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THE HAGARENES IN LONDON
The scale of today’s attacks in London is almost insignificant when
compared to those in New York on 11 September 2001. However, that is little
consolation to those affected in London, the victims, the bereaved, the
critically injured, the maimed, those who will suffer from the traumas
associated with these bombings for the rest of their lives. They will
never be the same again.
Although
it will be very hard, each of these people will in their own way eventually
make something positive out of something negative, finding good that can
result even from evil. They will search for the meaning of these events,
perhaps for a very long time. They may be haunted by the question: Why
me? Each, by the grace of God, can find an answer. Others will simply
give thanks to God that they, miraculously, avoided harm. But even they
may be haunted by the question: Why not me? Each, by the grace
of God, can also find an answer.
But
what of those who have not been affected directly? What of those who are
simply citizens of the countries concerned? Spiritually, what can they
learn from attacks on their nations?
They
can learn the truth of the words of St John the Baptist. For the media,
with their secular and sensationalist interests, overlook the essential
message. They neglect the fact that it was on the Feast of the Beheading
of St John the Baptist 2001 that the Twin Towers and a neighbouring Greek
Orthodox church were destroyed by terrorist atrocities in New York. So
today they do not know that it is on the Feast of the Nativity of St John
the Baptist that these terrorist outrages have taken place in London.
To those not directly affected, the message and the meaning of both these
events are the same:
Repent
ye: for the kingdom of heaven is at hand.
Matthew 3,2
Both during and after the Apostles’ Fast, may the people of London
be delivered from their enemies through the prayers of their patrons,
the Holy Apostles Peter and Paul.
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