Writing about the Boston Marathon bombings is difficult for a number of reasons. For one thing, these stories have a tendency to move quickly, thus one runs the risk of sounding a bit dated by the time thoughts go to print. Secondly, what else is there, really, left to say? What words haven’t been written by this point? What ideas haven’t been brought to light, battered about, and then rearranged? As mentioned by multiple commentators, such travesties seem to happen so often anymore that dealing with the aftermath, collectively as a culture, has taken upon an almost eerie redundancy.
Like many Americans on Friday morning, April 19th, I listened in slack jawed awe as radio announcers narrated the most recent events, their own voices, generally so subdued, taut with apprehension. A carjacking. A shootout. A car chase with homemade bombs being tossed from the escape vehicle.
Homemade
bombs tossed from a stolen car?
This wasn’t
news; this was modern-day yellow journalism from a Hearst paper.
As I turned
off the radio that morning and walked into school, my mind, strangely enough,
thought back to a comic book movie. I reflected
on the last scene of Batman Begins,
when the Dark Knight stands on a rooftop with Commissioner Gordon. While pleased with the help that Batman had
offered the city, Gordon laments the new dynamic that the hero’s existence
represents.
He
represents an amplification of carnage, Gordon assumes. An arms race, so to speak, between the forces
of good and evil. The movie ends with
Gordon handing Batman the calling card of Gotham’s newest menace: the Joker.
This scene, of course, leads us directly into the forthcoming sequel.
It seems we
live in that world now; this world of sequels.
If we’ve learned anything from the messy death of Osama bin Laden two
years ago or this most recent story of violence and retribution, it is
this: civilization won’t end because of
terrorism. If a menace targets the
United States, that menace, eventually, will be killed.
The
terrorists won’t win if for no other reason than they’re hopelessly
outnumbered. A deft combination of both
federal and local law enforcement, along with civilian cooperation, brought
down the Tsarnaev brothers. They
also won’t win because terrorism, as a political strategy, just doesn’t work
very well when used against people willing to invest their treasure and their
blood in a concerted effort to stop it.
This is not
meant to be depressing or fatalistic, and I’m certainly not making light of
these tragedies by discussing them at the same time as super heroes. Overall, I’m hopeful about the future and
life in general, but not because I believe that a day is approaching when all
the terrorists with homemade bombs, or all the crazy people with stolen assault
rifles, or all the dictators with bored armies suddenly decide to give up.
My hope
stems from the belief that there are more heroes in the world, such as Charles
Ramsey, who helped rescue the kidnapped women in Cleveland,
than there are villains. It stems from
the understanding that light travels much further and more efficiently than
darkness, as we can see in Rachel Scott, who was killed by the Columbine
monsters in 1999 and who still inspires people to this day.
My hope
rests on the belief that despite all the evil in the world, despite all the
bombs and the poisons and the hate, our lives are still a gift from a sovereign
God. They are gifts worth fighting for
and worth protecting.
Next April,
tens of thousands of people will compete in the 2014 Boston Marathon. The vast majority of them will not run
because they believe they can win; they will run to compete bravely because it
is a privilege and an honor. On that
day, law enforcement personnel and others will keep out a watchful eye, not
because they believe they can save everyone in the world, but because it is a duty
and an honor to fight for those they can.
We’ve each
been called to run our race, we’ve all been called to fight our fight, because
in the end, it’s not so much about defeating evil as it’s about battling
against it until reinforcements arrive.