9/11 -- Bishop Willimon's Perspective

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I preached on remembering 9/11 this morning.

I found this from Will Willimon this afternoon.

I share it here.

On 9/11 I thought, For the most powerful, militarized nation in the world also to think of itself as an innocent victim is deadly. It was a rare prophetic moment for me, considering Presidents Bush and Obama have spent billions asking the military to rectify the crime of a small band of lawless individuals, destroying a couple of nations who had little to do with it, in the costliest, longest series of wars in the history of the United States.

The silence of most Christians and the giddy enthusiasm of a few, as well as the ubiquity of flags and patriotic extravaganzas in allegedly evangelical churches, says to me that American Christians may look back upon our response to 9/11 as our greatest Christological defeat. It was shattering to admit that we had lost the theological means to distinguish between the United States and the kingdom of God. The criminals who perpetrated 9/11 and the flag-waving boosters of our almost exclusively martial response were of one mind: that the nonviolent way of Jesus is stupid. All of us preachers share the shame; when our people felt very vulnerable, they reached for the flag, not the Cross.

September 11 has changed me. I'm going to preach as never before about Christ crucified as the answer to the question of what's wrong with the world. I have also resolved to relentlessly reiterate from the pulpit that the worst day in history was not a Tuesday in New York, but a Friday in Jerusalem when a consortium of clergy and politicians colluded to run the world on our own terms by crucifying God's own Son.
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2 comments

  1. Wow; what a different perspective than what we generally hear on the topic of the terrorist attacks of Sept. 11. 2001. I have long been concerned about the ultra-nationalism that has been vocalized since this event, especially after I became aware of the fact that the work Nazi means nationalism. We need to be less concerned with national borders and identity and focus on the inclusiveness of Jesus' message.

  2. I think his strongest phrase is that, when people felt vulnerable they reached for the flag and not the cross. I had to sit with that one today.