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Friday, April 20, 2007
Chuck Colson :: Townhall.com Columnist
Something Horribly Wrong
by Chuck Colson
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Less than seventy-two hours have passed since the shootings that killed thirty-two innocent people and injured another thirty at Virginia Tech. Americans can relate to what Virginia Tech President William Steger said immediately after the killings: "I'm really at a loss for words to explain or to understand the carnage that has visited our campus..."

This is especially true as a frightening picture of the killer emerges: a young man, by all accounts a loner, who, according to the Washington Post, wrote poetry about death and "expletive-filled rants against the rich and privileged." Clearly, on the dark side.

As we seek to understand what happened and why he did this, it is vital that we not exclude an important part of the equation: evil.

Faced with this kind of horror, we automatically assume that we are dealing with a madman—a word the media has already used to describe the killer. That's because we can't imagine ourselves or anyone we know doing anything remotely like this. Therefore, we conclude that something must have been "wrong" with the perpetrator.

And, since our culture is defined by what sociologist Philip Rieff called the "therapeutic ethos," the "something" that's "wrong" must be a psychological defect. Mental illness, not human evil, is our preferred explanation for what happened in places like Blacksburg or Columbine.

I witnessed an extreme example of this therapeutic thinking during a visit to a Norwegian prison years ago. Throughout the tour, officials bragged about employing the most humane and progressive treatment methods anywhere in the world. I met several doctors in white coats.

That prompted me to ask how many of the inmates, who were all there for serious crimes, were mentally ill. The warden replied, "Oh, all of them." I must have looked surprised, because she said, "Well, of course, anyone who commits a crime this serious is obviously mentally unbalanced."

Stated differently, there is no such thing as sin and evil, and the only reason why people might commit serious crimes is that they are mentally ill. Thus, the best—and perhaps, only—response to crime is behavior modification and all of those other up-to-date psychological techniques.

While the Norwegian approach would strike most Americans as very naive, the difference between them and us is one of degree not kind. We also blame crime on external factors, like mental illness, culture, dysfunctional childhood, and the like.

We are uncomfortable attributing events like this to human evil, much less to a kind of evil that seeks to undo God's creation—what Christians call the demonic.

Yet without this idea, events like this massacre can never be understood. We might learn that the killer was "mentally unbalanced" or on anti-depressants. But, absent evidence that he was clinically delusional, this knowledge will not explain why he walked onto a college campus, locked people in a lecture hall, and killed them.

Events like this not only horrify us—they unsettle us. We think of sin and the demonic as not-so-quaint relics from a superstitious age. And even more destructive, random events like this remind us how little we know about ourselves and what we are capable of, as well. But failing to call evil evil misleads us about the world we live in and our need for God's grace, the only real answer and hope for any of us.

Today's BreakPoint offer:

Evil and the Justice of God Evil and the Justice of God by N. T. Wright.

For further reading and information:

BreakPoint Commentary No. 070418, "Death, Where Is Thy Sting?: The Virginia Tech Massacre "Death, Where Is Thy Sting?: The Virginia Tech Massacre."

"How Does Your Faith Tradition Explain (and Respond to) Senseless Tragedies Such as the Virginia Tech Shootings?" —responses from Chuck Colson, N. T. Wright, Cal Thomas, and others at the On Faith Newsweek/Washington Post blog.

Ian Shapira and Michael E. Ruane, “Student Wrote about Death and Spoke in Whispers, But No One Imagined What Cho Seung Hui Would Do," Washington Post, 18 April 2007, A01.

Regis Nicoll, "Where Was God on Monday" The Point, 18 April 2007.

Travis McSherley, "Hope amidst Anger, Hate, Suffering," The Point, 18 April 2007.

Diane Singer, "Rush to Heal," The Point, 18 April 2007.

"Compassion: Students Forgive Virginia Tech Killer," WCBS TV, 18 April 2007.

David Kuo, "Tune Out," Beliefnet, 18 April 2007.

Mark Galli, “Peace in a World of Massacre," Christianity Today, 17 April 2007.

Lee Strobel, The Case for Faith (Zondervan, 2000).

Peter Kreeft, Making Sense out of Suffering (Servant Ministries, 1986).

