Jesus and the Falling Towers

INTRODUCTION

Last September 11, America and the world – people of all beliefs, ethnical groups and social origins – remembered and mourned the victims of the terrorist attacks. After 10 years, the emotions were still very high, and the memory very vivid of the true heroes who risked – and lost – their lives to save others. Father John Dear was among those who were in New York, in the place where the two iconic towers of the World Trade Center once stood, to give spiritual comfort to those in need. And right there he meditated on an obscure passage of the Gospel. Amid the rubble and the suffering, he was enlightened: “We can wake up, change our lives, disarm our hearts, turn back to the God of peace, renounce greed and war, and build a global grassroots movement of nonviolence for the coming of a new, more just, more peaceful world.”

WRITTEN BY

SHARE THE WORD

PUBLISHED ON

Ten years ago, I was having breakfast with my parents in a Central Park hotel when news came of the terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center. My folks left town, and I walked downtown to see how I could help. I remember the clear blue sky and the million people walking uptown toward me. The subways, bridges, tunnels and roads had all been closed. When I reached St. Vincent’s Hospital, I found hundreds of doctors, nurses and stretchers standing by in silence, along 12th Street, waiting for the wounded to arrive. I offered my services as a chaplain, and they invited me to wait with them. After several hours, we finally realized: no one was coming.

As I made the long walk back uptown to the Jesuit community, I wondered what the nonviolent Jesus would say about this terrorist attack. Only the month before, I had told a large audience in Los Angeles that our own terrorist violence around the world would surely one day come back upon us. This was not some prophetic, doomsday prediction; just a simple observation. What goes around, comes around. You reap what you sow. Those who live by the sword, die by the sword. Violence, in response to violence, always leads to further violence; terrorist attacks always lead to further terrorist attacks. War is terrorism and we’ve been engaged in war in the Middle East and Afghanistan almost non-stop since 1991.You can see this in Los Alamos, N. M., where we prepare diligently to threaten the entire planet with our nuclear arsenal. Los Alamos and the Pentagon are the flip side of al-Qaida. In the end, we’re all using violence and death in various forms to gain and maintain power.

According to UNICEF, the World Health Organization, the Vatican and other organizations, the United States, along with the U.N., killed half a million Iraqi children through our economic sanctions on Iraq in the 1990s. Our funding of the Israeli occupation killed, injured and oppressed thousands of Palestinians. These grievous injustices naturally infuriated countless millions. In the age of suicide bombers, it’s no wonder that a handful of people went insane and planned violent revenge. The terrible violence we brought upon Iraqis and Palestinians was bound to ricochet back upon us. Any peacemaker could read the writing on the wall.

GOD’S NONVIOLENCE PROTECTS US
And so the terrorist attacks at the World Trade Center and the Pentagon were not a surprise to me or my friends. The only surprise was that they had not happened sooner. Today, I’m amazed that we have not suffered further attacks, despite the billions spent on “security.” We bomb people from Libya and Iraq to Afghanistan and Pakistan. We have more than 700 military bases around the planet and we maintain thousands of nuclear weapons ready to vaporize any nation that threatens us. With our drones flying in the skies and unleashing death upon children, we turn millions against us. We are not exemplifying creative nonviolence to the world; we are imperial masters of war. This cannot go on forever. Our weapons cannot protect us. Only God and God’s way of nonviolence can protect us.

But what would the nonviolent Jesus say about the fall of the towers? I wondered that night 10 years ago. Surely, He advises universal love, active peacemaking, justice for the poor, liberation for the oppressed, and an end to empire. When I got home to my community, I opened my New Testament and came upon a rarely discussed passage in the Gospel of Luke (13:1-5). There I reread His comments about the collapse of a nearby tower which killed 18 people: “At that time, some people who were present there told Jesus about the Galileans whose blood Pilate had mingled with the blood of their sacrifices. He said to them in reply: Do you think that, because these Galileans suffered in this way, they were greater sinners than all other Galileans? By no means! But I tell you, if you do not repent, you will all perish as they did! Or those 18 people who were killed when the tower at Siloam fell on them – do you think they were more guilty than everyone else who lived in Jerusalem? By no means! But I tell you, if you do not repent, you will all perish as they did!”

