
"And we know that God causes all things to work together for
good to those who love God, who are the called according to His
purpose." [Romans 8:28]
We
dare not speak on God's behalf to explain why He allowed these particular
acts of evil to happen at this time to these persons and in this
manner. Yet, at the same time, we dare not be silent when we should
testify to the God of righteousness and love and justice who rules
over all in omnipotence. Humility requires that we affirm all that
the Bible teaches, and go no further. There is much we do not understand.
As Charles Spurgeon explained, when we cannot trace God's hand,
we must simply trust His heart.
The Reality of Evil and the Impossibility of Moral Relativism
Moral
relativism is one of the hallmarks of the postmodern worldview,
and it has become foundational to modern academic culture. As Allan
Bloom recounted in The Closing of the American Mind, "There
is one thing a professor can be absolutely certain of: almost every
student entering the university believes, or says he believes, that
truth is relative."
Professor
Robert L. Simon of Hamilton College has updated Dr. Bloom's observation:
Although
groups denying the reality of the Holocaust have raised controversies
on some college campuses, in more than 20 years of teaching college
students, I have yet to meet even one student who has expressed
doubts about whether the Holocaust actually happened. However, I
have recently seen an increasing number of students who, although
well-meaning, hold almost as troubling a view. They accept the reality
of the Holocaust, but they believe themselves unable morally to
condemn it, or indeed to make any moral judgments whatsoever. Such
students typically comment that they themselves deplore the Holocaust
and other great evils, but then they wind up by suspending moral
judgment.
This
collapse of moral judgment is not only a slander against the victims
of the Holocaust, but also a denial of the entire moral order. This
cowardly abandonment of moral judgment, the inevitable product of
the postmodern worldview, collides with reality when we see evil
acts in others and in ourselves. The Apostle Paul reminds us that
this law is known to all. We are quite efficient at ignoring or
denying this knowledge in everyday life, but the sight of airplanes
deliberately turned into missiles and flown into skyscrapers brings
this knowledge into stark and undeniable sight.
We
dare not lack the moral courage to call these acts what they are-murderous
acts of mass terror. We dare not dignify the murderers by explaining
their cause. No cause, however righteous, can justify such acts.
And, no righteous cause could produce such acts.
President
Bush rightly characterized these murders as "evil, despicable
acts of terror." We must call evil by its proper name and refuse
to slander the victims by ascribing rationality to the terrorists'
cause. These murderers were driven by an irrational rage into diabolically
rational plans for death and destruction.
Our
Christian vocabulary is absolutely essential, and "sin"
is an indispensable explanation. These acts of terror were not merely
attacks upon individuals, or attacks upon America, or attacks upon
civilization-these were attacks upon God's dignity, God's creatures,
God's law, and God's glory.
Some
persons seek a psychological explanation. The modern therapeutic
worldview assumes that all persons are basically good, and that
"antisocial" behavior is explained by environmental causes,
a lack of education, persistent frustration, or inadequate socialization.
The
prophet Jeremiah records God's analysis of our human condition:
"The heart is more deceitful than all else and is desperately
sick; who can understand it?" [Jeremiah 17:9] Our heart tells
lies even to ourselves. We are skillful self-deceivers. Human evil
is real and it is an abomination in God's sight.
As
a matter of fact, the resolution of the sin problem can come only
by God's power, and will be found in accordance with His own righteousness.
God will judge all of us, and we will bear the full wrath of His
judgment except we be found in Christ, covered by His own righteousness
imputed to us by faith.
Evil
is real, not illusory, but evil will never have the last word. The
righteous judgment of God will establish justice, and display His
glory among the nations.
The Mandate of Justice and the Temptation to Vengeance
The
blood of the victims and the sufferings of their loved ones call
out for justice. Final justice belongs to God, but our Creator has
assigned the cause of temporal justice to earthly rulers. As Paul
wrote to the Romans:
For
rulers are not a cause of fear for good behavior, but for evil.
