Announcement

Collapse
No announcement yet.

Os Guinness Looks Evil in the Eye

Collapse
X
 
  • Filter
  • Time
  • Show
Clear All
new posts

  • Os Guinness Looks Evil in the Eye

    Christianity Today

    Christianity Today, Week of March 7

    Os Guinness Looks Evil in the Eye

    The author of Unspeakable: Facing Up to Evil in an Age of Genocide and
    Terror talks about "life's greatest dilemma."
    Interview by Stan Guthrie | posted 03/10/2005 09:00 a.m.
    Author and lecturer Os Guinness has written or edited more than 20 books,
    including The Dust of Death, The Call, and Invitation to the Classics.
    Earlier this month, HarperSanFrancisco published Guinness's latest work,
    Unspeakable: Facing Up to Evil in an Age of Genocide and Terror. Senior
    Associate News Editor Stan Guthrie interviewed Guinness.

    Why did you write this book, and why now?

    I actually had the date September 11 marked down in my calendar for a dinner
    discussion in Manhattan on evil, which was suddenly made all the more urgent
    by the terror strike, and I found myself in a passionate discussion of evil
    among leaders in New York and Washington.

    Far earlier than that, evil has somehow been the horizon of my life ever
    since I was born in China in World War II. Twenty million were killed during
    the Japanese invasion that swirled around us, and five million~Wincluding my
    own two brothers~Wdied in a terrible famine in Henan province, in three
    nightmarish months. My parents and I nearly died, too. Later, I witnessed
    the climax of the Chinese revolution and the beginning of Mao's repression.

    So my own life challenged me to think about the problem of evil at a very
    early age. This left me wanting to address what I have never seen elsewhere:
    a book that tackled both the personal and the public issues together: Why do
    bad things happen to good people? And what does it say of us, after the most
    murderous century in human history, that the people who did these things are
    the same species we are?

    Talk of evil is in the air, from the President's listing of the "axis of
    evil," to the televised beheadings by the Muslim terrorists and the Abu
    Ghraib prison abuses, and now the tsunami disaster. Several new books,
    including yours, are grappling with the topic. Yet you say in the book that
    we are illiterate when it comes to evil. How so?

    Sadly, the terrorist strike found the United States as unprepared
    intellectually and morally as it was militarily. This is the country with
    the most radical and realistic view of evil at its core~Wexpressed in the
    notion of the separation of powers in the Constitution because of human
    nature and the abuse of power. But various philosophies and ideas have
    undermined that view over the last 200 years, so that American views today
    are weak, confused, and divided. On one side, many progressive liberals
    still think that we humans are essentially good and getting better and
    better. On the other side, many postmoderns actually think it is worse to
    judge evil than to do evil. And in the middle, many ordinary folk plaster
    life with rainbows and smile buttons and wander through life on the basis of
    sentiment and clichés. All of these views and others are shown up as
    bankrupt by the savage reality of September 11~Wand Auschwitz and the other
    terrible atrocities right through to the ghastly spate of car bombings and
    beheadings in Iraq.

    Do you consider natural disasters like the South Asian tsunami to be evil,
    or simply unfortunate?

    Following the tsunami, we saw a rush to judgment from many Muslim, Hindu,
    Buddhist, and some Christian spokesmen. It happened for this or that reason,
    they said. This is quite wrong. We simply do not know why it happened or why
    God permitted it, and we can be as cruel as Job's "comforters" when we say
    we know why when we don't. We Christians must begin as Jesus did when he
    dismissed his contemporaries who judged the victims of the riots put down by
    Herod or those crushed by the collapsing tower. In the biblical view,
    natural disasters are the dark, sad fruit of a world gone awry because of
    the Fall, and they are clearly part of the creation that is groaning in
    anticipation of its coming restoration.

    You say modern evil is worse than evil committed in prior eras. Why?

    I am not saying we are more sinful or more evil than previous generations,
    but that we are more modern. The modern world has simultaneously magnified
    the destructiveness of evil and marginalized traditional responses to evil.
    >>From the Armenian massacre in World War I, through the Ukraine terror
    famine, Auschwitz, the Gulag, the Cultural Revolution, the killing fields of
    Cambodia, down to Rwanda, the Sudan, and the Congo, the terrible toll
    reaches into the hundreds of millions of humans killed by their fellow human
    beings. And the reason for the destructiveness is not weapons of mass
    destruction. The reason lies in the unholy marriage of modern
    industrialization and modern processes and attitudes with killing. And by
    marginalizing traditional responses, I don't just mean that notions such as
    disturbance and dysfunction have replaced sin, and "grief counselors" have
    replaced pastors. We have gone far further, and as Roger Shattuck and others
    have pointed out, we have destroyed so many moral boundaries and limits that
    we have made evil cool.

    Many in the liberal intelligentsia say monotheism~WJudaism, Christianity, and
    Islam~Wis the greatest source of man's inhumanity~Wif that is the right
    word~Wto man. Yet you say some of the worst atrocities, such as the Soviet
    Gulag and the Cultural Revolution, were committed in the name of secularism.
    Which is worse as a source of evil~Wsecularism or religion?