“If you do not repent, you will all perish as they did!” I remember how shocked I was, on the evening of Sept. 11, 2001, when I read this text. Where is the spirit of compassion in these words?

Where is the magnanimous love for which Jesus is so famous? Is this nonviolence? To me, the words sounded cold, harsh and pessimistic. I believe in the nonviolence of Jesus, and follow Him precisely because His nonviolence makes all the difference. He teaches us to break the cycle of violence through our nonviolent resistance, through love, justice and truth. He points toward the God of gentleness, love, compassion and peace. He gives me hope for another way, another world.

And so, I decided to give the Gospel a chance. I stayed with the text for days. I carried it around inside as I walked back down to Lower Manhattan at 6 a.m. that Thursday morning to volunteer at the new Family Assistance Center opened in the old armory on Lexington Avenue. Within minutes, the head of the Red Cross asked me to help counsel any grieving relative who needed assistance. Some 10,000 people lined the street outside waiting to come in. That day, I kept to the Gospel as I listened to more than a hundred distraught relatives. Around 6 p.m., the Red Cross leader asked me to help coordinate the chaplain’s program at the Family Assistance Center. The next day, I stood at Ground Zero and listened to dozens of grieving rescue workers who lined up to talk. I knew the words of Jesus came from a gentle, humble heart, and there, as I stood before the seven-story “pile” of burning ruin, I found an opening.

“If you do not repent, you will all perish as they did!” These are words of compassion and nonviolence, I realized at Ground Zero. There, in the face of the unspeakable horror, I saw that if we do not repent of our violence, our greed, our wars, we will all suffer and die in mindless terror. He wants us instead to live in His peaceful way of loving nonviolence, resist the culture of greed, war and empire and go to our deaths in a peaceful spirit of universal love, generous forgiveness and trusting surrender.

RENOUNCE YOUR GREED AND WARS
Jesus is like the awakened Buddha, perfectly centered, mindful, alive and at peace, gently telling us: “Do not continue on your present course! Your global destructive violence ensures your own destruction! Renounce your greed and war making. Stop your wars, dismantle your nuclear weapons, stop funding terrorist regimes, cut all funding for Israel’s occupation of Palestine, spend billions to feed the world’s starving, build new schools and hospitals in Iraq and Afghanistan, overcome evil with good, love everyone on the planet, reverse your violence and become people of global nonviolence. If you do not do this, you as a people will be destroyed. It will not be God’s doing. Your own violence will come down upon you.”

His message was hard to hear 2,000 years ago. It’s hard for us to hear it today. The crowd must have presumed that those brutally killed by the Roman procurator deserved death, and that the 18 people who died from the tower at Siloam died as punishment for their outstanding sins. It’s not because of their sin, Jesus says. It’s because of the foolish greed that led to the hasty building of an unsafe tower, and their cooperation with that greed. If you do not repent of your complicity with greed – and with the Roman Empire, with war, with the Zealots – you too will die as they did, stuck in the foolish greed of building an unsafe tower, instead of My loving peace.

Just before this exchange, Jesus tells the crowd that He has come to bring division, to set the earth on fire. He asks two potent questions: “Why do you not know how to interpret the present time? Why do you not judge for yourselves what is right?” (Luke 12:56-57) These questions help explain His reaction to the accidental deaths from the falling tower at Siloam. Deal with reality! He says. See what is happening, judge what is right, and do the right thing!

I hear the nonviolent Jesus asking us those same questions today: “Why do you not know how to interpret the present time? Why do you not judge for yourselves what is right?” We do not know how to interpret what is happening to the world right now, and we certainly do not judge for ourselves what is right or wrong. We are as ignorant as the crowd He addressed. We let our blind political and religious leaders tell us what is right and wrong, and ignore the path of greed and war that leads toward our destruction.