Charles Colson and Nancy Pearcey, The Problem of Evil (Tyndale, 1999).

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About The Author
Chuck Colson was the Chief Counsel for Richard Nixon and served time in prison for Watergate-related charges. In 1976, Colson founded Prison Fellowship Ministries, which, in collaboration with churches of all confessions and denominations, has become the world's largest outreach to prisoners, ex-prisoners, crime victims, and their families.
 
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Is VA Tech the Price We Pay?
The work of Chuck Colson has meant a great deal to me over approximately 30 years. I've written a couple of pieces -- both of them dialogues with others -- about the catastrophe at Virginia Tech, and I'm soliciting comments from others. You can see the material by clicking on my name above. Would love to hear from you. I agree with Colson that we're dealing with evil here, and that's a tricky subject for "modern" man.

steve

Fox News -- Fair & Boring?
Hi: I’m doing a piece (or two) on Fox News. I am very much a conservative, but I have problems with the network. Yes, there are some things on it that are very good (Ollie’s war stories, Edie, Liz Trotta, Britt Hume, Sean). However, I’m not against “fair and balanced,” but I am against fair and boring. The graphics are too 1970s and some of the personalities (Shep Smith, Allen Colmes, and even Bill O’Reilly) are getting tedious. They badly need some tough-minded, smart types like Kyra Phillips (CNN) and Chris Jansing (MSNBC). The morning show is unwatchable. The business show on the weekend strikes me as a bunch of overpaid Wall Street types shouting at each other. The multiple layers of lip glop on female news readers isn’t really that appealing. Maybe it’s just me, but I’d love to get some other opinions from conservatives. You can put a comment on my blog (click on name above) or send me an e-mail at: TalkTop65@aol.com. I’d really appreciate finding out if I’m alone – or if some of you have some of the same problems. Thanks for your input..

Steve Maloney
Ambridge, Pa

Evil
Steve, why is this a "tricky subject for modern man? We have been dealing with evil in people for generations. From Hitler to Baby Doc to the Va Tech gunman. The problem doesn't lie in inability to understand their actions but in the medical community to make excuses for the actions of these animals. In the states, the problem with this type of thinking is that later some bleeding heart liberal wants to come along and commute the legal sentence placed on these people to time served, release them and then they reoffend. I am fed up with the criminals in this country having MORE rights than the victims theycommit their crimes against. There are laws that would insure that these human scum will never bother society again if only they were inforced. God help us all if the latest trend of forgive and forget continues.

Explanation and Excuse
People on both sides of the political spectrum often confuse "explanation" and "excusing". An explanation is a systematic cause-effect theory as to why something happened, based on observable data. An excuse is a moral judgement that a person is not fully culpable for an action.

We must try to find explanations for terrible events like this; even if we fail to completely explain what caused Cho to commit this act using empirical data, we must at least try to develop some scientific understanding of the dynamics involved. To simply throw up our hands and blame "evil" is an abdication of our responsibility.

But it is also wrong to equate a scientific explanation with a moral excuse. To do so would be to discard the idea of free will and responsibility. Knowing "why" someone did something does not (necessarily) excuse the act, nor should it.

Va. Tech shooting
Virginia has a concealed firearm permitting process. Virginia Tech. does not allow firearms on campus. Had a janitor, professor or student been packing with a desparate courage 32 innocent people might not have died.

Real, powerful, entirely underestimated
The point Chuck Colson is making is that the tendency to point towards "mental imbalance," delusions, society's lax gun laws or VT's gun regulations as the cause of Cho's actions is to ignore the fact that there is an evil force at work in the world we live in. Christians need to realize that the demonic - the actions of Satan and his demons against God's creation - is real, very powerful, and completely underestimated. Yes, Cho was clearly a troubled young man. But isn't it possible that he had some help in getting there?

I understand Steve's point
Steve was asked why evil is such a "tricky subject for modern man." If morality is truly a matter of opinion, then there cannot truly be any such thing as evil.

Of course, the VA Tech shooting puts the lie to such claims, as did the 9/11 attacks. Unfortunately, too many liberals still don't get it. Once the initial shock wears off, somebody will start making excuses for the killer - if they haven't started already.

