Let's
start with the good news: The Independence Day weekend ended without a
terror attack in the U.S. There was a day when such an announcement
would not be news at all. But we live in a different world than we have
ever seen before.
Over the weekend, suicide attackers launched three strikes in Saudi
Arabia. Families are searching for loved ones after a suicide bomb truck
killed more than 200 in Baghdad. As Ramadan closes today, recent
jihadist attacks have killed scores of people in Jordan, Lebanon, Yemen,
and Bangladesh. Closer to home, Americans were charged or indicted last
week in
three Islamic terror cases.
CIA Director John Brennan spoke recently to the Council on Foreign Relations. He
told the Council that he had never witnessed a time with "such a daunting array of challenges to our nation's security."
The director cited uncertainty in Europe following Brexit, escalating
terror threats, and global instability that has displaced sixty-five
million people (the highest figure ever recorded). Cybersecurity and
risks from evolving biotechnology rounded out his list of threats we
face.
While the challenges of our day are unprecedented, the fact that we face
challenges is not. On this day in 1776, America's future was uncertain,
to say the least. We had declared our independence from the world's
greatest superpower and now faced the British Empire's wrath. Of the
fifty-six signers of the Declaration of Independence, twelve fought in
battle, five were captured and imprisoned, seventeen lost property to
British raids, and five lost their fortunes. All risked their lives for
the sake of their country and the cause of freedom.
Challenges reveal character. C. S. Lewis noted that "courage is not
simply one of the virtues, but the form of every virtue at the testing
point." The reason we can be courageous in every circumstance is that
our Lord offers "the immeasurable greatness of his power toward us who
believe" (Ephesians 1:19). Wherever we are, he has been. Whatever we
feel, he has faced. And more.
Elie Wiesel died over the weekend at the age of eighty-seven. The
Holocaust survivor and Nobel Peace Prize winner lost his entire family
in the Nazi concentration camps. His first memoir was titled
Night, one of the most powerfully moving books I have ever read.
In it he tells the story of a young boy who was convicted of sabotage
and sentenced to die. The prisoners were made to watch as he was hung.
Wiesel describes what happened: "For more than half an hour he stayed
there, struggling between life and death, dying in slow agony under our
eyes. And we had to look him full in the face. He was still alive when I
passed in front of him. His tongue was still red, his eyes were not yet
glazed. Behind me, I heard [a] man asking: 'Where is God now?' And I
heard a voice within me answer him: 'Where is He? Here He is—He is
hanging here on this gallows."
Was the Jewish writer was more right than he knew?
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