Broken Dolls

My own ignorance landed heavily on me on September 10. When the news bulletin flashed on my phone I found myself asking “who is Charlie Kirk?” I knew literally nothing about the man and his mission. I take no pride in my lack of knowledge. I have done a root cause analysis on why I was so uninformed and am now implementing corrective action to address it.

I immediately began trying to fill the information void. I began watching video clips, reading transcripts and watching news specifically about him. There is so much available information that I can never hope to assimilate it all.

Charlie’s message was reaching and connecting with thousands of young people and it resonated beyond college campuses. His ideology and mine do not align but I acknowledge the sanctity of his life and respect for his passion. I respect him even though I do not agree with him on many topics.

I saw a quote regarding empathy and Charlie’s thoughts on the subject. The posts I viewed did not include the complete quote so I dug deeper to get the entire quote and the context. My initial reaction was that he was wrong and I could prove it. But I could not prove him wrong.

I have not been persuaded to view empathy the same way as Charlie but I can better understand his perspective. The specific word empathy is not in the Bible. That does not mean the concept is not there, just that the word is not.

I dug deeper. The word “empathy” did not come into English vocabulary until 1909. It was a translation of the German psychological term Einfühlung that means “in-feeling” or “feeling into.” Empathy could accurately be understood as being made up in 1909 to describe human to human connection in a way that had not been specifically expressed before.

I am not persuaded to dismiss the term as meaningless or irrelevant. Human to human connections are essential, even critical, for a society and culture to thrive in peace and harmony. When we dismiss or diminish the sanctity of a person’s life because of their political views, religious beliefs or any other value humans hold dear then we dismiss or diminish the sanctity of our own lives.

Jesus demonstrated the deepest, most loving connections with everyone he encountered. All of our lives are sacred to him. He experienced shared joy with people as well as shared sorrow and despair. Why else would Immanuel, God with us, cry with Mary and Martha at Lazarus’s tomb when he knew he was about to raise Lazarus from death? The tears were not for Lazarus. They were for Mary and Martha so they did not have to experience sorrow and grief alone.

I am reminded of a story I heard a long time ago. A policeman was out walking his beat. He came upon two young girls sitting on a side walk. There was a broken doll between them and they were both sobbing. As he approached, one of the girls looked up and made eye contact with him. He asked her “what is going on here?” The girl replied “my friend broke her favorite doll and she is heart broken.” The officer said “well now I understand why she is crying but why are you crying?” She responded “I love her and right now the only thing I can do to comfort her is to cry with her.”

May we all have deeper connections with our fellow human beings to laugh with them in joy and cry with them in pain, sorrow and despair.

Mind Then Heart or Heart Then Mind?

People have accepted Jesus Christ as Lord and Savior because of the many debates Charlie Kirk engaged in.  The breadth and depth of his Bible knowledge was amazing and his ability to put forth rational and logical arguments based on his knowledge persuaded many minds.

My struggle is that in reading the Bible, I have not found a situation in scripture where Jesus initiated a debate to present his message of redemption and salvation. I find many situations where Jesus engaged in debate only as a response to the criticisms and attacks he faced from religious leaders because of the message he was presenting.

Jesus’s message resonated with and touched hearts as well as minds.  As a teenager, I felt out of place at church because all my friends had already walked the aisle, made a profession of faith, and been baptized—most of them as children.  But I was, and still am, a scientist. I put my trust in the ideas and concepts that can be empirically observed, measured and verified. But the afterlife, the Trinity and Heaven cannot be observed, measured or verified.

There is a chasm between belief and faith. But no matter how long, how deep or how wide the chasm is The Cross can bridge it.

Definition of belief: An acceptance that something is true or exists, based on evidence, reasoning, or conviction. 

Definition of faith: Strong trust or confidence in someone or something unseen, without requiring proof.

If the afterlife, the Trinity and Heaven could be absolutely proven then faith would have no eternal value.  I was reluctant to believe because nothing could be proven to my mind regarding the spiritual realm. And my mind overruled my heart because that is how a scientist behaved in my thinking.

But after completing a Bible study in Sunday School where we did a side-by-side reading and comparison of scripture with The Hobbit my heart was affected in a way that opened my heart to faith.   I realized that my heart had faith even though my mind had not yet embraced belief.

Since then I have gained trust in Jesus and confidence in scripture. The growth of belief from faith is a work of the heart and is an inner transformation.  And that transformation is not linear or predictable.  It has ups and downs and ebbs and flows.  I take comfort in knowing this is part of the Christian journey.

There is a story in Mark about a father who brings his son to Jesus for healing. Jesus declared that if the father can believe it is possible for the son to be healed then he will be healed.  The father makes a statement that resonates with me.

Mark 9:23-25

New King James Version

23 Jesus said to him, “If[a] you can believe, all things are possible to him who believes.”

24 Immediately the father of the child cried out and said with tears, “Lord, I believe; help my unbelief!”

Fifty years after being saved there are still episodes in my life that challenge my belief.  It is my trust in Jesus and confidence in scripture that sustains me in those difficult times. And it sustains me now as I lament the senseless death of Charlie Kirk.  He is a child of God, brother in Christ and made in the image of the God he loved and served.  He is now in the loving arms of his Heavenly Father.  And yet my heart aches for his family and my mind hungers to understand why?