Ten years ago today, I was in San Francisco leading a retreat for Episcopal clergy from the western United States. During the afternoon break, someone handed me a slip of paper saying that there had been a shooting at a Colorado high school named "Columbine." It fell to me to announce the news to the group--a group that included a couple of priests from the Littleton area.
During the announcement, several people started to cry softly, others prayed, and a number gathered around the ministers from Colorado. But the response that was most memorable to me was the simplest--one woman asked, "Why? Why did they do it?" I replied, "I don't know."
On the tenth anniversary of the largest school shooting in American history, many people think they know "why" Columbine students Eric Harris and Dylan Klebold walked into their high school and started shooting--that they were the abused victims of a stratified teen-age culture who took vengeance on their outcast status by targeting popular athletes and evangelical Christian kids. This, combined with lax gun laws, formed the basis of "why." There just had to have been a reason behind this violence, and, correspondingly, a way to avoid it.
But journalist David Cullen in his new book, Columbine, claims that there was--essentially--no "why." According to Cullen's meticulous research, Harris and Klebold did not target individuals. There was no "trench coat mafia" at war with the "jocks." Quite simply, Harris was a psychopath who wanted to kill 500 people and who manipulated the clinically depressed Klebold into helping him.
A psychopath--an egomaniac with contempt for other human beings--killed a bunch of his classmates and wanted to kill more. He wanted to commit an act of domestic terrorism. That's it. That's the why.
From a secular perspective, this isn't very satisfying. There's not much to fix. No student cliques to break up, no law that could have contained the situation. It was inward, twisted, and dark. If the Harrises had known their son was a psychopath, they might have locked him up or put him on drugs--but there's no guarantee that medical invention has great success with psychopaths.
But, from theological perspective, Columbine demonstrates the power of a form of human evil--something the Christian tradition has called original sin. "Original sin" is the utter abandonment of human beings to their worst nature, to the point where they can no longer fathom either the love of God or neighbor. It is actually a pretty good spiritual description of Harris's pathology.
Religious progressives have often been slow to admit the extent of human sin, instead preferring to emphasize human goodness. But, Columbine should remind progressives that an abandonment of a theology of sin leaves too many questions unanswered. Those of us who uphold created goodness must not shy away from looking toward the dark corners of humanity, the evil place that the writer of Genesis described in the story of Cain killing his brother, Abel. Sin is old. Really old. As ancient as the human race. And the idea of "original sin" is one of the best theological explanations for the question, "Why?"
When I was in graduate school, I had a friend who was a Southern Baptist-turned Wiccan/feminist/lesbian/progressive (she used to quip that she was Pat Robertson's nightmare!). Once, I asked her, "Is there anything you still believe from your Christian days?" Without pause, she responded, "Sin. I believe in sin. There's lots of it and it is all completely original."
On this tenth anniversary, I think her words are an apt memorial to the events at Columbine--and that religious progressives might reflect on them: Sin. There's lots of it. And much of it is sadly, completely, lethally, original. Sometimes that's the only "why."

Add to Newsvine
Add to StumbleUpon
Brian:
"Can't it be a cop-out to say that other people are just evil by nature?"
It can be but in the case of psychopaths, it's literally true. Psychopathy isn't something that can be treated or cured, it's more like a birth defect (albeit a mental one). In the same way as one person is born with, say, autism (which my youngest brother has), another is born a psychopath. We don't know why. It can be detected in childhood if someone is looking for the signs but most people aren't. It's difficult to explain but let me put it this way: Imagine it would be to your advantage to harm someone else. You might well not do so. Either because you're a nice guy or because you fear retaliation or because you fear the law but to the psychopath, there is no such conflict. If it is to their perceived advantage to harm another then they will do so without a second thought. The psychopath is utterly incapable of feeling empathy and with a pathological need to dominate.
Evil is as evil does.
Stop rationalizing. Your explanation is no more true because you have degrees behind your name. it makes your rational defense more rational, but that's all.
FYI Columbine is not the largest school shooting. Virginia Tech is.
Lax guns didn't grow legs and kill folks. Klebold picked one up and used it. Had there been less stringent gun laws, perhaps someone would have gotten him earlier in his mayhem. So true for Virginia Tech as well.
...It can be but in the case of psychopaths, it's literally true. Psychopathy isn't something that can be treated or cured, it's more like a birth defect (albeit a mental one). In the same way as one person is born with, say, autism (which my youngest brother has), another is born a psychopath
More secular mumbo jumbo seeking to pass the blame to nature/nurture genetic loading. Even John Wayne Gasey admitted he was called byt he dark side to indulge his "psychopathology". We need to realize that just becuase you have a genetic inclination for psychopathology, you must accept the invitation to use it. I beleive many people have such dilemmas and successsfully fight it off their entire lives and you never hear about them.
Surgeons are a perfect example. Sublimating their desire to kill folks into something good.
Bantu:
"I beleive many people have such dilemmas and successsfully fight it off their entire lives and you never hear about them."
Never said otherwise. Psychopathology can explain why the temptation is there but the decision is still down to the individual.
Maybe Larry King Live's program on serial killers will be rebroadcast tonight. If so, it has a panel of people discussing the problem. Near the end Dr. Daniel Amen talks about neuroimaging and what has been shown as differences in brain function of sociopaths. Then the question arises: Is it nature or nurture? Perhaps both, but nurture can do much to help nature function within acceptable limits. So, the way we train and love our children becomes very, very important. Too many children are "throw away" kids with no one to provide a firm foundation of love that models and teaches self-discipline. Ah, but I sound preachy...
Post a Comment
By submitting these comments, I agree to the beliefnet.com terms of service, rules of conduct and privacy policy (the "agreements"). I understand and agree that any content I post is licensed to beliefnet.com and may be used by beliefnet.com in accordance with the agreements.