Do you want to have no fear of authority? Do what is good and you
will have praise from the same; for it is a minister of God to you
for good. But if you do what is evil, be afraid; for it does not
bear the sword for nothing; for it is a minister of God, an avenger
who brings wrath on the one who practices evil. [Romans 13:3-4]
Even
the unbelieving ruler, who never acknowledges God, points to God's
righteousness when he executes justice. The Bible reminds us that
justice is not merely a goal, it is a mandate. We are to seek justice
and demand punishment for evil deeds.
Any
nation that would allow evildoers to go unpunished is an affront
to God's dignity. The American people are right and righteous in
demanding that the perpetrators of these acts be identified and
justice must be executed. Those who would kill forfeit their own
right to live, and those who would harbor them bring equal judgment
upon themselves.
According
to Romans 13, earthly rulers have not only the right but the responsibility
to protect their citizens from such murderous acts, to uphold justice,
and to maintain law, authority and order. Justice should be swift
and order must be restored. The entire world hangs out of balance
so long as such crimes are unpunished. This is no time for moral
cowardice. We live in a real world of real evil and our national
leaders bear full responsibility to ensure that the murderers are
punished and the threat removed.
At
the same time, sin can also be manifested in a desire to see others
suffer as we have suffered. Justice is proportional to the crime.
If a man kills the wife of another, justice does not allow the second
man to kill the first man's wife in an act of revenge. Justice is
directed at those who bear moral responsibility, not at other innocent
parties.
Revenge
is an ugly substitute for justice. Americans must not direct our
hatred at an ethnic group out of which murderers have come, but
we must demand justice and demand that all persons whose hands are
clean of innocent blood join and assist in this mandate. To refuse
this demand is to join the murderers in complicity.
We
must avoid moral cowardice disguised as pacifism and moral arrogance
disguised as warmongering. Instead, we must pray for our national
leaders as they demand justice and act to remove the threat of future
acts of terrorism. All the peoples of the earth are threatened when
international order is undermined by terrorists.
Temporal
justice is God's requirement of earthly rulers. Ultimate justice
will come when God's righteousness is established among the nations.
The Clash of Civilizations
Underlying
these acts of terror is the development of a worldwide clash of
civilizations. Many Americans live under the fiction that all persons
share a common perception of justice and a common commitment to
human rights. This is simply not the case.
Many
persons and cultures around the world do not share our commitment
to modern democratic values. The most important flashpoints in the
world order fall where different civilizations with contrasting
and conflicting worldviews come into contact.
For
most of the twentieth century, western civilization faced its greatest
challenge from fascism and international communism. These rival
systems of belief were locked in a contest for world domination.
They held very different conceptions of human rights and human dignity,
and this led to almost categorical opposition on any issue of importance.
The conflict with fascism led to a world war. The contest with communism
led to a cold war.
Western
civilization faces a particular challenge from the civilization
of Islam. We must be very careful here. It would not be fair to
accuse all Muslims of participation in violence or of celebrating
these acts of terror. This would certainly be both inaccurate and
unfair.
At
the same time, the Islamic worldview is opposed to many of the most
important pillars of western civilization. Though western secularists
seek to deny the obvious, western civilization is based upon a Christian
civilization and worldview. From the Judeo-Christian worldview of
the Bible we gained our respect for human rights and human dignity.
We have never held these ideals with full faithfulness, but no other
worldview holds human life to be sacred because each human being
is made in the image of God.
We
face what Samuel P. Huntington has identified as a "clash of
civilizations and the remaking of world order." The victims
and the perpetrators of these acts of terror represent two rival
worldviews with irreconcilable aims and principles. Islam has turned
its wrath upon the West, Israel, and Christian culture. Most particularly,
Islamic culture hates western secularism and the moral relativism
and corruption it has produced. As Huntington explains:
Muslims
fear and resent Western power and the threat which this poses to
their society and beliefs. They see Western culture as materialistic,
corrupt, decadent, and immoral. They also see it as seductive, and
hence stress all the more the need to resist its impact on their
way of life. Increasingly, Muslims attack the West not for adhering
to an imperfect, erroneous religion, which is nonetheless a 'religion
of the book,' but for not adhering to any religion at all. In Muslim
eyes Western secularism, irreligiosity, and hence immorality are
worse evils than the Western Christianity that produced them.
