My heart broke hearing about the 20 innocent children and 6
adults massacred in Connecticut today. There is never enough to say when lives
are so unjustly taken, especially so many and so young. Unfortunately, these events
are not so uncommon. And why is that? Maybe, in light of these events, we
should examine the modern human condition. How was such a shooter created? Why
are we mortified at these events, but so few are shocked at the millions of
babies massacred everyday through abortion?
We are desensitized. Most have blocked out reality and
created their own world of superficiality and technological ‘joy’. We have lost
our human connection. Communication is faceless and our time for others is but
a moment—in a tweet or a text message. God is dead or does not exist, and
therefore there is no right or wrong. Family is no longer a priority, but a
burden in the crazy flux and flow of our lives.
It is no wonder then that such a monster was born from our society. Such
nihilistic values have shaped us into unfeeling and lifeless creatures.
But we know in the core of our being that this is not Man’s
purpose. Our purpose is to love. We must pray, certainly, for the poor souls
lost today… especially for the shooter who, clearly, was in tremendous
spiritual and mental turmoil. But let today also be a reminder that we are
still killing hundreds, if not thousands, of children everyday to serve own
selfish whims.
Twenty children were shot today, but many more were torn
from their mother’s womb without having a chance to make their mark on the
world. Violence is never good, whether it is in the privacy of a medical clinic
or in a school—two places where humans, especially children, should feel safe. Ever
since the Fall of Man, violence against the innocent has long been a horror.
The Slaughtering of the Innocents in the Old Testament came quickly to mind
after hearing of the terror in Connecticut. It seems that children, even those
who are unborn, suffer the most from Man’s shortcomings. We should be ashamed
of ourselves. We are all responsible for the sufferings of these little ones,
just as we are all responsible for the death of Christ.
How sad that a man should feel compelled to kill dozens of
people to make a statement. This is an extreme, but a very real example of what
our disillusionment can spawn. Lack of love produces a lack of life. That is
truly the root of the problem—our lackluster disposition toward faith and love,
and lacking the passion about what matters in life. We have gotten so caught up
in our own Dante-ish whirlwind, that we find ourselves absentmindedly tiptoeing
over the dead bodies piling higher. We no longer understand Joy as something
attainable—in this world we must simply accept the ugliness and try to patch it
over with superficial distractions. We are a hopeless race.
This same attitude of death and hopelessness is what brought
Christ to the Cross. The fallen human condition causes us to crucify and kill
those things which are most beautiful and most innocent. Our pride blinds us to
what we know is greater and more pure than ourselves, and out of envy, we must
destroy it. But Christ has conquered sin! Now, with Him, we can accept what is
beautiful and remove the real evil within ourselves. The world cannot and will
not change unless we first concentrate on what is truly corrupt—our own hearts.
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