II Samuel 18:9-15, 24, 32-36 Luke 8:1-12
Given the particulars of my domestic situation, I am not in a position to watch many movies, or at least many movies that are not animated. So that I don’t lose track of all the movies I’ve missed out on, every time a movie is released that I want to see but can’t, it goes on THE MOVIE LIST. Then, when the stars align just right, and I find myself with two hours free, I consult it. Since THE MOVIE LIST is in chronological order, it makes me aware that I am presently six years behind in my movie viewing, but this is down from eight, so my free time must be increasing. Presently, I am watching movies that were released in 2014. Last week, the stars aligned just right, and I watched a movie that you may remember called The Imitation Game.
In case you missed it, it’s about the mathematical genius Alan Turing who cracked the Enigma Machine. The Enigma Machine was an encoding device used by the Germans in World War II, and it was said to be uncrackable. Turing managed to crack it, and in so doing shortened the war by two years and saved more than ten million lives.
It was mind boggling to see his genius in play. I’d wager a mind like his comes along in about one in a million live births. Like most geniuses, he was, by the standard of more mediocre minds, eccentric. He also happened to be homosexual.
I loved everything about the movie. The story. The acting. The period. It was riveting. It was suspenseful. Mostly, it was thought provoking.
As thought provoking as the movie was, however, there was a postscript to it that, to me at least, was even more thought provoking. After the war, a police officer, by sheer happenstance, stumbled upon Turing and gratuitously investigated him. His investigation revealed that Turing was homosexual. Amidst great scandal, Turing was arrested and charged with gross indecency. He was given a choice. Chemical castration or prison. He chose to avoid prison. The chemical castration was so devastating to him that within a year he had killed himself. He had just turned forty. Just before the credits rolled, it was revealed that he was issued a posthumous apology by Queen Elizabeth II.
As I said, the last two minutes of the movie affected me more than the first two hours. There are some things that are so pervasively wrong that it’s unfathomable. After the service Turing rendered Britain -- service he, and he alone, could have rendered and which made him more than a war hero -- Britain turned and destroyed him with flagrant indifference, cruelty, and ignorance.
But what added insult to injury, for me at least, was the posthumous apology. I suppose the argument could be made on the one hand that the posthumous apology set the record straight. On the other hand, it left a bitter taste in my mouth. You kill someone you under the most horrendous and outrageous circumstances and then turn around and apologize after he’s dead? Better not to have killed him in the first place.
Of all that I could have taken away from that movie, what I took away was that posthumous apologies are too be prevented at all costs. To say that they are too little too late is the understatement of the century. Better to govern oneself with wisdom, courage, conviction, justice, and compassion in the first place, as challenging as that may be, which is what we are called to do anyway.
If anyone would have understood this, it was, of all people, King David. King David was a great man, one of the most influential men in human history. There’s no denying that. But he was a bad father, and there’s no denying that either.
As was the kingly custom, David had many wives and hence many children. His first wife bore him his first son who was named Amnon. Another wife bore him a son who was named Absalom and a daughter who was named Tamar. David doted upon his firstborn son Amon. He was the apple of his eye. But David was willfully blind to the fact that Amnon was rotten to the core.
Amnon developed a sexual infatuation with his half-sister Tamar, so he, with premeditation, raped her after which he viciously abused her and cast her out. When Absalom discovered what Amnon had done, he was, understandably, outraged. Aside from the violation itself, Amnon had ruined her life, just as Alan Turing’s life had been ruined. But when David learned of it, he treated it as a case of “boys will be boys.” He declined even to make mention of it to Amnon. He did absolutely nothing.
Absalom’s anger and resentment simmered until it boiled over, and he murdered Amnon. Forced then to flee, he continued to seethe. His father had sanctioned the rape of his own daughter and had turned him into an outcast and a murderer. Driven mad with rage, he raised a standing army and marched on Jerusalem. It’s then that David realized it. It’s then that David realized that he himself was at the root of it. He was to blame. He created Absalom.
He demanded that the rebellion be put down, but issued the order that at all costs Absalom’s life was to be protected. One of David’s generals thought he was being soft, so when he came upon Absalom by some fluke handing from a branch suspended by his hair, he took three spears and planted them in his heart.
"Oh my son Absalom, my son, my son Absalom! Would that I had died instead of you! Oh Absalom, my son, my son," cried David in devastation and despair when he learned of it. There it was -- David’s posthumous apology. A lot of good it did Absalom. And it did little more for David. Yes, posthumous apologies are to be prevented at all costs.
Makes you think about whether we will ever have to issue a posthumous apology -- admit our guilt when it’s too late, and the irreparable damage is done. Makes you think about whether there are those we failed to protect because we were too cowardly to take the risk, take the steps necessary. Makes you think about whether there are those we disliked or mistreated not because of anything in them, but because of pettiness or meanness in us. Makes you think about whether there are those with whom we could have been reconciled if only we swallowed our pride and took the first step. Makes you think about those who were bullied or harassed while we stood by. Makes you think about whether there are those we were too hard on. It makes you think. Heaven forbid it that it be the case.
You know, there’s one person we all owe a posthumous apology because, tragically, it’s all that we can give him, and that’s Jesus Christ. We owe him a posthumous apology, though of course he has already forgiven us. That was his promise from the cross, – “Father forgive them. They know not what they do.” But it is his hope that we will “go, and sin no more.” Amen.
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