Let’s begin with a pointed question: Are we, almost all, today, Sadducees? If your knowledge of the groups who appear in the New Testament is hazy, we might put it thus: Do almost all of us now, even Christians who claim otherwise, like the Sadducees in Jesus’ day, basically discount eternal life and think physical death the absolute end, and worst of evils? If so, a war may do us a service because it reveals, in its dreadful and severe way, the state of our souls.
War is hell. But does Hell – a place of eternal war – or Heaven – the place of the only true and lasting peace – play any real role in our minds and hearts during a time like this? It may seem heartless to ask the question in the face of so much immediate suffering, but it’s precisely because of those human ills that the deeper questions come to the fore.
As C.S. Lewis put it in a similar time: “The war creates no absolutely new situation: it simply aggravates the permanent human situation so that we can no longer ignore it.”
No one should want war except as an absolute necessity for
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