    Monotheism is the "great unmentionable evil" at the heart of our culture,
    Gore Vidal thundered in the Lowell Lecture at Harvard in 1992. His charge
    has been picked up widely and unthinkingly by educated people. The
    accusation is in fact ignorant, prejudiced, and dead wrong. On the one hand,
    monotheism is unquestionably the most innovative and influential belief in
    human history~Wfor instance, its link to the rise of science. On the other
    hand, more people in the last century were slaughtered under secularist
    regimes, led by secularist intellectuals, and in the name of secularist
    ideologies than in all the religious persecutions in Western history
    combined~Wmore than 100 million by the communists alone. The point is not to
    trade charges and countercharges about whether religion or secularism has
    produced more evil, but to challenge secularists to engage in serious
    discussion about public life with a great deal more honesty and humility.

    Evil can be overwhelming, both to our faith in God and to our faith in man.
    How should we respond to evil in terms of our own faith?

    It is often said that after Auschwitz there cannot be a God~Wevil is so
    overwhelming that it is the "rock of atheism." But as Viktor Frankl pointed
    out, those who say that [about evil] were not in Auschwitz themselves. Far
    more people deepened or discovered faith in Auschwitz than lost it. He then
    gave a beautiful picture of faith in the face of evil. A small and
    inadequate faith, he said, is like a small fire; it can be blown out by a
    small breeze. True faith, by contrast, is like a strong fire. When it is hit
    by a strong wind, it is fanned into an inextinguishable blaze.

    For example, Fyodor Dostoevsky wrote that he came to faith in Christ through
    "the hell-fire of doubt." The turning point for him after all the evils he
    had experienced was several hours spent looking at a painting of the descent
    of Jesus from the Cross, after which he wrote, "I do not know the answer to
    evil, but I do know the meaning of love." The Cross~Wor as I put it, "no
    other god had wounds"~Wis only one part of the Christian answer, but we need
    to have a fully strong and adequate faith.

    What would you say to someone who is suffering from evil?

    Suffering is uniquely individual, so there are no recipe answers. The first
    part of reaching out in love is to listen and try to discern where and why
    the person is hurting, and only then to bring the reassurance that the
    gospel brings to that particular hurt. We must never forget that listening
    is love, that comforting someone with an embrace without words is love, and
    that if we do not know why someone is suffering, to pretend that we do and
    say what God is doing in his or her life can be insensitive, cruel, and dead
    wrong~Was Job's comforters were. That said, evil can torture the mind just as
    it can torture the body, and it is wonderful to be able to bring specific,
    comforting truths of the gospel to bear on specific points of anguish and
    see them make a difference. For example, I have seen more people helped by
    coming to appreciate the outrage of Jesus at the tomb of Lazarus~Wand its
    significance for the notion that "the world should have been otherwise"~Wthan
    by a hundred worthy expositions of the Fall.

    How do you maintain your faith as a Christian in the face of pervasive moral
    horror?

    I think you have the question the wrong way around. Where else are we to go?
    Which other faith comes close to matching the biblical answer for its
    combination of realism, hope, and courage? Buddhism, for example, has been
    described as the most radical No to human aspirations ever formulated. And
    while I personally have sometimes admired the nobility of great atheists I
    have met such as Bertrand Russell, there is a bleakness to the nobility that
    is almost unendurable. "Atheism," in the words of Jean Paul Sartre, "is a
    cruel long term business, and I have gone through it to the end."

    In contrast to all such views, the gospel is truly the best news ever~Wwith
    its prospect of a world in which evil and suffering are gone, justice and
    peace are restored, and the very last tear is wiped away.

    Do you think the current focus on evil has any upside?

    Recognizing silver linings is not the same as knowing why God allowed
    suffering and evil in the first place. That, we simply do not know. The
    silver lining must never be made into the purpose. But in the biblical view,
    there is no such thing as "useless suffering." People often cite growth in
    character through suffering, and C.S. Lewis is famous for his idea that
    suffering is "God's megaphone" and gets our attention. A rarer silver lining
    that is very important in answer to our postmodern, relativistic,
    nonjudgmental age is that absolute evil assumes and requires absolute
    judgment. When an atheist instinctively says, "Godammit!" and actually means
    it, he is right, not wrong, and is unwittingly praying a prayer that blows
    apart his atheism.

    At the end of the day, it is challenging and sobering to look at human evil
    in the white of the eye. But from the very depths of my being, with no
    attempt at propaganda or special pleading, I would say after years of
    looking into the question, that there is no answer to human evil deeper and
    more adequate than the answer that is ours as followers of Jesus. But we
    need to speak it out, and act it out, with clarity, courage, and love today.
    The world is hungry for it, and so are many in the church.

    --Boundary_(ID_Cg4LEACj4R3JykwUU1Rarw)--
Working...
X