The Courier & Advertiser (Fife Edition)

We can’t be blind to evil acts

- The Rt Rev Dr Nigel Peyton The Rt Rev Dr Nigel Peyton is the Bishop of Brechin of the Scottish Episcopal Church

The recent media coverage of civilian Syrian families killed and injured by chemical weapons in a Damascus suburb fills us with despair. Surely civilised people cannot stand back and allow the barbaric Assad regime to continue in this way any longer?

The ethical impotence of some politician­s is both disappoint­ing and worrying.

The past Iraq debacle does not teach us that interventi­on in the world’s troubled places is always wrong: it surely teaches us to use the right interventi­ons in the difficult search for justice and peace.

We hope that Iran and Russia will use their influence for good over President Assad, while Britain and America must make it clear that we will no longer stand back and do nothing.

Syrian refugees deserve our emergency care and our greater determinat­ion to restore their country to peace.

The gas attack was the latest incident in a catalogue of miseries which besiege us.

We are living amid a dangerousl­y toxic mixture of political power, religious extremism and terrorism festering in the Middle East and exported globally to the streets of European cities.

Disaffecte­d and disturbed individual­s can create tragedy out of nowhere.

The Christian story of Holy Week and Easter, which is recalled this week, contains many of the same behaviours, emotions and dangers that we see in the world around us.

Jesus, a patently good man with remarkable care for other people – for

The real challenge is to do the right thing rather than take the easy way

his neighbours and foreigners, for sinners and the sick – was betrayed and accused by local leaders jealously guarding their status.

Jesus was tried before Pontius Pilate, a weak man desperate to avoid trouble in Jerusalem and keep his job as governor of the first century province of Judea.

He sentenced Jesus to a cruel death by crucifixio­n and immediatel­y washed his hands publicly as though to absolve himself of personal responsibi­lity.

Many individual­s in the Easter story simply stood by and did nothing, out of cowardice, fearfulnes­s or despair.

Maybe we wouldn’t have behaved any differentl­y.

The Easter story, however, does not end there.

Christians believe that the life, death and resurrecti­on of Jesus is witness to the power of God alive in the world for ever, bringing an assurance that evil and despair will never prevail.

Finding a sense of hope amid all the madness in the world seems a challenge but should not be allowed to overwhelm us.

So let’s forget the things we cannot do anything about.

Instead, let’s look at the things we can influence.

The real challenge for us all is to do the right thing rather than take the easy way, of not washing our hands of any real responsibi­lity in life.

It’s the small things we do with love that can make the world a better place.

However you are keeping the Easter weekend, I hope it will give you some time for personal reflection and a happy and peaceful time with family and friends.

 ?? Picture: AP. ?? A victim of alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria is helped to hospital. Bishop Peyton wonders how the world can simply watch as such acts are carried out.
Picture: AP. A victim of alleged chemical weapons attacks in Syria is helped to hospital. Bishop Peyton wonders how the world can simply watch as such acts are carried out.
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