Statement from Bishop Robert Muench of Baton Rouge
(Vatican Radio) “Prayer is a
powerful path to follow when tragedy happens, but even the most devout of us
sometime question: ‘What good could come of this?’” In a powerful statement
following the shootings in Baton Rouge, USA, on Sunday, Bishop Robert Muench
said, “Only the Word of God has the answer to the questions that shake our
faith: The answer is our Lord Jesus Christ. In Jesus, hope ultimately triumphs
over despair; love ultimately triumphs over hate; and resurrection ultimately
triumphs over death.”
Three police officers were
killed and three others wounded in Baton Rouge on Sunday, the second attack on
law enforcement officers in the United States in less than two weeks. On 7
July, a gunman shot and killed five policemen and wounded nine others, along
with two civilians.
It was not immediately clear
whether there was a link between Sunday's bloodshed and unrest over the police
killings of two black men under questionable circumstances earlier this month -
Alton Sterling, 37, in Baton Rouge on July 5, and Philando Castile, 32, near
St. Paul, Minnesota, on July 6.
In his statement, Bishop
Muench renewed his call for “a diocesan-wide week of prayer and fasting as we
reflect on the events of the last several days, and as we work toward a lasting
peace in our communities.”
Here is the full text of
Bishop Robert Muench’s statement:
BISHOP ROBERT
MUENCH STATEMENT
Bishop of the Diocese of
Baton Rouge
July 17, 2016
July 17, 2016
Words cannot express the
emotions we feel for those who have lost loved ones in the tragic events of
this day. Their entire lives have been unexpectedly and terribly turned upside
down. In visiting this afternoon with two of the families affected by these
shootings, Fr. Tom Ranzino and I shared prayer and support in the midst of
their shock, horror and grief. Prayer is a powerful path to follow when tragedy
happens, but even the most devout of us sometime question: “What good could
come of this?” Only the Word of God has the answer to the questions that shake
our faith: The answer is our Lord Jesus Christ. In Jesus, hope ultimately
triumphs over despair; love ultimately triumphs over hate; and resurrection
ultimately triumphs over death. Standing firmly on the pillars of these eternal
truths, we look to his words of promise in the Sermon on the Mount,
and we recall two beatitudes that speak to the hope we should hold, especially
today: “Blessed are the peacemakers, for they shall be called children of God,”
and “Blessed are they who mourn, for they will be comforted” (Mt. 5: 9, 4). We
renew our call for a diocesan-wide week of prayer and fasting as we reflect on
the events of the last several days, and as we work toward a lasting peace in
our communities.
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