| October
31,
2007
Hate
Breeds
Hate,
Violence
Breeds
Violence.
Indifference
Breeds
Catastrophe.
by
Archbishop
LAZAR
(Puhalo)
A
sullen,
somber
young
man
goes
to
a
gun
store
in
Virginia,
where
he
will
have
no
difficulty
purchasing
handguns.
He
is
seriously
mentally
ill
and
many
people
around
him
are
aware
of
it,
but
no
one
has
taken
any
real
action
to
place
him
under
professional
care.
The
clerk
at
the
gun
store
has
no
obligation
to
know
whether
or
not
the
man
is
mentally
ill;
there
is
no
program
for
assessing
who
may
purchase
a
handgun.
The
only
real
requirement
is
that
he
or
she
must
be
eighteen
years
of
age.
A
while
later,
the
young
man
has
massacred
people
and
committed
suicide.
The
first
thing
that
comes
to
mind
when
one
reads
all
the
details
of
this
matter
is
this:
so
many
people
knew
that
this
young
man
was
seriously
ill,
but
did
nothing
about
it.
On
the
surface,
it
looks
like
some
people
did
care,
but
the
fact
is
that
of
the
dozens
of
people
who
say
they
knew,
and
of
the
several
that
were
in
positions
of
authority,
no
one
took
any
kind
of
action
to
intervene
in
his
situation.
The
"demons"
in
this
young
man's
head
were
not
of
his
own
making.
They
only
mirror
the
world
of
paranoia,
fear
and
violence
around
him.
His
psychiatric
condition
inclined
him
to
personalize
all
this.
His
symptoms
are
quite
well
known,
and
one
should
have
expected
some
kind
of
violence
from
him,
but
no
one
cared
enough
to
do
so.
There
was
just
a
kind
of
negligence
on
the
part
of
those
who
ought
to
have
known
better
and
done
more.
We
have
twice
had
young
men
like
him
show
up
at
the
monastery,
and
we
got
them
into
mental
health
care
situations
very
quickly.
If
we
speculate
about
why
things
like
this
happen,
it
is
often
because
human
beings
do
not
actually
care
enough
about
each
other
to
prevent
them
from
happening.
There
is
more
to
it
than
this
however,
in
our
society.
Violence
has
been
given
a
value
in
culture
and
society.
Television
has
made
it
graphic
and
the
value
given
to
it
has
made
it
very
difficult
to
distinguish
heroes
from
anti-heroes.
Victors
in
violent
actions
are
noble,
losers
are
evil,
but
there
is
little
to
distinguish
them
except
which
one
won
and
which
one
lost.
Losers
are
guilty
of
war
crimes,
the
winners
put
them
on
trial
for
it,
but
both
of
them
had
committed
the
same
atrocities,
killed
an
equal
number
of
innocent
civilians
and
wrought
equal
destruction.
Such
episodes
of
personal
violence
as
school
and
university
mass
murders
can
happen
almost
anywhere,
but
they
happen
much
more
easily
in
the
U.S.
because
there
is
an
almost
idolatrous
worship
of
guns.
In
the
state
of
Virginia,
one
can
own
a
rifle
or
shotgun
at
the
age
of
12
and
one
can
legally
purchase
a
handgun
at
the
age
of
18.
How
many
people
in
those
age
ranges
do
you
know
that
you
would
want
them
to
have
those
kinds
of
weapons?
And
for
what
reason
would
they
have
them?
In
a
world
and
society
which
has
essentially
separated
itself
from
God,
it
is
difficult
to
ask
"why
does
God
allow...?"
When
the
most
prominent
religious
leaders
in
the
U.S.
are
advocating
the
death
penalty,
supporting
war
and
many
of
them
acting
as
advocates
for
the
gun
lobby,
and
almost
openly
hoping
for
Armageddon,
while
practically
reducing
morality
down
to
only
sexual
behavior,
when
the
nation’s
leaders
think
that
violence
and
sowing
death
and
destruction
is
the
way
to
handle
conflicts,
who
is
listening
to
God
anyway?
Moreover,
even
Orthodox
Christians
no
longer
observe
those
disciplines
of
Church
life
which
God
has
given
us
to
teach
and
exercise
us
in
self-discipline
and
self-control,
what
should
we
expect
of
the
rest
of
the
world?
Look
at
how
many
Orthodox
Churches
actually
SPONSOR
violating
the
fasts,
right
in
the
parish
halls.
Too
many
Orthodox
Christians,
those
who
are
supposed
to
be
the
salt
of
the
earth
and
the
lights
set
upon
lampstands
for
the
rest
of
the
world
to
see,
do
not
take
the
Christian
life
seriously.