You are mistaken, Matthew
Christianity teaches that ALL people are sinful by nature. Romans 3:10 says, "There is none righteous; no, not one." That's why Jesus came to die for us.

God does forgive, but it involves than just asking for forgiveness. We have to repent. That is, we see our sins as wrong, and resolve not to do them anymore. That doesn't mean Christians are perfect (we're not), but it does mean we resolve to do what is right.

Matthew, a litte more
From the same passage that Ken quotes, Romans 3:26 says: "All have sinned, and fallen short of the glory of God."

Those who become conscious of their sin, and decide to turn away from it, are said to have "repented". That's what repentance is--a turning away from sin. However, Christianity also teaches that relying on one's self for repentance is worthless; that no human being has the strength to repent and mean it for very long. Thus, we need to rely on God for his daily, even hourly, support in the face of temptation and evil.

Expose "The Trickster"
The greatest trick Satan has pulled on the world is to convince us he does not exist. It is obviously from the events of the past week, his trick is still one of his greatest accomplishments.

Once again the time has come for us to "expose The Trickster" for what he really is - evil incarnate.

This evil goes by a variety of names of which 33 are contained in The Bible. Some are not familiar: Abaddon; Apollyon; or Belial. However, others are very familiar: devil; god of this world; or murderer to name just a few.

Satan, the devil, pure evil is where the finger needs to be pointed and it is time to accuse “The Accuser.”

BOYCOTT NBC
One aspect in this tragedy is the NBC complicity resulting in the broadcast of the "exclusive" tapes. Below is the letter I’ve written to Steve Capus, President of NBC News.

I would urge those reading this to post it on to as many web sites as possible and forward it to others, urging them to do the same.
______________________________________________

Mr. Capus,
Last night I was informed of your decision to broadcast the “Exclusive” video and accompanying rant, mailed to your news office by the deranged individual responsible for VA Tech shootings. I refused to view it and all subsequent NBC coverage of this event, as I realized your decision to broadcast the tape; being entirely self serving, only facilitated this persons agenda, by giving him the public platform he desired, while encouraging others to follow suit. In allowing him to achieve this ultimate agenda, you are culpable. Subsequent events confirm this. Within days following the event, others seeking similar notoriety, have made threats to schools around the country. Why? It’s not just that they are deranged. By similar acts, they achieve International "recognition" and “fame”, due to news media executives who are thoughtless and stupid enough to broadcast their pictures and rants; thus providing the inducement they need to carry out their plans. You facilitate their warped goals. If there are copy cat incidents, encouraged by this notoriety, it’s Idiots like you who will share some of the responsibility. Your shortsighted decision to broadcast the tape was based on solely on your quest for rating. Your greed and indifference is despicable. Well, you got your ratings. And I suspect greed and indifference are integral parts of your character.
Normally, I write letters that are civil and polite, regardless of the circumstances. My upper-middle class background taught me to be that way. My education and subsequent professional career reinforced this requirement for civility and politeness: (in most cases). However, in your case I must make an exception. Your monumental stupidity causes me to tell it like it is. The truth is, you’re a reprehensible self-centered greedy little prick. You could care less about the likely result of such an ill-conceived decision. The consequences should be evident to any intelligent person. But as the President of one of the largest news broadcasting companies in the world, your complicity in the agenda of this deranged person, by airing his tape, is INEXCUSABLE! This letter will be published on numerous blogs with the recommendation that NBC be boycotted. No American with any intelligence or sensitivity should watch your net work. And the NBC board of directors should fire your sorry dumb a*s for your reckless and callus disregard. And that “sir”, is about as polite as I can be. F**k you and your ratings. .Don’t like my tone? Too bad. You’re welcome to contact me and discuss it. But we both know you won’t. Most likely, the sycophant admin assistant you hire to read your mail won’t show this to you. Media a*s holes like you care only for ratings, with total disregard for the consequences, and place themselves above public opinion. But perhaps the opinion of the NBC Board of Directors who will receive copies of this letter may get your attention.
BOYCOTT NBC!

