Here we go again. At least 26 people killed and 20 wounded
at a mass shooting in Texas.
As in too many recent incidents, the gunman has committed
an act of vicious, senseless violence against innocent people as the world
watches—apparently helpless to stop what Pope Francis calls “hatred and
homicidal madness.”
In the face of this madness, we are tempted to give up all
hope of ending the violence. But Pope Francis urges us to do the opposite. He
wants us to redouble our efforts to pray for peace and for the conversion of
those who would do us radical harm. Hope, not despair, is the solution to
terrorism. Jesus, the source of all our hope, commands us to love our enemies
and to pray for those who persecute us.
The understandable reaction of political leaders and law
enforcement is to search for motives. But it makes no difference whether the
madmen who commit these unspeakable crimes are religious fanatics who share a
terrorist ideology or deeply disturbed individuals acting alone. In all cases, the pope tells us, the ultimate
solution is to ask the Lord to convert the hearts of these madmen and free the
world from hatred and homicidal madness that abuses the name of God in order to
sow death.”
It’s bad enough that evil people kill men, women and
children randomly and without regard to their innocence. But to do so in God’s
name—or in his house—makes the homicidal madness blasphemous, a mortal sin
against God as well as humanity. Our response cannot be more bloodshed, which
is why Pope Francis vigorously opposes capital punishment. Even the heinous
acts of terrorists do not justify an equally violent response. Even evil men
and women are subject to God’s mercy and the profound hope that they will one
day experience conversion from a belief in the God of vengeance to a personal
encounter with the God of Love.
Love our enemies and pray for those who persecute us? Even
deranged madmen who take innocent lives by opening fire in a church or by turning
ordinary vehicles into weapons of mass destruction?
Yes. We must ask the
Lord to convert the hearts of all who would harm us and free the world from violent
acts that abuse the name of God.
It is equally important to pray for the victims, their
families, the first responders and caregivers. These suffer the immediate
effects of the hatred and homicidal madness that terrorism spawns. These women
and men cry out to us for our prayerful support in their hours of anguish and
need. Not to pray for them would mean succumbing to the “sin of Indifference”
that Pope Francis has repeatedly condemned. We dare not let the increasing
frequency of violent attacks here at home and abroad blind us to the suffering
of victims and their families or to the heroism of those who are called to
protect us and care for us even in the most horrific circumstances.
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Even in the worst of times, joy always endures. |
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