Christian Living
Responding to Evil
I am normally loathe to react to the rhetoric of politicians and pundits encountered daily on the airways and in print. But the recent tragedies in El Paso and Dayton and the continued vitriol with which many of our would-be leaders publicly reacted have moved me to enter the arena. First, the loss of lives in these two cities, and just as tragic in my mind, the loss of lives in Chicago, Atlanta, Los Angeles, … during the same weekend, cause my heart to weep for the humanity caught up in the evil so pervasive in our world. Yet I have yet to hear anyone address the root cause of these events. Instead, each commentator positioned themselves to continue the deterioration of public discourse and fuel the flames of hatred and dissension for those who think, believe, or speak differently than they do. Each in their own way proclaimed the failure of those with different party affiliations or different electoral strata suggesting remedies that thoughtful men and women know will result in futility. Rather than react to one person’s response by calling it BS and another by claiming it as evidence yet again of racism while yet others call opponents clueless and unintelligent, maybe, just maybe, our world needs leaders that will stop the inflammatory rhetoric and instead, establish a tone of love and peaceful respect for each other and for the lives entrusted to their authority. It is my hope that these men and women will begin to understand and then to tell us that all men, all women possess a divine and sacred spirit. Possibly they can establish for the communities and the nation they represent a town square where differences of opinion or philosophy are debated by men and women whose first response to all people, opponents and colleagues, is love rooted in the acknowledgement that we are all children of our common Creator. I am quite sure he too is weeping and has been for some time. Today I pray for the transformation of the hearts of my political leaders and for the transformation of the hearts of us all. Can we replace the destructive forces of evil with genuine love? Did not Jesus do precisely this? It is a choice we have the innate capacity to make if only we exercise the will to so choose. We might begin by accepting the gifts available from those with whom we differ as opportunities to grow closer to the divine intent of God for his creation. His wisdom and will are pure and perfect and worthy of pursuit by all of us, yes, all of us.