America
has given the Muslim world many reasons to consider us decadent
and dangerous to their concept of national righteousness and international
order. The world-wide growth of Islamic civilization presents the
West with its greatest contemporary challenge. This is hard for
secularists to understand, but in the end, theology matters.
Is This a Sign of the Lord's Imminent Return?
Callers
to radio programs and Christians in chat rooms are debating whether
these acts of terror are signs of the imminent return of the Lord.
Let us be cautioned against the twin sins of understatement and
overstatement.
Our
Lord commanded us to be aware of the times and the seasons. Signs
of His coming are identified, and a coming wave of unleashed terror
is foretold. Nevertheless, we are also warned that we must not jump
quickly to conclusions and over-read events as signs of the Lord's
immediate coming. In the end, He will return as a "thief in
the night," and the timing of our Lord's return is unknown
to us.
In
the meantime, we are to live in the hope of the Lord's coming, keep
our hearts and lives ready for His coming, look always for His coming,
and live in this expectancy. This much we know, every day we live
brings us one day closer to the Lord's return.
Furthermore,
we know that the Lord's return will bring the justice and righteousness
for which we pray. In that light, we pray Maranatha, Lord come quickly.
The
Call for Repentance
Jesus
took the occasion of the tower's fall in Siloam and asked, "Do
you suppose that those eighteen on whom the tower in Siloam fell
and killed them were worse culprits than all the men who live in
Jerusalem? I tell you, no, but unless you repent, you will all likewise
perish."
The
falling tower in Siloam killed eighteen persons. The falling of
the World Trade Center twin towers alone may have killed over 20,000
persons. They went to work Tuesday morning as any other day. They
ate their breakfasts, kissed their husbands or wives, took the dog
out for a walk, read the paper on the subway, got about their normal
business and died in our greatest national tragedy.
This
generation will remember that Tuesday morning, September 11, 2001,
as other generations remembered the attack on Pearl Harbor or the
assassination of a President. We remember where we were standing,
and the sense of unreality that came over us all. Reality has set
in.
We
are now facing one of the greatest challenges known by any people.
International terrorism is unlike any foe we have ever faced. We
are certain to be called upon to make sacrifices. Our way of life
and our most cherished ideals, are at stake. The nation must rally
around our leaders, pray for national righteousness mixed with rare
wisdom, and work to rebuild a trust so horribly violated. We must
reach out to pray for all those in peril and suffering loss, and
offer material assistance wherever we can.
Jesus
took the occasion of the tower's fall and turned it into a call
for national and individual repentance. Given our assurance that
God is in control, and working even in this unspeakable tragedy
to accomplish His will, dare we not see the horrors in New York
and Washington as an opportunity for America-and Americans-to repent
as well?
The
parable of the fig tree makes the warning clear. The owner of the
vineyard demands that his fig tree produce fruit, but there is no
fruit. Cut it down, he orders. Why does it even take up space in
my vineyard? The vineyard-keeper pleads for time to tend the tree
that it might bear fruit.
"Let
it alone, sir, for this year too, until I dig it up and put in fertilizer;
and if it bears fruit next year, fine, but if not, cut it down."
It
would be arrogance to claim that we have special knowledge of what
God is doing through and in the midst of this horrible tragedy.
But this biblical text explains that all such events are signs of
our need for repentance. Thousands must have died in New York and
many died in Washington. Like the Galileans in Jerusalem and the
victims in Siloam, many may have died impenitent and unrepentant.
Our
Lord's warning is clear, for "unless you repent, you will all
likewise perish." Clearly, Jesus was not warning that those
who heard these words were in immediate danger of Pilate's sword
or a falling tower. They were, however, in immediate danger of God's
judgment, and so are we.
This
is a time for repentance, and in the midst of this national horror,
Christians will face unprecedented opportunities to share the Gospel
and tell sinners of salvation through Jesus Christ our Lord. We
will be called upon to explain these events and to give an account.
We must tell the truth in a time of terror. By God's grace, may
we find the right words to speak, when we dare not be silent.
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