There will
be wars and rumors of wars;
see that you are not alarmed. (Matthew 24:6)
Dear
Priscilla,
I woke
up to War in Europe. It is a scary thought. Few generations, I suspect, have
been as free from the reality of war as your generation. When I was in college,
the Vietnam War hung over everything. College was our way out of the
military—our way of staying out of the battle.
Even
then, the Vietnam War was one of those left over wars from the really big war
that our fathers fought—like Don, your mom’s grandpa, who parachuted with the
101st behind enemy lines. I grew up with veterans of that big war. Seems each
had a story to tell; or, not to tell. Some bore the story of war on their body
like the tall man in our congregation with his disfigured face and blinded eyes
led around by his beautiful wife. My dad told me they were engaged when he went
off to war; and, she married him when he returned.
One
in particular, a tall, my dad told me handsome man, but when I saw him his face
was disfigured and his eyes were blind; and, his beautiful wife lead him about
by the hand (That’s the other part of the story my dad told me, how when he
came back blind and disfigured, his beautiful girlfriend married him.)
As
you learned in you Biblical Studies class last semester, the Bible story is a
history of wars: Assyria, Egypt, Syria, Babylon, Persia, Greece, and Rome. Not
to mention all those little wars with the “Hittites, Girgashites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites,
Hivites and Jebusites” (Josh
3:10). Who
did I miss; oh yes… David and the Philistines, especially that Philistine
giant. Little wars remains real wars for those engaged in battle.
The
Big war is way behind you—long before you were born. But, come to think of it,
you have known, as our Lord prophesied: “wars and rumors of wars;” haven’t you.
It’s just that this one—the one I woke up to this morning; is too much like
that Big one. Jesus would not have us follow the illusions of the false
prophets who proclaim “‘Peace, peace,’ when there is no peace” (Jer 6:14). Nevertheless, as Jesus
teaches us, “Don’t be alarmed; for the end is not yet” (Mt 24:6). Nations with their terrible
wars will not bring about “the end.” The end is God’s doing.