Our God and God of all
people:
This Friday night, Jews
around the world will tell the ancient story of Passover. We will gather around our seder tables and experience the
bitterness of slavery and the sweetness of freedom and redemption. On Easter Sunday,
Christians will celebrate the potential to be reborn with hope and faith.
This is a sacred time – when we
are reminded of both the fragility of life and the potential for renewal and
redemption. Now should be a period of gratitude and introspection that helps us
to see the best in all of humanity.
And yet, in the midst of these
festivals of holiness and hope, over the past two days our state was suddenly
and brutally thrust into a climate of terror and dread brought about by a heartbreakingly
disturbed young woman who played out her demons as we anticipated the 20th
anniversary of the Columbine shooting.
The juxtaposition of the
anticipation of these two sacred festivals with the ugliness and paralysis of potential
violence reminds us just how little progress has occurred in the years since
our innocence was shattered on April 20th, 1999. We have become numb
to the horrors of violence brought about by each new tragedy. For a parent to
have to tell their child that it is too dangerous to go to school is an
obscenity and anathema to the values that are embodied in this sacred chamber.
When messages of rebirth and
redemption are overshadowed by fear, we must take stock in who we are and who
we are becoming. We can try to write off each tragic incident as distinct and separate,
but taken in an aggregate we have no choice but to acknowledge that there is a
sickness in our nation that cannot be ignored. Whether it is caused by easy
access to weapons of destruction or the political divisions that paralyze us, it
is essential that we come together to bring about change – to strive to see the
veracity and sanctity of all humanity – even if we disagree. If the deaths of
innocents are not enough to move us to action, then what have we become?
May the messages of hope and
rebirth symbolized by both Passover and Easter motivate all of us to see the
holiness infused in every soul. As we anticipate this painful anniversary, may
we be inspired to use every means at our disposal to ensure that the hopelessness
and despair that we have been feeling these past two days will be replaced by a
sacred determination to bring about healing and change. Only then will we be able to ensure that we are
doing God’s work on earth.
Amen
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