A prayer vigil for those killed and wounded in the weekend Sikh temple shooting in MilwaukeeBecause we live in a largely therapeutic culture, evil is a slowly disappearing concept. But every once in a while we are shaken by a holocaust, a genocide, or the destruction of a World Trade Center, and we remember why we need that word. The Bible reminds us that we battle "evil in the heavenly places."
Psychiatrist Scott Peck wrote of meeting with a depressed
15-year-old named Bobby, who was increasingly troubled after his 16-year-old
brother killed himself with a .22 rifle.
Peck tried to probe Bobby's mind, but got nowhere. Searching for
ways to establish a bond, he asked what Bobby had received from his parents for
Christmas. "A gun," Bobby said. Peck was stunned. "What kind?"
"A .22."
More stunned. "How did it make you feel, getting the same kind of
gun your brother killed himself with?"
"It wasn't the same kind of gun." Peck felt better.
"It was the same gun."
Bobby had been given, as a Christmas present, by his parents, the
gun his brother used to kill himself.
When Peck met with the parents, what was most striking was their
deliberate refusal to acknowledge any wrongdoing on their part. They would not
tolerate any concern for their son, or any attempt to look at moral reality. Read more
Photo: Daily Herald/Mark Welsh
Photo: Daily Herald/Mark Welsh
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