The Record Online
Fall 2001
Roots of Our Culture Hold Strong
September
11, 2001 was a terrible day in the life of our country. A Pearl
Harbor of terrorism, an Act of War, and certainly a day to live
in infamy.
We at Greenville College, like our fellow citizens around the nation,
found ourselves numbed as we witnessed one tragic event unfold after
another. Each one alone seemed impossible, and taken together the
feeling was surreal. Accustomed as we are to the films and books
of fiction describing airliner terrorist attacks on government buildings
and skyscraper fires, we struggled to understand how what we saw
live on television could possibly be happening. We waited for the
movie to end.
We imagined, then cringed, at the last thoughts not only of passengers
in those planes, but then at the intensity of purpose and hate in
the minds of those who piloted them to their deaths. We second-guessed
our confidence in our own nations innocence from oppression
overseas. Then we began to realize the numbers of people who must
have been killed in the collapse of a 110-story building, and in
those first hours it dawned on us that many many others might be
trapped and dying even as the impact of events began to sink in.
Our numbness changed to anger as we saw one of our own cities covered
with the dust and debris were accustomed to seeing in Beirut
or Jerusalem. We saw major symbols of our wealth and our power reduced
to dust. And perhaps worst of all, we saw our own citizens forced
to run for shelter in fear in our own streets.
We asked ourselves, Why didnt we have any warning?
but caught ourselves short, unwilling to believe that much can ever
be done to anticipate suicidal events like these.
Then we imagined ways to prevent it in the future, but caught ourselves
short of the grim prospect of police-state restrictions on our own
freedom. We contemplated revenge, eager to find someone against
whom to lash out, but caught ourselves again, aware that to point
fingers, to curtail our own freedoms, or to lash out in revenge
would be to let those who committed this cowardly act of violence
win in twisting our hearts to the image of their own.
The genius of our culture in the United States is its openness.
The price we pay for that openness is our vulnerability, and on
this day we were forced again, as we have been on the occasion of
other historic national tragedies, to pay yet another installment
on that price. But we also know that despite recent years of internal
dissension, and despite recent decades of disillusionment about
the altruism and patriotism of our citizenry, we have all become
well aware that in difficult times, Americans stand together.
We pull together and stand together when threatened from outside,
and we began to see that happen, symbolized by the firemen and police
officers even in cynical New York City, sacrificing themselves for
others, and perhaps most poignantly by democratic and republican
senators and congressmen joining on the steps of the capitol in
a spontaneously rendering of God Bless America.
So the roots of our culture in sacrifice and faith are apparently
not dead after all. And as Christians, we must take the lead in
modeling what we believe would be the responses of our Lord. In
the face of terrible and tragic injustice, He responded with self-sacrifice
and love.
We must not leap to conclusions about the perpetrators nor take
it out on minorities in our midst. We must not shrink from the careful
and thoughtful work to be done to uncover those responsible, but
we must not stoop to their level in response. We must distinguish
justice from revenge.
At Greenville College, we have met to pray silently; once at noon
on that Terrible Tuesday and again in a circle of a thousand at
noon on Scott Field that following Friday, a national day of mourning.
We pray for all those who have suffered directly. We pray for our
nation that we might respond with moderation and maturity as a model
to the world. The world is watching.
We pray that students who have rightfully moved beyond blind patriotism
will now also move beyond feckless scepticism to understand both
the privileges and responsibilities of living in our imperfect society.
And we pray for us all, that both our minds and hearts will be stretched
so that we may grow in wisdom and grace through this terrible attack
on innocent people. We pray, with Gods help, for transformation
of lives for character and service. Let us pray His help on this
occasion to model that transformation in ourselves.
- by President
V. James Mannoia Jr.
Last updated: November
1, 2001
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