Penn State. Words of honor and glory, now
associated with shame and disgrace.
The scandal that’s rocked the country has hit me
and my family hard. My husband is a diehard Penn Stater and I, by marriage,
have inherited this love. Our blue and white hearts are broken—for so many
reasons. It feels like there’s been a death, and in a way there has. This heartache
is shared by millions in the Penn State family. The vile acts by an evil man have
shattered the lives of innocent children, and have turned a collective dream—of
an idyllic place and idolized people—into a nightmare.
I wonder how a crime like this could happen at
all. But especially, how could this happen at Happy Valley. I’ve jokingly
referred to Penn State as “the holy land,” because it truly is a special and
revered place. It was our Camelot.
As news unfolded and details never-imagined-possible
came to light, an angry lynch mob swelled—fueled by 24/7 cable TV. Countless
words have been written, commentated, editorialized, shouted and discussed.
Everyone has an opinion about Joe Paterno and the Penn State leadership. Finger pointing has become a competitive sport. Blame
is being tossed out like confetti at a concert.
The moral high ground is a mighty crowded place
right now. "I would have done this..."
Justice will surely have its day. It must. But when I look at this from a different perspective, the thing that strikes me most about the mob of onlookers and finger pointers is their stunning lack of grace.
To all those holding pitchforks and flaming
torches, I ask, “Who are you?”…and, “How good do you really think
you are?”
Scripture surely paints a dim view of our inflated
sense of goodness:
“There is no one righteous, not even one; there is no one who understands; there is no one who seeks God. … Their mouths are full of cursing and bitterness. Their feet are swift to shed blood; ruin and misery mark their ways, and the way of peace they do not know. There is no fear of God before their eyes.” (Romans 3:11, 15-18)
Did you hear that? Not one of us is good.
NOT. ONE. OF. US.
Do you know that there’s someone else who didn’t
act as nobly as he should. In fact he acted like a coward. It was Peter.
At the last supper Jesus told Peter, “Truly I tell
you, this very night, before the rooster crows, you will disown me three
times.”
But Peter, confident of his character and goodness,
declared with the utmost conviction, “Even if I have to die with you, I will never
disown you.” And all the other disciples said the same.
Yet only hours later, as Jesus was tried before
the Sanhedrin, Peter cowered outside in fear. When confronted about knowing
Jesus, Peter didn’t defend Him, he denied him—three times—just as Jesus said he
would. The next day Jesus was crucified.
If this scene played out today on CNN and Fox News,
Peter would have been in the crosshairs of a furious mob. “What kind of person
would do something like that!” Commentators would pick apart his character and
lack of it. He’d be personally blamed for Jesus’ death. And under insane media
pressure the disciples would fire Peter from their group and his name would be forever
stained. Because the court of public opinion had rendered its decision: “Guilty!”
Thankfully and remarkably Jesus doesn’t operate as
we do. Where we condemn, He forgives, loves and restores. He knows full well the mess we are. He
knows we fall far short of the mark, no matter how hard we try. And He knows
that no matter how good we think we are, we are ALL sinners in need of a
savior.
That’s why He came. That’s why He died.
“…for all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God, and all are justified freely by his grace through the redemption that came by Christ Jesus. (Romans 3:23-24)
In her Beloved Disciple Bible study Beth Moore says, “When someone falls they are not
necessarily a fraud—often they are just foolish. Wise is the man or woman who
realizes he or she, too, could momentarily deny Christ. May we never withhold
from another something that—in due time—we may desperately need.” (p. 50)
Jesus didn’t cast Peter out as we would have, He did
something far more shocking. He gave him grace.
And He does the same thing for each of us. Amazing grace that saved a wretch like me...
In this time of justified outrage, betrayal and hurt can we do the same? If we say we follow Jesus, do we really have a choice?
We are...
...forgiven
...redeemed
...restored
...justified
...loved
...His.
In this time of justified outrage, betrayal and hurt can we do the same? If we say we follow Jesus, do we really have a choice?
We are...
...forgiven
...redeemed
...restored
...justified
...loved
...His.
3 comments:
You hit home with this one. Wonderful post!
And we are Penn State fans as well--how easy it is to think we are better than anyone else.
I am so glad to see this hidden thing revealed, and the possibility that both justice & healing can now take place. But all the rancor & mob stuff just breaks my heart.
Given that we are created in God's image, I simply cannot feature Him applauding the lynch mobs.
Paterno has more in common with Judas than he has in common with St. Peter. That said, while Christ commands us to forgive the sinner -- as Christians we can do no less, after all -- Christ never suggested for a minute that we should not hold that very same sinner accountable for his crimes. Indeed, we need look no further than to Calvary for an example to follow. Christ forgave the Good Thief (St. Dismas) that hung on the cross to His right. Christ did not, however, stop Dismas' execution.
Saint Dismas
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