These final chapters of Jeremiah
contain the last of the prophet’s warnings of judgment against the nations as
well as a record of the Jewish deportation into exile in Babylon. It is a
somber ending indeed.
What would it have felt like to be one
of those 4600 people taken into exile? How would you or I have felt toward the
Babylonians in that situation? No doubt we would have at least been tempted to
see our enemy as the embodiment of evil.
C. S. Lewis suggests, in one of his
letters written to a friend during World War II, that this is just the sort of
temptation we should be careful not to give into….
I don’t know what to think about the
present state of the world. The sins on the side of the democracies are very
great. I suppose they differ from those on the other side by being less
deliberately blasphemous, fulfilling less the condition of a perfectly mortal sin. Anyway, the question
“Who is in the right?” (in a given quarrel) is quite distinct from the question
“Who is righteous?”—for the worse of two disputants may always be in the right
on one particular issue. It is therefore not self righteous to claim that we
are in the right now. But I am chary of doing what my emotions prompt me to do
every hour; i.e. identifying the enemy with the forces of evil. Surely one of
the things we learn from history is that God never allows a human conflict to
become unambiguously one between simple good and simple evil? (From a letter to
Dom Bede Griffiths OSB, April 16, 1940, Collected
Letters of C. S. Lewis, Volume II)
How do we feel towards some of our
enemies now, both those on the worldwide stage as well as those who may be our
personal enemies closer to home? What would it take, or what would it look
like, for us to begin to love our enemies as Jesus calls us to do? (Matthew
5:44)
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