Music is unconditional.
It plays—I listen. Or not. When I
turn on my stereo and tune into Alabama Public Radio, music pours forth from my
speakers, filling the room and cascading upon me in such a way that I can be
drawn into its depths and float in its ethereal melodies. I can choose to be engulfed in the notes and
sounds of wind and string instruments in such a way that it stirs my soul. Or, I can turn on my radio and allow the
music to enter the room, but not enter me.
I may hear it, vaguely maintaining awareness of it, but in no way
connecting with it. The music hasn’t
changed—it pours forth from my speakers unconditionally—regardless of whether or not I listen. I am
responsible for whether or not I hear it, not the music. The very nature of music is to present itself
in a particular way. But to listen to
music requires one to be in relationship with it, to choose it, to engage
it. The music is there. The question is—am I?
Last week there was another mass shooting. This time the shooting took place at a movie
theater in Lafayette, LA. Two people
were killed, nine injured, and the shooter took his own life. After hearing about the shooting, I posted on
Twitter, “3 mass shootings in a month.
Lord have mercy. Christ have mercy. Lord have mercy. #Lafayette
#Chattanooga #Charleston.” I grew up in
the Catholic and Episcopal traditions and we often say this prayer during the
season of Lent as a preparation for delving into the Word. Lent is a penitential time; the shooting in
Lafayette felt like it needed a penitential response (for reasons I am not
going to go into—that’s another post).
The next morning when I looked at my Twitter feed, I had one reply. Steve_J wrote, “What has the US done to cause
Christ to show mercy to the US, much less the rest of the world?”
It took me a while to reply to Steve_J for three reasons:
1.
I don’t want to get into a “back ‘n forth” on
Twitter;
2.
There is no easy answer though there is a
faithful one; and,
3.
I’m not giddy about correcting someone else’s
bad theology on social media.
We have been led to believe that we can do something to earn
or lose the love of God. This bad
theology permeates our religious culture. Nothing we can do, or not do, lessens
God’s grace and mercy for us. Just ask
the eleven disciples, the ones who abandoned Jesus on the cross and hid in the
Upper Room after his crucifixion. He
greeted them with the word “peace” after his resurrection, not judgment and
condemnation. How much more does he
greet us with that same word?
The U.S. (much less the rest of the world) can do nothing,
nothing at all, to cause Christ to show mercy upon us. Jesus pours out his mercy upon us of his own
accord. It is his nature to do so. He will not give or deny mercy based on what
we do. Instead, the conditions of mercy were met a long time ago on Golgotha. I don’t deserve
that mercy, few do, and yet, the Good News is that it is not up to us. It is up to God.
It's good that you responded to Steve_J and not me. I think I would have pointed out that one went into a theater with a gun with the intention to kill, while thousands were caring for the sick, feeding the hungry, clothing the naked, helping the poor. We aren't all bad because of the one with the gun. Lord have mercy.
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