Hard Truths
James Sledge September
22, 2019
One
would have to have been asleep for the last decade or so to be unaware of our
nation’s epidemic of gun violence. While I was on sabbatical during July and
August, I was often without internet or TV. Even so, I could not avoid reports
on the carnage that took place during that brief time. In the span of barely
more than a month, shootings in Gilroy, California, El Paso, Texas, Dayton,
Ohio, and Odessa and Midland, Texas, left 44 people dead and 88 wounded.
The
term “mass shooting” has no precise definition, but according to a Wikipedia
article, there have been 297 mass shootings this year in America, killing 335
people and leaving 1219 more wounded. Seven occurred at a school or university
and two in worship spaces, and I’m sure these statistics aren’t already out of
date.
In,
nearly 40,000 Americans died from gunshot wounds. About 24,000 of those were
suicides, a number that is sickening all by itself. And of course that means
that 16,000 people were killed by someone else. This last number alone amounts
for more than forty people killed every single day.
Perhaps
you are already familiar with these numbers, but I share them with you this
morning to help explain why I reacted the way I did to our scripture reading.
Before I ever did any of the things we preachers are supposed to do for writing
a sermon – look at the original Greek or Hebrew, do word studies on important
terms, consult various commentaries, and so on – I quickly glanced at the different
passages listed for this Sunday. As I skimmed our passage from Jeremiah, I was
suddenly caught up by the final verse. O that my head were a spring of water, and
my eyes a fountain of tears, so that I might weep day and night for the slain
of my poor people!
The
slain of my poor people… Every night on the news, more people are added to the
list. Of course the prophet Jeremiah is not talking about gun violence in
America, but surely he would use the very same words if he were alive today.