Home
/
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
/
The Complicity of Silence
The Complicity of Silence
Oct 4, 2024 11:14 PM

A second reporter has been killed by ISIS, Steven Sotloff. Women are being sold off as “brides.” Teen girls are raped repeatedly. Thousands are murdered. There are plenty of news reports, but in some quarters, the silence is deafening.

Kathryn Jean Lopez asks what can we do, what must we do, in the face of evil, at National Review Online.

I don’t want to have on my conscience that I plicit in something as horrendous as this simply by being quiet,” is how Cardinal Donald Wuerl, the archbishop of Washington, D.C., reflected on the persecution being conducted against Christians and other religious minorities in Iraq and Syria — which are far enough away from the U.S. that we mostly go on with our lives, perhaps without even a thought or a prayer.

The President plays golf, Beyoncé is applauded for her “women’s power” performance that is laden with sexual imagery, we worry about our favorite celebrities as their nude photos get leaked. And people die. En masse. For their faith, for where they live, for their willingness to say “I believe” when someone with a sword demands they recant.

Lopez writes about James Foley, the American journalist who was beheaded by ISIS just a few short days ago.

Foley talked about his time in a Libyan prison. A few days into his captivity, he heard a knock on the wall of his cell. He then heard the muffled voice of an American contractor, also detained there, who read to him from the Gospel according to Matthew, and they prayed together. “In a very calm voice, he’d read me Scripture once or twice a day,” Foley told the interviewer. “Then I’d pray to stay strong. I’d pray to soften the hearts of our captors. I’d pray to God to lift the burdens we couldn’t handle. And I’d pray that our Moms would know we were OK.”

Foley is not alone in having faith in the power of prayer and our obligations to truth. Just this past week, Pope Francis met with Paul Bhatti, the brother of the slain Pakistani Shahbaz Bhatti, who was minister for minorities in his country’s government. Before Shahbaz Bhatti was killed, he talked with peace and courage about the threats he received for his work against blasphemy laws: “I want to share that I believe in Jesus Christ, who has given his own life for us. I know what is the meaning of cross, and I am following the cross, and I am ready to die for a cause.”

That’s real faith.

Lopez wants to know if NOW is the time when we’ll be awakened. What will it take for us to realize that “Never again” really means “Never again?” Will we clear out the distractions of celebrity and politics and infotainment and football scores and take note of what terror surrounds us? Will we plicit in our silence, or will we stand up to evil and truly mean, “Never again?”

Read “Never Again” at National Review Online.

Comments
Welcome to mreligion comments! Please keep conversations courteous and on-topic. To fosterproductive and respectful conversations, you may see comments from our Community Managers.
Sign up to post
Sort by
Show More Comments
RELIGION & LIBERTY ONLINE
Only in Jerusalem: Building Institutions Of Freedom
Religious liberty and economic freedom in the heart of … Israel? In September, the foundational message of the Acton Institute was featured at “Judaism, Christianity, and the West: Building and Preserving the Institutions of Freedom,” a conference that brought together Jewish and Christian scholars in Jerusalem. One featured speaker was Professor Daniel Mark, an Orthodox Jew and an assistant professor of political science at Villanova University, Pennsylvania’s oldest Catholic university. Mark is also a visiting fellow in the Department of...
Bernie Sanders Loves to Decry ‘Casino Capitalism,’ But What About Economic Freedom?
Inlast Tuesday’sDemocratic debate, Senator Bernie Sanders stayed true to his famed aversion to capitalism, proclaiming the fanciful virtues of “democratic socialism.” Yet when prodded by Anderson Cooper — who asked, “you don’t consider yourself a capitalist?” — Sanders responded not by attacking free markets, but by targeting a more popular target of discontent: Wall Street and the banks. “Do I consider myself part of the casino capitalist process by which so few have so much and so many have so...
Religious Shareholder Activism an Inside Job to Harm Companies and Investors
The Manhattan Institute Centers’s “Proxy Monitor Season Wrap-Up” is hot off the press, and the findings presented by author James R. Copland, are remarkable. Since 2011, MIC has monitored shareholder activism, which it describes as efforts “in which investors attempt to influence corporate management through the shareholder-proposal process.” This year’s wrap-up includes MIC-researched data from corporations’ annual meetings held by the end of June 2015. By that time, “216 of the 250 largest panies by revenues” pleted their meetings, which...
Does Bitcoin Have an Energy Problem?
Over the past couple of years I’ve fallen into a habit of infrequently pointing out the flaws, dangers, and threats to Bitcoin as a viable cryptocurrency. While I find the experiment in alternative currency intriguing, I’m just as intrigued by criticisms made against Bitcoin. Even if Bitcoin ultimately fails, it will provide numerous valuable lessons about peer-based innovation, and the criticisms that were warranted can help us avoid pitfalls in the future. We won’t know, of course, which criticisms are...
Life in Exile: Bringing Peace and Prosperity to Rural New York
The Acton Institute’s latest film series is having a profound influence on churches munities of all kinds. Hearts are being stirred and inspired, mindsare connecting mission withculture, and as a result, the church is unlocking a bigger-picture vision of God’s plan for creation. Over at the Letters to the Exiles blog, Evan Koons piling letters and testimonials from viewers of the series, sharing how For the Life of the World is transforming their lives munities. In the latest letter, we...
Leftist Shareholders’ GMO Crusade Runs Aground on Science
Ahhhh, the Left! So often passionate, so obstinately assured of the rightness of their secular crusades mounted under the variety of flags and anthems espousing “social justice” and “environmental sustainability.” And, unfortunately, so often just plain wrong. Such is the case with As You Sow, the Interfaith Center on Corporate Responsibility and other shareholder activist groups that each year apply their supposed religious authority to the proxy resolutions they submit to panies. Certainly, AYS and ICCR investors believe from the...
The Catholic Church And Labor Unions: Belonging To The Former Does Not Mean Membership To The Latter
In places like Chicago, ties between unions and Catholics often run deep. However, with right-to-work ing a voting issue in many states, the intersection of union membership and church membership is ing a hot topic. Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich got himself tangled in this arena this week: At the request of local unions, Chicago Archbishop Blase Cupich recently spoke at a West Side union hall about the church’s teachings on work and workers. After the speech, Democrat House Speaker Michael...
The Call of the Martian
I sawThe Martian this week and was struck by the number of resonant themes on a variety of is issues, including creation, creativity, innovation, entrepreneurship, exploration, work, suffering, risk, and civilization. I won’t be exploring all of these in the brief reflections below, but will simply be highlighting some salient features. The municates something seriously important about the threefold relations of human beings: to God, to one another, and to the creation. There will be some potential spoilers in the...
State Department Report on Religious Freedom Highlights Christian Persecution
Yesterday the State Department released its International Religious Freedom Report for 2014. A wide range of U.S. government agencies and offices use the reports for such efforts as shaping policy and conducting diplomacy. The Secretary of State also uses the reports to help determine which countries have engaged in or tolerated “particularly severe violations” of religious freedom in order to designate “countries of particular concern.” A major concern addressed in this year’s report is the violent opposition to religious freedom...
There is No Such Thing as ‘The Poor’
“With the news this week that Angus Deaton of Princeton University had won the economics Nobel,” says Victor V. Claar in this week’s Acton Commentary, “the question of how best to help the poor in developing nations takes on a greater level of urgency.” When es to understanding the specifics of global poverty, Deaton’s achievements are especially impressive. By pioneering household surveys in poor countries, he helped us gain a more accurate perspective on living standards and the particular consumption...
Related Classification
Copyright 2023-2024 - www.mreligion.com All Rights Reserved