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Thomas Richmond

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Expecting the unexpected Romans 1:29-31
8/4/2007 11:18:08 AM
 They were filled with all manner of wickedness, evil ... they are
... foolish, faithless, heartless, ruthless (Romans 1:29-31 RSV).


Much of the news in Chicago the past couple of weeks has revolved
around the investigation and arrest of Christopher Vaughn, who
allegedly pulled his Ford Expedition off the road in a Chicago suburb a
little before 5:30 a.m. on June 14th in order to shoot and kill his
wife and three children. Such a horrific crime has sent shock waves
through a city that sees its share of murders. Even journalists who
report on terrible atrocities on a regular basis are searching for
"whys" for this one.

One of those journalists is Eric Zorn, a regular columnist for the "Chicago
Tribune." In his June 26 editorial, Zorn admits that he "can't stop
thinking about" the "unthinkable" murders that Vaughn is accused of
committing. Zorn describes the murders, if they occurred as prosecutors
believe they did, as "a betrayal of love, trust, decency, and
biological imperative so complete it redefines the standards of
everyday evil." He goes on:

  Christopher Vaughn, 32, allegedly took the lives that most fathers
  would unquestioningly give their lives to save. Such an inverted,
  unnatural act seems to set the world spinning backward. It taxes
  even the most jaded imagination.

Zorn's characterization is right on, isn't it? The crime of which
Vaughn is accused would be an "inverted, unnatural act." It's hardwired
into parents to protect their children, isn't it? To do something,
anything, to hurt them is impossible to imagine. And yet, however
rarely, too often we see it. In his column, Zorn asks out loud the
question this crime naturally makes us all want to ask: "What force was
strong enough to pull that trigger against the resistance of nature
itself?"

What force? We talk about mental illness, and yet that doesn't quite
cover this, does it? It's hard to explain it away as sickness, or
personality disorder, or even selfishness; we all know sick people,
people with personality disorders, or selfish people who do no such
thing. Wanting to ask the question is natural enough, but for all our
intelligence and sophistication we don't have the vocabulary to
actually answer it.

For the vocabulary we need, we have to look beyond ourselves.

How about these words?

Depravity. Wickedness. Futility. Foolishness. Darkness.

Not enough? How about these?

Senselessness. Faithlessness. Heartlessness. Ruthlessness.

Those are all words from Romans 1, where the Bible paints a lurid
portrait of the human condition in garish colors. They don't quite do
it, though, in this situation, do they? Those words all describe the
act, but they still fall well short of explaining it.

How about one more word?

God went to the trouble to remind us.

Godlessness.

At the risk of oversimplifying a horrible crime, that's really our
problem, isn't it? Godlessness. Not the kind of godlessness that comes
from ignorance. It isn't, unfortunately, that we don't know God at all.
Our real problem is that, though we have every reason to know him and
worship him as our Creator, we don't. We just don't.

What often passes for worship among us, Paul writes, is directed at
created things -- including ourselves (Romans 1:18-25). Think Adam and
Eve in the Garden, worshipping a serpent's promises, a piece of fruit,
and in the end their own impulses and desires. Godlessness: "[A]lthough
they knew God they neither glorified him as God nor gave thanks to
him." And the result? Predictable. "Their thinking became futile and
their foolish hearts were darkened."

Though only a few of us, thankfully, are actually capable of an
atrocity like this, the fact that some of us apparently are
demonstrates how fallen human beings really are -- how broken by sin
are our hearts, how twisted by evil our thoughts. We wind up hurting
the people we should love most, in one way or another. Though we're
capable of great compassion, we're equally as capable of coldness and
selfishness. Though we can and sometimes do think of others, we're just
as likely to think of ourselves. Though we can show self-discipline, it
seems we're never too far from greedily gobbling up as much as we can
of whatever we happen to want.

