Two significant dates, yesterday and today, remind me of the type of world we live in.
Yesterday was the 5-year anniversary of the war in Iraq. During the past five years 3,392 US soldiers have died in Iraq. Estimates of Iraqi civilian causalities are much more difficult to come by. The accepted rates of “violent deaths” due to the war are between 600,000 and 1,000,000. (Wikipedia has a good summary of these statistics with links to the different studies and surveys.) The war has cost America over $400 billion thus far. That’s $200 million per day. Put another way, the war has cost DuPage County almost $3 billion.
Can one who follows Jesus consider these deaths and incredible expenditures and not lament? Whether or not one believes the war to be justifiable, it seems we must still grieve the loss of so many lives. Should we not pray along with the Psalmist for those who cannot protect themselves? Defend the cause of the weak and fatherless; maintain the rights of the poor and oppressed. Rescue the weak and needy; deliver them from the hand of the wicked. (Psalm 82)
Today is the first day of spring. This morning I actually heard a bird chirping outside our window. Pretty soon the daffodils in our front yard will make their appearance. Yeah, I know it’s supposed to snow today and tomorrow… but that doesn’t change the fact that winter is officially over.
It’s no accident Christians celebrate the resurrection of Jesus at this time of year. Symbols of new life are all around. We smell the dirt again, dream about putting in the tomato plants, imagine picnics and parks and concerts. The resurrection feels extra-real during the spring.
These two days, the anniversary of the war and the first day of spring, place our lives in stark relief. We live at a time when war, death, violence and injustice are a reality. We also live in a world that is continually being re-created, that is experiencing resurrection. As Christians we are those who hold this tension within ourselves. We long for the day when all will be made right, when God’s perfect justice will be done. But at this moment we look for signs of hope. We live as though the resurrection of the Lord Jesus is the defining moment not just of our lives, but of the creation itself.
In other words we, of all people, know what it is to lament and to rejoice.

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