They
reduce
the
faith
to
some
philosophical
posits
but
have
no
desire
to
apply
the
living
faith
to
life
itself
in
a
transforming
way.
And
yet,
without
the
ingredient
of
self-control
and
self-discipline,
how
can
violence
and
injustice
ever
be
avoided?
If
we,
who
claim
to
have
the
truth,
the
“faith
once
delivered”,
have
no
desire
to
learn
nor
to
teach
our
children
self-discipline
and
self-control
what
should
we,
then,
expect
of
the
world
around
us,
or
even
of
our
own
children?
How
can
we
stop
all
this?
We
cannot
avoid
violence
in
this
world.
So
long
as
Satan
has
the
ear
and
heart
of
so
many,
we
cannot
stop
it.
We
can
pay
more
attention
to
each
other
and
watch
for
the
symptoms
in
others
that
would
alert
us
to
the
fact
that
they
need
help,
but
we
cannot
stop
violence
in
a
fallen
world
in
which
violence
itself
appears
to
have
value,
when
we
are
taught
by
the
example
of
national
leaders
and
whole
nations
that
violence
is
the
solution
to
violence.
Stopping
violence
to
a
greater
degree
would
require
that
we
diligently
search
for
root
causes
of
the
violence
and
seek,
aided
by
prayer
and
fasting
for
the
Grace
of
the
Holy
Spirit,
to
heal
the
root
causes,
not
simply
to
bomb
and
shoot
those
whom
we
feel
are
responsible
(WE
never
are
responsible,
of
course....)
for
the
violence.
So
long
as
nations
and
the
leaders
of
nations
deal
with
problems
by
resorting
to
violence
and
state
terrorism,
we
have
no
reason
to
suspect
that
people
who
are
mentally
and/or
emotionally
unbalanced
will
not
follow
their
example.
Children
tend
to
imitate
adults,
alas!
Prayer
does
have
a
healing
power.
We
need
to
pray
sincerely,
and
not
just
"because
one
is
supposed
to
pray,"
for
the
healing
of
mankind,
for
the
healing
of
our
world,
and
we
should
not
neglect
to
pray
for
the
young
man
who
committed
this
most
recent
massacre.
What
else
can
we
do?
Let
us
begin
by
trying
to
recapture
the
meaning
of
our
Orthodox
Christian
life,
the
actual
meaning
of
the
parish,
to
discover
again
the
sweet
mystery
of
the
parish,
how
the
parish
itself
is
intended
to
promote
the
healing
of
the
fallen
human
nature
and
our
assimilation
of
the
life
in
Christ.
Physically,
the
only
thing
we
can
do
to
protect
ourselves
is
to
be
alert.
We
live
in
a
world
that
is
dangerous,
and
we
need
to
be
aware
of
that,
to
pray
about
it
and
to
live
our
lives
in
such
a
way
that
we
do
not
contribute
to
it.
We
place
our
hope
in
God
for
our
own
lives.
We
must
make
proper
use
of
our
Christian
faith
as
a
source
of
healing
in
the
world,
not
as
a
source
of
judgment,
division
and
enmity
toward
others.
The
less
we
endorse
violence,
the
more
we
observe
the
disciplines
of
Orthodox
Christian
life,
the
more
we
can
contribute
to
love,
peace
and
healing
in
the
world
around
us.
We
do
so
need
to
learn
to
love
"the
other,"
those
who
are
not
"us"
and
not
"like
us."
How
shall
we,
as
Orthodox
Christians,
make
such
contributions
to
the
world
if
we
cannot
have
peace,
harmony,
self-control
and
self-discipline
even
in
our
own
parishes,
among
neighboring
parishes
of
the
same
jurisdiction
and
among
the
local
national
Orthodox
Churches?
Did
our
beloved
father
Paul
not
tell
us
that
though
we
may
speak
with
the
tongues
of
men
and
of
angels,
know
all
mysteries
and
even
give
our
bodies
to
be
burned
in
martyrdom,
but
do
not
have
love,
we
are
only
clanging
brass
and
it
does
not
profit
us
anything?
We
must
see
the
image
of
the
creator
in
every
other
human
being,
not
merely
in
those
who
we
see
as
being
also
an
image
of
our
own
selves,
those
who
agree
with
us
and
think
and
act
as
we
do.
The
Church
has
even
given
us
a
program
of
prayer
and
fasting
to
help
us
accomplish
this.
If
we
do
not
strive
to
accomplish
it,
then
we
become
part
of
the
problem
rather
than
the
seed
of
healing
in
a
troubled
and
suffering
world.
*
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the
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Forum
of
Holy
Trinity
Church,
Los
Angeles
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