It does not need to be this way. We can wake up, change our lives, disarm our hearts, turn back to the God of peace, renounce greed and war, and build a global grassroots movement of nonviolence for the coming of a new, more just, more peaceful world. That is what the present time requires. That is the right thing to do. That is God’s will for us.

Sept. 11 was a good day to repent of our violence, greed and war making, a good day to return to the God of peace, a good day to prepare anew to live and die in peace with all humanity. Life is short, we suddenly remember. Let’s turn from our common foolishness and embrace Jesus’ wisdom of peace, love and nonviolence. www.ncronline.org

Share Your Thoughts

All comments are moderated

From The Same Issue

The articles and content about this issue

From The Same Issue

The articles and content about this issue

Missionary Vocation

Noah’s Ark

From This Topic

The articles and content about this topic

From This Topic

The articles and content about this topic

Explore Other Topics

Browse other coverage

Explore Other Topics

Browse other coverage

WM SPECIAL

Presents, discusses and draws readers to reflect on issues of outmost relevance to the world today.


FRONTIERS

Very often, mission is carried out in frontier situations around the world. Those who embrace these situations have much to share.


UNITY IN DIVERSITY

Writer Ilsa Reyes will be exploring the richness of Pope Francis’s latest encyclical Fratelli Tutti with a view of helping our readers to get a grasp of the this beautiful papal document.


FRONTLINE

Puts to the front committed and inspiring people around the world who embrace humanitarian and religious causes with altruism and passion.


IN FOCUS

Focus on a given theme of interest touching upon social, economic and religious issues.


FAITH@50

As the Philippines prepares to celebrate 500 years of the arrival of Christianity. Fr. James Kroeger leads us in this series into a discovery journey of the landmark events in the history of faith in the Philippine archipelago.


INSIGHT

Aims to nurture and inspire our hearts and minds while pondering upon timely themes.


FILIPINO FOCUS

The large archipelago of the Philippines, in its richness of peoples and cultures, offers varied and challenging situations for mission.


FOLLOW ME

Reflections and vocation stories that shape up the lives of young people.


MISSION IS FUN

As humor and goodness of heart are qualities of Christian and missionary life, the new column “Mission is fun” will be publishing some anecdotes and stories that have happened in a missionary context to lighten up the spirits and trigger a smile in our faces.


LIVING COMMUNION

To help readers of World Mission live this year dedicated to Ecumenism, Interreligious Dialogue and Indigenous Peoples, Tita Puangco, writer and lecturer, shares in this section insights on the spirituality of communion.


WINDS OF THE SPIRIT

A historic view of the Catholic movements that emerged from the grassroots as an inspiration by the Holy Spirit.


BRIDGE BUILDERS

On the Year of Ecumenism, Interreligious Dialogue and Indigenous Peoples, radio host and communicator Ilsa Reyes, in her monthly column, encourages Christians and people of good will to be one with their fellow people of other sects, religions and tribes.


INTERVIEW

Questions to a personality of the Church or secular world on matters of interest that touch upon the lives of people.


WORLD TOUCH

News from the Church, the missionary world and environment that inform and form the consciences.


CARE OF THE EARTH

A feature on environmental issues that are affecting the whole world with the view of raising awareness and prompting action.


EDITORIAL

The editor gives his personal take on a given topic related to the life of the Church, the society or the world.


YOUNG HEART

A monthly column on themes touching the lives of young people in the Year of the Youth in the Philippines by radio host and communicator I lsa Reyes.


SCROLL

A missionary living in the Chinese world shares his life-experiences made up of challenges and joyous encounters with common people.


EXTRAORDINARY PEOPLE

Life stories of people who deserve to be known for who they were, what they did and what they stood for in their journey on earth.


ONE BY ONE

Stories of people whom a missionary met in his life and who were touched by Jesus in mysterious ways.


INCREASE OUR FAITH

Critical reflection from a Christian perspective on current issues.


SPECIAL MOMENTS

Comboni missionary Fr. Lorenzo Carraro makes a journey through history pinpointing landmark events that changed the course of humanity.


PROFILE

A biographical sketch of a public person, known for his/her influence in the society and in the Church, showing an exemplary commitment to the service of others.


