CNN Senior Legal Analyst Tears Into Judge Over This Aspect of the Trump...
Chris Cuomo Brought Up Joe Rogan and Ivermectin. It Didn't End Well.
Democrats Deserve Everything Bad That Comes Their Way…And More
Democrats’ Bogus Lawfare Takedowns Rooted In Fear and Loathing
A Quick Bible Study Vol. 220: What the Bible Says About Love
If Ignorance is Bliss, with the Trump Verdict, Liberals Are Euphoric
Democrat Urges Gov. Hochul to Pardon Trump for the Sake of 'Our Country'
Bernie Moreno Pressures Dem Sherrod Brown to Rescind Biden Endorsement After Trump Verdict
DeSantis: Trump Hasn't Lost Voting Rights In Florida
Here's Where Texas Authorities Found 27 Illegal Aliens
Why It's Even More Egregious That Biden Is Still Bragging About Defying SCOTUS...
Pollster Warns a Harsh Sentence for Trump Would Backfire on Dems
Another University Held Segregated Graduation Celebrations
Wait Until You Hear Bill Maher's Crazy Theory About Trump and the 2024...
Biden Struggles to Put On Football Helmet As Entire KC Chiefs’ Team...
OPINION

An Amazing Story of Redemption Out of Pearl Harbor

The opinions expressed by columnists are their own and do not necessarily represent the views of Townhall.com.
Advertisement
Advertisement
Advertisement

December 7th, 1941 is “a date which will live in infamy,” declared President Franklin D. Roosevelt. The Japanese pilot that led the infamous raid on Pearl Harbor is the subject of a new fascinating book, Wounded Tiger by T. Martin Bennett. Christian apologist Josh McDowell calls Bennett’s book, “mesmerizing.”

Advertisement

I spoke with Bennett on my radio show about this amazing story of violence, repentance, redemption, and forgiveness. I have been aware of Fuchida’s incredible story before, having produced a TV segment on his conversion for D. James Kennedy Ministries-TV about 30 years ago.

When Bennett read an old book, God’s Samurai, about the life of Fuchida, he said, “Wow. This is one unbelievable story….If it was fiction, it wouldn’t work. But it’s true.”

Commander Mitsuo Fuchida led the raid on Pearl Harbor, the outpost in Hawaii, where the United States had aircraft carriers, other ships, and many airplanes. Fuchida is the one who yelled into the static-filled airplane radios the attack code, “Tora! Tora! Tora!” That means “Tiger! Tiger! Tiger!”

This surprise attack by some 350 Japanese planes in the wee hours of that fateful Sunday morning killed about 2,400 Americans. It was the worst attack on American soil by an enemy, until 9/11.

Why did the Japanese even bomb Pearly Harbor in the first place? Bennett writes of the Japanese leadership, “Their agreed-upon strategy was solely to assault and cripple the Americans and quickly secure terms of mutual nonaggression, allowing Japan free reign in greater East Asia.”

Japanese Emperor Hirohito understood himself to be, notes Bennett, “a living god to whom his subjects owed absolute obedience.”

Advertisement

A month before Pearl Harbor, Japan’s Prime Minister Hideki Tojo appeared on the cover of TIME (11/3/1941). Tojo told Hirohito near that time, “Your Majesty….At the moment, our empire stands at the threshold of glory or oblivion.”

Bennett observes, “Japan was at its strongest, and America at its weakest. The Empire of Japan was finally poised for conflict and to secure its place in history.”

Before the surprise attack, Fuchida declared to his fellow pilots, “In the event we fail to destroy the aircraft on the ground, or we lost the element of surprise, I will give the signal for the dive bombers to begin the attack.”

Fuchida continued, “Years of training and careful planning have brought us to this moment in time...Our duty is not only to protect the untarnished past of our ancestors, but to annihilate the enemies of Japan and to establish a new order for the future, the imperial way!”

After the devastating attack on Pearl Harbor led by Fuchida, America was stung into action. General James Doolittle quickly organized bombardiers to attack targets in Japan.

One of the pilots flying in General Doolittle’s squadron was Sergeant Jacob DeShazer. Alas, his plane was shot down, and he ended up as a prisoner for the duration of the war. The Japanese did not look kindly on anyone who surrendered.

Advertisement

The Japanese treated their prisoners of war in subhuman ways. DeShazer developed an intense hatred for the Japanese guards who tortured him. He became consumed with thoughts of revenge.

But somehow he got his hands on a tattered copy of the Bible, and he read it. He was deeply touched by the prayer of Jesus from the cross, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do” and His command that we are to love even our enemies. As with so many before and after him, Jesus’s forgiveness transformed DeShazer.

After the war, DeShazer returned to the former enemy, Japan, as a missionary to bring the love of Jesus to the people. His story was written up in a small booklet, and a copy of this tract fell into the hands of the disheartened, disillusioned Fuchida---whose god (the emperor) had been defeated.

Amazingly, Fuchida too experienced the forgiving love of Jesus Christ. He even returned to Pearl Harbor on the 25th anniversary of the attack in 1966, asking for forgiveness. He came bearing a gift---a Bible with Luke 23:34a inscribed in it, “Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do.”

This is a powerful story and not well known. Portions of T. Martin Bennett’s book, Wounded Tiger, are posted online.

In this fallen world, war can be a necessary evil. What the Japanese did in World War II was inexcusable. How redemptive it is that the lead pilot in the opening drama of the Japanese-U.S. conflict found a higher purpose in life.

Advertisement

Tragically, we were unprepared for what happened at Pearl Harbor---contrary to George Washington’s well-known maxim of peace through strength. But out of the evil and the ashes of Pearl Harbor has come this reminder of how God’s amazing grace is greater than all man’s evil.

Dr. Jerry Newcombe is the executive director of Providence Forum, a division of D. James Kennedy Ministries, where Jerry also serves as senior producer and an on-air contributor. He has written/co-written 33 books, including (with D. James Kennedy), What If Jesus Had Never Been Born? and (with Dr. Peter Lillback), George Washington’s Sacred Fire. 

Join the conversation as a VIP Member

Recommended

Trending on Townhall Videos