Men fear change as children fear the dark, to
misquote Francis Bacon. To a child, the dark is full of hobgoblins, werewolves
and nameless monsters who would do him harm, which is why I have always felt
uncomfortable about the current sanitised and irreligious expressions of
Hallowe'en which have slipped, like Disney, into popular culture. The dark is
not merely a comforting absence of light, or the expectation of comfort where
there currently is none.
We live in dark times - the world is a less
predictable place. Changes, especially those which happen fast, cause our
balance to falter as familiar patterns of behaviour seem to us be be becoming
less secure. When balance falters, errors are made. We hear a
great deal now about the drift of America and Europe away from a Christian
identity. Whenever there is talk of decline - as in fact there always is - the
one thing that seems to be lacking is a meaningful standard of change. How can
we know where we are if we don’t know where we were, in those days when things
were as they "ought" to be? How can we know there has been decline,
an invidious qualitative change, if we are unable to establish an appropriate
timeline? If we begin to pay attention to the marked and oddly general
fearfulness of Western culture at present and thus identify its sources, we are
some way towards dealing with the problem. Evidence of such fearfulness is
ubiquitous, from erecting razor wire at Hungarian borders, to the torching of
immigrant accommodation in Sweden, to police responses to recalcitrance in
schools.
In the twenty-sixth chapter of Leviticus we find a description
of the state the people of Israel will find themselves in if they depart from
their loyalty to God, or, loyalty to foundational principles: “The sound of a
driven leaf shall put them to flight, and they shall flee as one flees from the
sword, and they shall fall when none pursues. They shall stumble over one
another, as if to escape a sword, though none pursues.” Has Europe and the US
lost sight of the laws and traditions from which the solid bulwarks of their
democracies were first forged? If so, if
Leviticus is to be believed, irrational responses will be made to irrational
fears. With the rise of homicidal, religiously inspired and heavily armed
forces in the Middle East, intent on propagating a version of Islam which has
surfaced, like a Babylonian river over the centuries, indeed from its blood-soaked
inception, we do well to fear, but not to lose our reason. Fear alone, the
flight of the adrenalin-fuelled prey, will not be enough to save us. Neither
will a soothing call to 'peace and safety' because the images of black flags on
the streets of Washington or Paris or in little rural villages in Germany or
Belgium, is too distant and far-fetched to even contemplate.
Fearfulness
obscures the distinction between real threat on one hand and on the other the
terrors that beset those who see threat everywhere. One response to the latter is
to arm ourselves to the teeth and just wait. During the First World War, waiting
for action was one of the most mind-shattering processes to endure which of
itself, generated a fear which could rapidly be used as a weapon, the same kind
of fear that the suicide bomber so effectively uses against his enemy.
Let us, prejudice notwithstanding, assume for a moment that a
God of justice really exists, separate from the states and institutions who
proclaim his authority. If so, his wrath is turned to the devastation and
horrors wreaked in his name by people who walk into schools with semiautomatic
weapons and who rally behind fundamentalist, closed-minded and blood-drenched
ideologies seeking to replace his justice and mercy with the flawed fascism which
is Shari'a. Few actions are more harshly forbidden in the Old Testament than
sacrifice to the god Moloch (Leviticus 18.21, 20.1-5). The sacrifice referred
to was presenting living children to be consumed in offertory fire to Moloch -
a perfect metaphor for the suicide bomber or the Palestinian driven to
murderous attacks against Israelis whose inevitable outcome will be his death.
Ever since then, worship of Moloch has been the sign of a deeply degraded culture
and in essence is at the heart of ISIS, Hamas and all the other proponents of
terror. Ancient Romans justified the destruction of Carthage because children
were sacrificed to Moloch there. Milton represented him as the first pagan god
who joined Satan’s war on humankind:
"First Moloch, horrid king, besmear’d with blood
Of human sacrifice, and parents’ tears,
Though for the noise of Drums and Timbrels loud
Their children’s cries unheard, that pass’d through fire
To his grim idol."
(Paradise Lost 1.392-96)
If we must make war, let there be reason. Let there be an
understanding of the enemy against whom we are called to fight and a measured
clarity from whence we have come. Moloch has only one weapon, fear, but, 'the
righteous are bold as a lion'. (Proverbs 28:1)
Excellent reflection. Your last paragraph makes a great quote in and of itself. Bravo.
ReplyDeleteThank you. Everywhere, people are trying to make sense of the intertwined conflict in Syria - who is allied with whom and why. We live in perilous times.
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