The Modern Myth of Scientific Perfection
Over the past two centuries, the success of the scientific method and progress, coupled with the deliberate push towards secularism (the Victorian belief that God wouldn't allow evil, thus He must not be present in our world), has led to the BELIEF that all is or will be knowable through science. Thus any person who is 'evil' is not REALLY 'evil' but simply ill. Eventually, the Modern Myth of Science says, all diseases will be understood, including the diseases of the mind. Since there is no God and there is no soul, our minds are simply the result of a vast connection of biological circuits, and eventually we will be able to recognize and understand the bad wiring and fix it. There WILL be a drug, procedure, or treatment for every malady. This is the prevailing modern myth of our times. Can you identify the flaws?

Again...
Ken writes: "Unfortunately, too many liberals still don't get it. Once the initial shock wears off, somebody will start making excuses for the killer - if they haven't started already."

Again, explaining, or at least an attempt to explain, is necessary. But explaining is not the same thing as excusing.

We can explain why King David committed adultry with Bathsheba and then arranged for her husband to be killed. But an explanation is not an excuse. Just ask God.

If you'll forgive the shameless use of stereotypes, liberals too often believe an explanation is an excuse, and thus negate the actor's responsibility.

But one must also concede that conservatives too often err in the other direction, rejecting out of hand any attempts to temper moral judgement with mitigating (explanatory) circumstances.

It's not a black-or-white issue, folks. Yes, evil exists; yes, personal responsibility is crucial. Yes, explaining is not the same as excusing. But we still are obligated to try our best to understand, by empirical means, how tragedies like this occur.

I'll repeat: It's wrong to simply throw up our hands and blame it all on evil, if by doing so we duck out of our responsibility to study and understand all of the factors that go into awful events like this.

GreenDay
The only problem I have is with the word myth. Belief is more appropriate just as you mention victorian belief concerning god and goodness. Now, as with all science these beliefs can and will change, with facts and findings.

I do believe that the bible should be studied in high school much along the same lines as the Illiad and Odessey were studied when I went to high school.

Gitazhian
You said: "It's wrong to simply throw up our hands and blame it all on evil, if by doing so we duck out of our responsibility to study and understand all of the factors that go into awful events like this."

I don't entirely disagree with you, but too many times we use "explanatory circumstances" to excuse the behavior. Even now, some people are talking about how the VA Tech murderer was teased and bullied in school. Having been through plenty of that myself, I can sympathize, but I simply do not buy that as an excuse.

I am not implying that you are trying to excuse the killer's behavior, but I believe many liberals will attempt to do so. Remember, these are the same people who suggested 9/11 was America's fault. If people will stoop to that kind of twisted reasoning, they'll stoop to anything.

Mind Games
I keep seeing in my mind's eye, a student who has a permit to carry a concealed weapon and defying the lib pathetics' administration by bringing said weapon with him to class, putting Cho [who would have a very surprised look on his mug]on his back, with about five rounds lodged in his heart.
It should come as no surprise that communities that allow concealed weapons have the lowest crime rates [remember Charles Bronson and the Death Wish flicks?. Except for libs of course, who will continue to Rosie O'Dumbell the gun issue and call for the arrests of all guns. [Except for the guns their security details keep.]

Bad Fruit, Bad Tree
Though God is not the author of evil, he approves it (Job).

I suspect that the liberal environment in our government's school system (grammar, high schools, and college) may not be a safe place from evil.

While I am not a historian, when men were teachers and the school system was conservative, I do not recall murder, sexuality, and or plays about evil step fathers.

A liberal based education (read: God rules ignored, women teaching men, sexually charged study environment) may produce more than degrees.

Chuck Colson
I love Mr. Colson, I am a Christian person, and I agree with Mr. Colson on most issues. However, like most Christians, Mr. Colson tries to make "Black and White" an isssue that is NOT "Black and White". Anyone who can see and hear this young man, can clearly see he is mentally unbalanced. As someone who grew up in a traditional church, most traditional Christians don't want to deal with things they don't understand. It is much easier to simply call it "demonic". This young man grew up in a traditional Korean Christian church. His parents, by all accounts, are Christian people. From most accounts he was raised in church, with basic Christian values. What happened? Where did he go wrong? I don't know. But unlike most self appointed judges, I leave it to GOD to understand, because I don't have the answers.


The Scariest Thing
The Scariest Thing about this incident is,

How many great minds at Townhall.com don’t get it.