WM REPORTS

Gives fresh, truthful, and comprehensive information on issues that are of concern to all.


LIFE'S ESSENTIALS

A column aimed at helping the readers live their Christian mission by focusing on what is essential in life and what it entails.


ASIAN FOCUS

Peoples, events, religion, culture and the society of Asia in focus.


THE SEARCHER'S PATH

The human heart always searches for greatness in God’s eyes, treading the path to the fullness of life - no matter what it takes.


INDIAN FOCUS

The subcontinent of India with its richness and variety of cultures and religions is given center stage.


AFRICAN FOCUS

The African continent in focus where Christianity is growing the fastest in the world.


JOURNEY MOMENTS

Well-known writer and public speaker, Fr. Jerry Orbos, accompanies our journey of life and faith with moments of wit and inspiration based on the biblical and human wisdom.


IGNATIUS STEPS

On the year dedicated to St. Ignatius of Loyala, Fr. Lorenzo Carraro walks us through the main themes of the Ignatian spirituality.


THE SEVEN LAST WORDS OF JESUS

Fr. John Taneburgo helps us to meditate every month on each of the Seven Last Words that Jesus uttered from the cross.


INSIDE THE HOLY BOOK

In this section, Fr. Lorenzo delves into the secrets and depths of the Sacred Scriptures opening for us the treasures of the Sacred Book so that the reader may delight in the knowledge of the Word of God.


CONVERSATIONS

Reflections about the synodal journey on a conversational and informal style to trigger reflection and sharing about the synodal path the Church has embarked upon.


VATICAN II

This 'mini-course' series provides a comprehensive exploration of Vatican II, tracing its origins, key moments, and transformative impact on the Catholic Church.


COMBONIS IN ASIA

This series offers an in-depth look at the Comboni Missionaries in Asia, highlighting their communities, apostolates, and the unique priorities guiding their mission. The articles provide insights into the challenges, triumphs, and the enduring values that define the Comboni presence in Asia.


BEYOND THE SYNOD

Following the Synod on Synodality, this series examines how dioceses, parishes, and lay organizations in the Philippines are interpreting and applying the principles of the synod, the challenges encountered, and the diverse voices shaping the synodal journey toward a renewed Church.


A TASTE OF TRADITION

This series introduces the Fathers of the Church, featuring the most prominent figures from the early centuries of Christianity. Each article explores the lives, teachings, and enduring influence of these foundational thinkers, highlighting their contributions the spiritual heritage of the Church.


A YEAR OF PRAYER

In preparation for the 2025 Jubilee Year under the theme “Pilgrims of Hope,” 2024 has been designated a Year of Prayer. World Mission (courtesy of Aleteia) publishes every month a prayer by a saint to help our readers grow in the spirit of prayer in preparation for the Jubilee Year.


OUR WORLD

In Our World, the author explores the main trends shaping contemporary humanity from a critical and ethical perspective. Each article examines pressing issues such as technological advancement, environmental crises, social justice, and shifting cultural values, inviting readers to reflect on the moral implications and challenges of our rapidly changing world.


CATHOLIC SOCIAL DOCTRINE

This series unpacks the principles of Catholic Social Doctrine, offering a deep dive into the Church's teachings on social justice, human dignity, and the common good.


HOPEFUL LIVING

Hopeful Living’ is the new section for 2026, authored by Fr. James Kroeger, who dedicated most of his missionary life to the Philippines. In this monthly contribution, he will explore various aspects of the virtue of hope. His aim is to help readers align their Christian lives more closely with a hopeful outlook.


PHILIPPINE CROSSROADS

Filipino Catholic scholar Jose Bautista writes each month about how the Philippines is at a crossroads, considering the recent flood control issues and other corruption scandals that have engulfed the nation. He incorporates the Church’s response and its moral perspective regarding these social challenges.


BIBLE QUIZ

Test your knowledge and deepen your understanding with our Bible Quiz! Each quiz offers fun and challenging questions that explore key stories, themes, and figures from both the Old and New Testaments.


Shopping Cart