On 28th June 1914
shots rang out in Sarajevo. Archduke Franz Ferdinand and his wife, Sophie were gunned
down in cold blood while being driven from a reception in the Town Hall. The
twenty-year-old assassin was Gavrilo Princip, a Yugoslavian nationalist. Like
other radicals he was resentful of Austro-Hungarian rule over his
country. The Archduke was heir to the Austro-Hungarian Imperial crown.
The assassination of the Franz
Ferdinand was the catalyst for the outbreak of the First World War as the Great
Powers of Europe acted to protect their interests and cement their alliances.
By the end of that most bloody global conflict around 16 million people lay
dead, 888,246 of whom were British or colonial soldiers. War Memorials erected in
every city, town and village of the UK testify to the huge loss of life on
foreign battlefields. Ten members of Providence Baptist Church lost their lives
in the Great War. Our War Memorial records their names:
To the Glory of God and in loving memory of the men
of this church who fell in the Great War 1914-18
F. H. Daniells - F. H. Noakes
W. Ingram - E. J. Woodward
C. D. Millard - W. G. Noakes
E. J. Grant - A. V. Brown
H. J. Mizen - A. J. Newman
Their Lives laid down that others might have life
A sense of foreboding pervaded
Europe in the days leading up to the outbreak of WWI, 100 years ago today. Russia mobilised its troops to protect the Serbian Slavs from annihilation at the hands of the Austro-Hungarians as revenge for assassinating their Archduke. Meanwhile Germany and their Austro-Hungarian allies mobilised to attack Serbia,
Belgium and France. Britain and France were desperately trying to find a diplomatic
solution to the crisis. As a gap lamp lighter went about his business on the
streets of London, Foreign Secretary Edward Grey mused, ‘The lamps are going
out all over Europe, and we shall not see them lit again in our lifetime.’
Some,
however were excited by the prospect of war. Winston Churchill wrote to his
wife Clementine: ‘My darling One & beautiful – Everything tends towards
catastrophe, & collapse. I am interested, geared-up & happy.’ The reality
of war was somewhat different, however. Churchill’s ill-conceived military
adventure in the Dardanelles left him devastated as his attempt to open up a second
front by invading Turkey ended in failure. The First Lord of the Admiralty
resigned his post and signed up for military service in the trenches of France in
an attempt to atone for his political sins. A member of Providence
Baptist Church, Edmund James Grant lost his life at Gallipoli.
WWI saw the introduction of
mechanised warfare on a massive scale. It is said that the artillery bombardment of German lines
at the outset of the Battle of the Somme could be heard from England. An estimated 200,000 – 400,000 allied soldiers lost their lives amid the mud and
blood of Passchendaele. Of that battle a haunting anecdote survives, ‘A party
of men passing up to the front line found a man bogged to above the knees. The
united efforts of four of them with rifles under his armpits made not the
slightest impression, and to dig, even if shovels had been available, was
impossible for there was no foothold. Duty compelled them to move on up to the
line, and when two days later they passed down that way the wretched man was
still there; but only his head was visible and he was raving mad.’
Civilians also came under
attack. Around 17,000 British people were killed by German air raids. The atrocities
of WWI prompted many to wonder, ‘Where was God in all this?’ To pose the
question is to touch on the problem of evil. There are no easy answers to this
problem, but we need to be clear on two things. First, the Bible insists that God is good, just and in sovereign control of his world. Second, human beings are responsible
for their own actions. God may allow
war, but it’s man that does the fighting. We cannot understand why God would
willingly permit evil on a small or large scale. Faith seeking understanding may sometimes have to content itself with the fact that God's ways are past finding out.
For some, seeing the horrors of war first hand or through news reports may induce a crisis of faith. What C. S. Lewis experienced as a soldier in in WWI helped convince him that there was no God. The unimaginable cruelty and injustice he witnessed at the Battle of the Somme was enough to snuff out any lingering vestiges of belief. But later he reflected,
For some, seeing the horrors of war first hand or through news reports may induce a crisis of faith. What C. S. Lewis experienced as a soldier in in WWI helped convince him that there was no God. The unimaginable cruelty and injustice he witnessed at the Battle of the Somme was enough to snuff out any lingering vestiges of belief. But later he reflected,
My argument against God was that the universe
seemed so cruel and unjust. But how had I got this idea of just and unjust? A
man does not call a line crooked unless he has some idea of a straight line.
What was I comparing this universe with when I called it unjust? … Of course I
could have given up my idea of justice by saying it was nothing but a private
idea of my own. But if I did that, then my argument against God collapsed
too—for the argument depended on saying that the world was really unjust, not
simply that it did not happen to please my private fancies. Thus in the very
act of trying to prove that God did not exist—in other words, that the whole of
reality was senseless—I found I was forced to assume that one part of
reality—namely my idea of justice—was full of sense. Consequently atheism turns
out to be too simple.
The very problem that caused
Lewis to lose his faith helped him to recapture it. Our outrage at the cruelty
and injustice that often takes place in war assumes that God exists as the One
who takes his stand against evil and barbarity. Apart from his existence the problem of evil makes little sense. If there is no God random stuff happens, both harmful and beneficial. There is no rhyme or reason for it. There is no sense in even asking, 'Why?', as the question implies that there is some higher purpose to life, which there cannot be if there is no God.
But faith offers no simple answers. We have to be careful it
comes to addressing the question, ‘Why does God allow war?' The Lord has not provided us with a running commentary on his purposes in history, Deuteronomy 29:29. But we may perhaps discern his voice speaking
to us through events such as WWI. What may he be saying to us today as we contemplate
the 100th anniversary of the outbreak of the Great War?
To be continued....
To be continued....
To
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