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EDITOR OF REDSTATE

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On Christmas Day of 1863, Henry Wadsworth Longfellow penned the poem “I Heard the Bells on Christmas Day.” His oldest son had been badly wounded in the Civil War the prior month and Longfellow’s wife had died in an accidental fire. Among the lines were these:

And in despair I bowed my head;

”There is no peace on earth,” I said;

”For hate is strong,

And mocks the song

Of peace on earth, good-will to men!”

One week ago in Connecticut, innocent children were gunned down.

It is not a far leap to wonder if Longfellow was right. Many have asked loudly to Christians this week “Where is your God” and “How could Jesus let this happen?”

Young men storming the beaches of Normandy in World War II, as they lay dying in the sand, would gasp, crying out for their mothers. We should not dare even try to imagine the cries of those children that terrible day — the cries left unanswered; moms and dads not coming to rescue and to comfort.

At Christmas, those who demand to know where God was must be met with compassion, but also clearly with the word “Here.” Christ did not abandon those children. He met many that day with open arms. He comforts now where parents cannot. He shines even now as a light in the darkness for those who are willing to see him.

We have become accustomed in our vernacular to treat evil as the opposite of good or the opposite of God. Evil is not an opposite; it is an absence — the absence of good, the absence of God. The act in Connecticut was evil.

God and good exist. The devil and evil do as well — the incarnation of the absolute void left in the absence of God. The existence of a Risen Lord does not exempt the world, even Christians, from evil in the world. We are all born sinners and sin affects the world as much as sun and rain and air. Bad things do happen to good people and to innocent children still unaware of the extent of human evil. It is the nature of this world and why so many long for the next.

Two thousand years ago Christ was born in Bethlehem. We focus on angels, shepherds, wise men, and the virgin birth. We focus on the miracle. We ignore the rest of the story. King Herod sent soldiers to Bethlehem where they slaughtered every boy under the age of two. The world greeted the birth of the Savior with the slaughter of innocents.

Two thousand years later, in a small town in Connecticut, the cries of children and the sounds of gun fire bring us to reflection and prayer.

And “Jesus wept.”

He weeps now. He welcomes home the little children and calls for us to persevere and, if we will, to turn back toward him and bring our society with us. But our society must be prepared to have larger conversations than whether or not we should regulate guns or bullets. We must discuss mental health. We should discuss the real nature of evil. We should know that in this fallen world sometimes there is nothing we can do.

Longfellow, his wife dead and thinking his son dying, concluded his poem that Christmas Day 149 years ago thusly:

Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
“God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
The Wrong shall fail,
The Right prevail,
With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

As you head out today for the Christmas holiday, we here at RedState would like to wish you a blessed and merry Christmas. May we all have peace on earth and goodwill to men.

COMMENTS

  • kipling

    Unfortunately, I was not shocked by the shootings. Horrified, yes. Shocked, no. Evil always seeks to destroy the innocent. We now live in a western civilization that promotes the dismemberment of the unborn in the womb in the name of liberty. We have ignored the slaughter of millions, why should we be shocked at the deaths of less than 50. Hopefully, the horror of CT will force us to reexamine our culture and change. Otherwise, it will get worse and no amount of “gun control” will help.

  • adeleintexas

    Thank you… I hope others take heart from the truth and reminders you brought forth in this piece.

    Bless the beasts and the children – God bless us one and all. Merry Christmas… Happy Hanukkah.

  • bgintn

    Erick Sir, when I hear this, “Where is your God” and “How could Jesus let this happen?”

    This video comes to mind.
    https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=xEFb1NuAG9k

  • ihateliberals

    Beautiful Post Erick. Good tidings to you and your family. The last verse of the poem sums it up.
    “Then pealed the bells more loud and deep:
    “God is not dead, nor doth He sleep;
    The Wrong shall fail,
    The Right prevail,
    With peace on earth, good-will to men.”

  • libertybelle61

    Excellent post, thank you.

  • romeg

    Thank you, yet again, Erick for a thoughtful and thought-provoking piece.

    ” Evil is not an opposite; it is an absence — the absence of good, the absence of God. The act in Connecticut was evil.”

    This is a very difficult statement to reconcile: If God is omniscient and omnipresent and omnipotent how can such a thing as this ever happen? How can an Omnipotent, Omniscient, Omnipresent God ever be Absent?

    My Christian faith teaches me that while the attributes that I ascribe above to God are true the fact that evil exists is equally true. How could Jesus have ever been crucified if the latter were untrue or how could He have risen from the grave if the former were untrue? Evil was present when he was crucified but God was not absent, not even when He, in the person of Jesus, died on that cross.

    That Adam Lanza, for whatever reason, committed one of the most senseless and hate-fueled acts since 09/11/2001 is an undeniable fact. I fear that while it is unknowable WHEN, it is undeniable that a similar act awaits us at some dreaded, moment in the future, however near or distant that may be. It will happen again because evil persists in the world. But evil, however persistent, never prevails. Your story about Longfellow provides great insight into that fact.

    When Longfellow penned those words his world was crumbling about him. By the time Lee surrendered to Grant at Appomattox some 16 months later 600,000 Americans would have given their lives believing that they, whichever side of the conflict they were on, were right; that God was on their side. Lincoln, however, knew better.

    Lincoln wrote “The will of God prevails. In great contests each party claims to act in accordance with the will of God. Both may be, and one must be, wrong. God cannot be for and against the same thing at the same time.”

    God “allows” such evil deeds only insofar as he has given his greatest creation Free Will. That freedom allows man to perpetrate the most enormous evil but, simultaneously, provides for the greatest possible human good and goodness. The men who gave the last full measure of devotion on the beaches of Normandy, the Pacific and elsewhere demonstrated that goodness in their determination to overcome one of the greatest evils ever perpetrated by man in any age.

  • runner12

    Longfellow is one of my favorite poets. Great post. Merry Christmas to all!

  • Ketih W

    Its not just President Obama who believes this http://www.theblaze.com/stories/ethicists-argue-in-favor-of-after-birth-abortions-as-newborns-are-not-persons/ Sick!

  • Ketih W

    In response to “Where is your God” or “How could God let this happen” You have to remember that Death was not apart of the original plan for us. God created the world and Man & Woman, and it was Very Good. God gave Adam one simple rule to follow, Don’t eat from this tree, Man was given free will and he used it to rebel from God and brought Sin into this world and Death along with it. We live in a Sin corrupted world and creation growns under its burden until the Day Christ comes again and restores it with a New Heaven & Earth. God bless you all, Merry Christmas

  • gizmo

    Merry Christmas, Erick & Family! We so appreciate the blog you allow us to be a part of, the wisdom & thinking points you present for us & your faith – 1st in Our God & Hos Son Jesus Christ, 2nd in America & the great experiment & 3rd in us as listeners & in sharing the ability to write & vent with you & others…
    May this New Years bring blessings & honor & glory to Our Lord & the Lord of our Country!