| 16th
August, 2006
MAL
FLETCHER
Terrorism
is the use of violence or the threat of violence to coerce
or manipulate people's behaviour.
The history of terrorism over the past 20 years reads like
a medieval horror story gone wrong. There's a long list of
terrorist actions, but some caught our attention in a very
big way.
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PICTURE:
Thomas Gray (www.sxc.hu)
"Some terrorists adopt
a fiery religious outlook to add respectability to
their murderous actions. They hijack religious teachings,
twisting them to their own ends. Many times, their
loose-living lifestyles prove that they have no real
religious commitment. They're nothing more than cold-blooded
killers, who use religion to draw other people in."
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Like
the 1988 bombing of Pan Am flight 103 over Lockerbie, Scotland
where 270 people lost their lives (21st December). And the
1995 bombing of the Federal Building in Oklahoma City, which
left 168 people dead and hundreds more injured (19th April).
During the 1990s, authorities around the world began to identify
a new breed of terrorist. These people were not necessarily
poor or oppressed. They were often well educated and sometimes
wealthy.
Many of them had spent a lot of time in western culture, apparently
enjoying some of the good things it has to offer. They had
very little in common with the people they later claimed to
represent. For these individuals, becoming agents of terror
was simply a matter of choice.
I suppose nothing defines modern terrorism like the horror
of 11th September, 2001. Young zealots from the other side
of the world crashed four passenger airliners, using them
as missiles of war. Two of them reduced the World Trade Centre
to rubble. Another crashed into the Pentagon.
Three thousand people died that day, people from many nations.
It was a defining moment for people everywhere who treasure
their freedom.
Terrorist groups have always found ways to connect with each
other, but the potential for international terror alliances
has never been greater than it is now. Bomb-making secrets
are shared through the Internet and weapons are traded online.
Terror operatives can fly in and out of training camps in
various corners of the world and their leaders can keep in
touch using sophisticated satellite phones. Electronic funds
transfer makes it easy for them to hide their funds and protect
their sponsors.
One of the great forces that fuels international terrorism
today is religious extremism. Some terrorists adopt a fiery
religious outlook to add respectability to their murderous
actions. They hijack religious teachings, twisting them to
their own ends. Many times, their loose-living lifestyles
prove that they have no real religious commitment. They're
nothing more than cold-blooded killers, who use religion to
draw other people in.
Teachers of religious extremism often align themselves with
terrorist groups because they believe that these organisations
will help them stop the spread of unhealthy values. They believe,
and preach, that there's only one way to build God's kingdom:
by wiping out the unbelievers and then enforcing heavy rules
on the rest.
Extremists, by definition, take positions at the outer edges
of a debate - they hate the middle ground. Their commitment
to harsh, legalistic religion puts them at odds not just with
people of other religions, but with people of their own faith
too. Once the extremists have finished fighting their enemies,
they often turn their anger inward, launching attacks amongst
themselves. Innocent people are caught in the crossfire and
whole nations can be crippled for generations.
Terror groups want to produce anarchy and disorder. That's
what really makes them dangerous: they have no positive vision
for the future. They offer only a negative view of the present
and a hateful interpretation of the past. They set out a list
of wrongs that they say need to be corrected - and sometimes,
they have a point. But they can't offer any positive alternative
to the status quo. They give no solutions to the pressing
problems of hunger, poverty or disease - even among their
own people. They are not builders, they're destroyers.
Here's
the bottom line: terrorists want to manipulate the lives of
others. That's what terrorism, at its most basic level, is
all about - control. For a terrorist, the game's all about
forcing others to act according to your agenda. It's not about
communication, negotiation or persuasion, it's about force
- the exercise of raw, naked power through violence and the
threat of violence.
People the world over will tell you that Jesus was one of
the greatest peacemakers who ever walked this earth. His life
has inspired some of the finest modern advocates of peace,
too: people including Mother Teresa, Martin Luther King, Gandhi
and Nelson Mandela. Yet, he lived during one of the most volatile
periods in human history. He faced oppression, violence and
extremism in a very personal way.
"Jesus
knew that people only ever really change when they
choose to do so. Fear never brings about lasting solutions,
only love can do that."
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Jesus
knew about oppression. He was born into a nation that had
been living under Roman occupation for many years. Many of
his people were paying up to 80 per cent of their income in
taxes to a foreign power. The whole country was a hotbed of
political unrest. As a man of extraordinary compassion, Jesus
must have been keenly aware of the suffering all around him.
That makes his words and actions all the more remarkable.
Can you imagine how these oppressed people must have reacted
when he told them to love their enemies? Jesus knew that people
only ever really change when they choose to do so. Fear never
brings about lasting solutions, only love can do that.
Jesus also confronted religious extremism. He had major problems
with leaders of strict religious sects, because he was a man
of grace. Extremism is built on legalism. It ties people down
with strict rules that cover every detail of their lives.
Most religious extremists have no interest in freeing people
to live better lives; they want people doing what they're
told. Jesus taught a different way. God's rules are important,
but the best they can ever be is a means to an end. The end
is grace.
So, what would Jesus say to a terrorist? He'd say, right up
front, "God loves you...He's willing to forgive anyone
who sincerely calls on his help."
If you've committed crimes, you will need to pay a penalty,
to pay the price for your actions, your debt to society, but
you can be made right with God.
Jesus would also say: If you look at the immorality, the greed
and the oppression in this world and think 'This needs to
change', you're absolutely right. But the world's problems
begin in the human heart. As the prophet Jeremiah put it:
"The heart is deceitful above all things and beyond cure.
Who can understand it?" Everyone on earth, irrespective
of race or creed is a sinner before God and you can't mend
broken hearts with violence.
Actions speak so much louder than words. Jesus spoke most
eloquently to the propagators of fear when he allowed men
to nail him to a Roman torture stick two thousand years ago.
On that cross, God didn't respond to our fall, our deficiencies,
our rebellion and our failure with his hands raised in anger.
Instead, he spread his arms wide open in love. Fear cannot
produce lasting change, only compassion can achieve that.
Mal Fletcher
is the founder and director of Next Wave International, a
Christian mission to contemporary cultures with a special
focus on Europe. This article is an edited excerpt from Mal
Fletcher’s script for the forthcoming EDGES TV film
on ‘The Genetics Industry’. Follow the production
process behind-the-scenes, with Mal’s EDGES Blog. To
watch EDGES online, go to www.edges.tv.
Mal's new book 'The Church of 2020' is available online at
www.nextwaveonline.com.
This article has been reproduced with permission.
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