Or that only Chuck Colson gets it right.

Mental Illness is not an explanation for evil criminal behavior.

The Mental Health system is full of persons with mental illness who had never committed a crime.

Prisons are full of dangerous felons who are not mentally ill.

Why can we easily accept that we can’t claim a link between crime and race yet, rush to assign all abhorrent acts to persons with mental illness?

The number of ‘criminally insane’ across the nation pales when compared to the number of the ‘purely evil.’

This murderer was not mentally disorganized, he proceeded according to a deliberate calculated plan that included; mailing a manifesto, attacking on the opposite side of campus from where the first incident, barring the victims escape with chains, etc.

He was twisted and overtaken with an evil rage but, he was certainly not more delusional than Jim Jones in Guyana.

Are we to declare the mugger who recently hit repeatedly a New York 80 year-old lady on the face with a closed fist; ‘mentally ill,’ because we found his behavior bizarre and abhorrent?

The culture’s “therapeutic ethos” is soothing to our fear because it gives us the false assurance that we can train professionals to address and prevent acts like this.

The truth is; our police department would never have Homicide Prevention Squads, only squads for homicide investigations.

Call it what it is
I found it interesting that there were teachers who refused to have him in their classes and students who would not attend classes that included him.

I think it's entirely possible that these people were reacting on some level to the recognition of evil.

Scott Peck, the author of "The Road Less Traveled" is a psychiatrist. In "People of the Lie", he describes cases exemplifying what he called the evil personality. He proposed including this type of personality as a subset of the narcissistic personality.

While he pretty much bogs down when he writes about treating this type of personality--tellingly, they're almost impossible to treat-- the chapters relating the case histories are fascinating.

A well-regarded psychiatrist of my acquaintance once said that he'd had patients for whom the only treatment he thought had a chance of working was exorcism. And he was quite serious.

A perspective from the field
I work for a community mental health center. We had a staff member murdered by a client about a month and a half ago. The client was probably off his meds. The staff member was attempting to correct misbehavior and might have missed the signals that should have told her to retreat. Nobody really knows. Everybody has a medical/therapeutic opinion on it.

The thing is, the client was one of about four of our entire case load who had always given me pause, even though most people thought he was a withdrawn, but "harmless" man. As a Christian whom God has gifted with what the Bible calls "discernment of spirits", I had sensed evil in him for a long time before most other workers had. This knowledge came from God, not from anything natural within myself.

My observation is that often people are as much victims of evil as they are of mental illness. Mental illness is treatable with medication and I often find myself praying for those patients who are seem untreatable, that they will encounter the Living God, because evil is treatable too, but not by human beings -- only by God Almighty Himself.

No such thing as evil?
I'm going off topic a little, but evil does exist, even when one lives with a man of God. I just heard the verdict on the Mary Winkler case. This woman shot her pastor husband in the back while he was asleep. The excuse was that her husband mentally abused her, making her feel like she was nothing. So, she blew him away with a shotgun. She said it was an accident. Legal experts say she will get 3 to 6 years for voluntary manslaughter, and eligible for parole after 1 year.

This is an evil woman. She did not have to kill her husband. I, myself, was married to a woman who routinely verbally abused me. After six years of marriage, I could not take it anymore. However, I did not kill her. I just moved out. Winkler had the same option.

Winkler's sobbing testimony took anything resembling reason away from the jurors. If a man kills his wife because she tortures him mentally, and then cries in front of the jury, will he be going to jail for 1 year. Somehow, I don't think so. Come to think of it, Scott Peterson did just that and got life in prison. The despicably nonchalant, enjoy-life attitude exhibited by Winkler after she had shot her husband mirrored that of Peterson after he had killed his wife.

BTW, what's wrong with this picture? A woman shoots her husband to death for mental abuse and gets 1 year. Two border patrol agents nick an illegal alien drug smuggler with a bullet while doing their job. The drug smuggler lives to smuggle another day while the agents get 11 years.

Ladies, listen up. Do you have a rotten husband who is fooling around on you? Does he call you fat as Winkler's husband did to her? You do not have to be degraded anymore. Put that shotgun to good use. It is worth it because the penalty is a 1-year vacation at taxpayer expense. It is a win-win situation.

