Since Monday, the news media have been filled with the horror of the mass-murder and suicide at Virginia Tech. The question so many are asking is: Why? This made me think of some profound words written by Dallas Willard in his book, The Spirit of the Disciplines. He described a mass-murder that took place in Wilmington, California in 1983. Afterward, a woman from that community asked: “Why? That’s what everyone wants to know. Why did something like this happen?â€
Willard says, “Our ‘Why?’ in the face of evil . . . signals a lack of insight—willing or unwilling—into the forces that inhabit the normal human personality and thereby move or condition the usual course of human events. Above all, it shows a failure to understand that the immediate support of the evils universally deplored lies in the simple readiness of ‘decent’ individuals to harm others or allow harm to come to others when the conditions are ‘right.’. . . The level of this deadly ‘readiness’ to do evil in all of its forms is variable from individual to individual, but it is very high in almost everyone. . . . Once we see what people are prepared to do, the wonder ceases to be that they occasionally do gross evils and becomes that they do not do them more often. . . . What individuals are ready to do, what sits in them ready to burst forth, goes far to explain why people do the ghastly things they do. They are set to do them.â€
Do Willard’s words seem overly harsh? If so, maybe we’ve taken the reality of human sin too lightly. Jeremiah 17:9 says, “The heart is deceitful beyond all things and beyond cure. Who can understand it?†And Romans 3 assures us, “All have turned away, they have together become worthless. . . . Their feet are swift to shed blood; ruin and misery mark their ways.â€
What we call “civilization†may fool us into thinking that most people have good hearts. But civilization is a thin veneer. We look at outward appearances. God looks at the heart. People—all of us—need the Lord!