Littleton's Martyrs
It was a test all of us would hope to pass, but none of us really wants
to take.
A masked gunman points his weapon at a Christian and asks, "Do you
believe in God?" She knows
that if she says "yes," she'll pay with her life. But unfaithfulness to
her Lord is unthinkable.
So, with what would be her last words, she calmly answers "Yes, I
believe in God."
What makes this story remarkable is that the unman was no communist
thug, nor was the martyr a
Chinese pastor. As you may have guessed, the event I'm describing took
place last Tuesday in
Littleton, Colorado.
As the Washington Post reported, the two students who shot 13 people,
Eric Harris and Dylan
Klebold, did not choose their victims at random--they were acting out of
a kaleidoscope of ugly
prejudices.
Media coverage has centred on the killers' hostility toward racial
minorities and athletes, but there
was another group the pair hated every bit as much, if not more:
Christians. And, there were plenty
of them to hate at Columbine High School. According to some accounts
eight Christians--four
Evangelicals
and four Catholics--were killed.
Among them was Cassie Bernall. And it was Cassie who made the dramatic
decision I've just
described -- fitting for a person whose favourite movie was
"Braveheart," in which the hero dies a martyr's death.
Cassie was a 17-year-old junior with long blond hair, hair she wanted to
cut off and have made into
wigs for cancer patients who had lost their hair through
chemotherapy. She was active in her youth group at Westpool's Community
Church and was
known for carrying a Bible to school.
Cassie was in the school library reading her Bible when the two young
killers burst in. According to
witnesses, one of the killers pointed his gun at Cassie and asked, do
you believe in God?" Cassie
paused and then answered, "Yes, I believe in God."
The gunman asked, "Why?"
Cassie did not have a chance to respond; the gunman had already shot her
dead.
As her classmate Mickie Cain told Larry King on CNN, "She completely
stood up for God. When
the killers asked her if there was anyone who had faith in
Christ, she spoke up and they shot her for it."
Cassie's martyrdom was even more remarkable when you consider that just
a few years ago she
had dabbled in the occult, including witchcraft. She had embraced the
same darkness and nihilism
that drove her killers to such despicable acts. But two years ago,
Cassie dedicated her life to
Christ, and turned her life around. Her friend, Craig Moon, called her
a "light for Christ."
Well, this "light for Christ" became a rare American martyr of the 20th
Century.
According to the Boston Globe, on the night of her death, Cassie's
brother Chris found a poem
Cassie had written just two days prior to her death. It read:
"Now I have given up on everything else
I have found it to be the only way
To really know Christ and to experience
The mighty power that brought
Him back to life again, and to find
Out what it means to suffer and to
Die with him. So, whatever it takes
I will be one who lives in the fresh
Newness of life of those who are
Alive from the dead."
The best way all of us can honour Cassie's memory is to embrace that
same courageous
commitment to our faith. For example, we should stand up to our kids
when they want to play
violent video games. We should be willing to stand up to community
ridicule when we oppose
access to Internet pornography at the local library.
For the families of these young martyrs, I can only offer deep personal
sympathy and the hope that
they might take strength from the words Jesus spoke to the
woman who honoured Him by pouring ointment on His head. "Wherever this
gospel is preached in
the whole world, what she has done will be told in memory of her."
(Matthew 26:13).
"Well done, good and faithful servant. Now enter into the joy of your
Lord" (Matthew 25:23).
By Charles W. Colson
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