ONE thing we have to get used to is
more violence of Paris proportions. We’ve known this for decades, but it’s only
as we enter another phase of trauma over the attacks in Paris do we realise how
close terrorism is to us all. We cannot escape it. It’s part of our system now.
Notwithstanding the fear that
intuits, there’s a great deal of confusion and grief and bewilderment going around;
an outpouring for the people of France, and a fresh torrent for Beirut and
other regions, too.
Growing up in the 1980s there was a
constant fear of nuclear war. The 90s brought us the HIVAIDS crisis. Since 9/11
it’s been terrorism. We’ve always had something on a global stage to fear.
But grief is different.
Children watch the extended Media
coverage and may not know how to unpack their reactions. They may not know how
to unpack their parents’ reactions. Then there’s social media. Of course, there
are the inevitable hero stories that restore our faith in the goodness of humanity
to draw together in unified solidarity. Thank God for propaganda… truly: one
good thing in our technologically advanced world.
Grief is the response we have, in
this case, for the loss of our freedoms. Change is coming because of extremists’
perversion of a life they don’t deserve. But we’d be grossly selfish if that’s
all we lamented.
Seconds is all it took. A bomb
blasts. Gunfire rings out around a packed arena. Bullets fly around a rock
concert. The innocence of a pure moment is putrefied. The joy turns immediately
to mass panic, to shock, later to anger, to numbness, to wailing, and to a
myriad cycle of out of control grief. What was lost can never be regained. What’s
lost is gone forever. Lives have been derailed and they can only ever be
rerailed on a completely different track. One life has ended without warning and
a new normal of unanticipated and unending grief has begun.
Paris and the morning after seconds
of madness. We lament the end of being human. A moment such as Paris had — many
millions of fragments of the same moment in time — was birthed out of hell
itself.
Oh for
Paris we weep,
Our heart
of hearts they mourn,
May God
comfort those
Whose grief’s
so deep,
And give them hope at dawn.
Compassion has no words of
condemnation in an outrageously awful time. It’s a love that bears, hopes,
believes and endures. For anyone affected, be it compassion that is availed to them.
***
What response to the Paris attacks is
dignifying in the sight of God? It is to act justly, to love mercy, and to walk
humbly.
A part of Paris died on Friday the 13th,
but God will resurrect her people and her land, and heal her hope. It’ll take
some time. But inevitably many will be made stronger for what they’ve been innocently
and irrevocably called to endure.
We’re so sorry for their loss.
© 2015 Steve Wickham.
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