|
Five years
ago today, Oklahoma City families experienced Golgotha firsthand
in a bombing without precedent on American soil. Tomorrow, Holy
Thursday, we observe the first anniversary of yet another bitter
tragedy, the Columbine High School massacre in Littleton. The people
of Oklahoma and Colorado are linked by a common experience of burying
the innocent. But we are also linked by our faith in a God who showed
us how to love, and now asks us to be agents of His love in a violent
world.
We offer these
thoughts in that spirit:
The killings
in Oklahoma City, Littleton, and elsewhere in the time since, are
heartbreaking, but they are not senseless. In a way, they make perfect
sense. They are the fruit of a culture which is rapidly losing its
reverence for the sanctity of human life and the dignity of other
persons. A culture which already ratifies violence through abortion
on demand and capital punishment. A culture which methodically erodes
its own sense of community by marketing self-absorption in order
to fuel sales and profits . . . and then wonders why the result
is impatience, leading to anger, leading to more violence.
Art, music,
drama, law and architecture are windows on a people's soul. So is
advertising. So are video games. So are films and television. Therefore,
we must ask: If American young people see 8,000 murders and 100,000
other acts of violence on television before they leave elementary
school; if they're offered a steady diet of virtual reality and
simulated sex and brutality; if they're told relentlessly that they
deserve what they want, right now; and if more than 200 million
guns now circulate around the country, why is anyone surprised at
the bloodshed?
Without ever
intending it, we have created a culture in which community has been
displaced by personal consumption; where pre-teens carry guns in
their backpacks to protect themselves at school; where the median
for teens who receive an allowance is $50 a week; where TVs and
computers can absorb more than five hours of the typical child's
day; where only a quarter of our families are intact and "traditional;"
where "Choose Life" license plates are attacked for being a political
statement against a woman's so-called right to choose; where scientists
can map an entire human chromosome but remain ignorant of the secret
yearnings of the human heart.
Without ever
intending it, we have confused freedom with mere choices, and turned
individual rights into a kind of idolatry. Some argue that we need
easy access to deadly weapons to guarantee our freedom. This is
a lie. Some argue that if we ban pornography and violence from our
entertainment media, we undermine the liberties guaranteed by our
Constitution. This is an even more cynical falsehood. In fact, we
are already unfree -- tyrannized by our lack of courage, concern
for one another, and common sense. And we are paying the price for
this unfreedom with the lives of minority children gunned down in
the inner city, middle-class children shot dead in the suburbs,
and average citizens murdered by terrorism. The glue holding us
to together as a nation is coming undone through our own selfishness,
and nothing has demonstrated it better than the cover story of a
recent Sunday news magazine entitled: "The New American Consensus:
Government of, by and for the Comfortable."
But comfort,
as we have so bitterly seen, is not safety.
No culture
can finally outrun the conflicts in its heart. For Christians, Holy
Week is a time to look honestly at our own sinfulness, to repent,
to turn to God, and to "choose life" (Deut 30:19). For 200 years,
Americans have been a great people, a nation committed to the sanctity
and dignity of the human person, born and unborn. It is not too
late to be so again -- to walk away from a culture of violence and
death and to embrace what Pope John Paul II aptly calls the "culture
of life" . . . the "civilization of love."
"For my thoughts
are not your thoughts; neither are your ways my ways, says the Lord."
The families
of the victims of the Oklahoma City bombing and the Columbine High
School massacre have carried the cross of Jesus Christ as few of
us ever will. May we help to give meaning to their suffering by
a conversion in our own lives -- a conversion which becomes an example
and leaven for others, so that our ways join in Christ's way of
salvation, which leads to Easter and to life.
+ Eusebius
J. Beltran, Archbishop of Oklahoma City
+Charles J. Chaput, O.F.M. Cap. Archbishop of Denver
|