Call it Sin, if you want, that force that gave Christopher Vaughn the
ability to allegedly pull that trigger. But don't call it that to
absolve him of responsibility. Attribute the act to the Devil, if you
like, but not in order to say that he made the shooter do it. In the
end, the trouble in all our lives, the thing that causes havoc and pain
and disorder and sadness, is that we forget we are creatures and then
forget our Creator.

So God went to the trouble to remind us.

He reminded us by becoming one of us in Jesus and dying for us. Then
Father raised Son to life in the power of the Holy Spirit and invited
us to share that new life. In that new life, we're no longer under
sin's power. We're free to offer ourselves to God in gratitude for his
grace, free to be his children and to share in the inheritance he has
for us. We're able to break out of the world's way of life, transformed
by minds that he has renewed, to acknowledge our Creator by offering
ourselves to him in worship. And we're able to treat each other with
something that more closely approaches the love we receive from him.

In a world where family ties don't necessarily mean what they should,
in Jesus we can learn to love even those who seem far away and very
different as if they were family. That's just one way that he's
redeemed our fallenness and repaired our brokenness. That's not to say
that we don't struggle with the same sins and shortcomings, the same
sometimes inexplicable evil that plagues every other human being. But
we are not left at its mercy. In Christ, a world that sometimes seems
to be spinning backward is put to right again.

So instead of asking what force caused Christopher Vaughn to allegedly
do this terrible thing, or what force causes us to do the terrible
things we sometimes still do, we're free to ask other questions. Like,
"How am I living out the new reality that Jesus has brought about in my
life? In what ways do I still need to die to sin?" And, maybe most
importantly, "In what ways am I offering the only sacrifice that will
adequately express my gratitude to God ... myself?"
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Helen Prowd

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Re: Expecting the unexpected Romans 1:29-31
8/4/2007 6:59:53 PM
Hi Thomas,
We have had situations here that have occurred in Chicago. Basically what it all comes down to is frustration the husband and wife arguing  and someone wants to win the argument the husband gets so frustrated that he cannot get across to his wife how important certain things are to him and the only way out that he can see is to destroy what means to him the most. WHY because the wife wants control. There are women in this world who have to control it is something within themselves who feel that they have to ontrol the circumstances in their lives and no they will not budge. Unfortunately the repercussions are very extreme. And as a result they say they are not to blame, they are not prepared to admit that they are in the wrong. I feel very sorry for this man and men like who are forced into a situation to which there is no return. Yes I can see your point about evil being in the midst of all this but it stems from the woman ultimately although there are women who would disagree. Butr if one is logical and stand back and review the situation you will ultimately that it is the woman and she is pushing her point so far that the man becomes out of control. Well it has been my reflections on situations that I have come across. ok. Best wishes Thom as. Helen from down under.
H. Prowd
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Thomas Richmond

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Re: Expecting the unexpected Romans 1:29-31
8/4/2007 7:20:50 PM
Thank you for your opinions Helen, duly noted and is welcome, remember once persons experiances on life, love and marriage does not reflect on anyone elses situations, but we all must be civil and assest the situation at hand. Men are natural fighters while woman are the care givers... naturally. The times of our society reflect on how we live and breath. Everything with a grain of salt and moderation. Many times here in Hollywood we take alot for granted and give to the rich, the richer you are the more power you have as TV might want you to think... Not so! I do expect the unexpected that way i wont have to far to fall. Faith in my Lord is really the back bone to me. I will continue with your posts at another time Helen, thank you once agian for your comments and feelings on this issue. Cheers!
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Nick Sym

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Re: Expecting the unexpected Romans 1:29-31
8/5/2007 12:43:47 AM
Hi Brother Thomas


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Thomas Richmond

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Re: Expecting the unexpected Romans 1:29-31
8/5/2007 12:49:22 AM
I wish and Hope for the best my brother, most of the time the prayers work! Maybe i'll do a learning how to pray to Jesus one day. Theres already a prayer for God Psalm 23 but i'll show you what Jesus wants. Next time my friend thanks for the pen! G Nyt
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