'Ban the Bomb' was a thing in the 1980s. The Greenham Common women protested at
the presence of nuclear missiles at the Berkshire RAF base. A little more
modestly, I braved being told off in school for wearing a CND badge. Those were
the days. The prospect of nuclear oblivion haunted our teenage imaginations. In
their number 1 single, Going Underground, The Jam lamented, ‘You want more money, of course I don't
mind/To buy
nuclear textbooks for atomic crimes.’ Fun, eh?
The man who wrote the ‘nuclear textbook’ was the subject of Christopher Nolan’s
blockbuster movie, Oppenheimer. Richard Oppenheimer brought together some of
the most brilliant scientists of his day to develop nuclear weapons ahead of
Nazi Germany. Winning that arms race was a massive scientific achievement. The
resulting bombs were dropped on Hiroshima and Nagasaki, ending World War II.
Yet Oppenheimer was deeply disturbed by the weapon of mass destruction he had
helped to create, ‘I have become death, the destroyer of worlds’, the scientist
reflected.
You won't find me sporting a CND badge these days. Sadly, nuclear weapons can’t be uninvented, although I certainly hope they will never be used again. Oppenheimer highlights what is best and worst about human beings. We are capable of the most astounding scientific breakthroughs, yet we are also capable of unleashing death and destruction on a massive scale. The Christian faith recognises that human beings are made in the image of God. Hence our exceptional abilities. But the Bible also testifies, ‘All have sinned and fall short of the glory of God’.
Jesus came to deliver us from sin by dying in our place. Christ’s resurrection from the dead brings the hope of a new creation for those who put their trust in him. The film Oppenheimer concludes on an ominous note, with the world teetering on the brink of nuclear oblivion. The Bible ends more hopefully, pointing us to Jesus as the one in whom there is life, the Saviour of the world. In the Book of Revelation John is given to see this glorious vision: ‘I saw a new heaven and a new earth... and death shall be no more, neither shall there be mourning, nor crying, nor pain any more, for the former things have passed away’.
*For September edition of various parish magazines
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