What's disturbing about all of this ...
... is that mental illness DOES exist. I agree that not all people who commit crimes are mentally ill. But this person clearly was, and the tragedy is that everyone considers it a "liberty" to walk around in that demented state. And so nothing was done.

Mental illness is, in large part, a PHYSIOLOGICAL phenomenon as much as a psychological one. Our brains and thus our very personalities are shaped by chemistry, and a slight change in that chemistry can have catastrophic effects. (If you don't believe me, as anyone who is losing or has lost a loved one to Alzheimers' or an invasive brain tumor, and has watched their personality completely change.)

As much as there are people who love to live in a therapeutic culture ("there's no such thing as evil; everything is treatable"), the fact is that there are just as many people who are uncomfortable with diagnoses of mental illness, despite those diagnoses being fully justifiable, because the "illness" isn't something they can "see," like cancer, or an infection. They feel more comfortable calling it "evil," and that way they can blame the sick person.

What Cho Seung-Hei DID was evil. His culpability for it is something none of us know. But regardless, he WAS deeply and profoundly mentally ill.

Binary thinking

Some good comments.

It's a good thing to be on guard against binary thinking. Too often we all react to opinions with which we disagree by embracing the polar opposite opinion.

So knee-jerk liberals will hear conservatives speak of "evil" and, being good liberals who know that conservatives are always wrong about everything, they will reject the concept of evil (and of responsibility) out of hand, and reflexively excuse horrible acts with sociological/psychological explanations.

Meanwhile, knee-jerk conservatives hear liberals speak of mental illness and environment and, being good conservatives who know that liberals are always wrong about everything, they will reject socio-psychological explanations out of hand, and reflexively blame horrible acts on evil.

We have to do the best we can to methodically try to explain what happened, so that we can take whatever steps we can to reduce the chances of this happening again.

We also have to remind ourselves that explaning is not the same as excusing, and reinforce the values of free will and responsibility that are the bedrock of civilization and Judeo-Christian morality.

Not either-or, but both-and.

Or, to put it more simply...
...pray to God and get to work.

Thank you Chuck Colson
It is a fearful reality that the spiritual realm is far more powerful and present in our lives than me can comprehend being so vexed with trifles and cares and distractions. Americans are in a non stop carnival of media images and it would seem almost designed to prevent any sober reflection of our destiny.
We will all depart this life and it comes sooner than any one cares to consider.
I have no doubt but that this sad man was demonically influenced. He did not just happen to go into a 'rage' but had calculated this murder in advance.
The Devotees of the "noble secular state" would have us forget the Personal Lord and Creator and substitute a veneration for the State. Clearly all Socialist States end up trying to Neuter and Control the Church, if not to eliminate it completely.
Sadly, many Churches are quite willing to cooperate with the most absurd intrusions by the State, to buy a place at the table and 'respectability'.
In brief, the actions clearly manfest a demonic evil condition in this man's heart, and the cold methodical murder of so many people, including himself have, like Judas Iscariot, assured him of a place in the lake of fire.
The Noble Secular State was unable to prevent this carnage and their methods cannot and will not prevent another.

Thank you Chuck Colson
It is a fearful reality that the spiritual realm is far more powerful and present in our lives than men can comprehend, being so vexed with trifles and cares and distractions. Americans are in a non stop carnival of media images and it would seem almost designed to prevent any sober reflection of our destiny.
We will all depart this life and it comes sooner than any one cares to consider.
I have no doubt but that this sad man was demonically influenced. He did not just happen to go into a 'rage' but had calculated this murder in advance.
The Devotees of the "noble secular state" would have us forget the Personal Lord and Creator and substitute a veneration for the State. Clearly all Socialist States end up trying to Neuter and Control the Church, if not to eliminate it completely.
Sadly, many Churches are quite willing to cooperate with the most absurd intrusions by the State, to buy a place at the table and 'respectability'.
In brief, the actions clearly manfest a demonic evil condition in this man's heart, and the cold methodical murder of so many people, including himself have, like Judas Iscariot, assured him of a place in the lake of fire.
The Noble Secular State was unable to prevent this carnage and their methods cannot and will not prevent another.
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