Today's Scripture Reading (July 2, 2026): Habakkuk 1
"Do
humans have mothers and fathers?"
"Yes,
but human mothers and fathers don't love their children as we do. They're not
the same as we are" (Star Trek: The Next Generation; Chain of Command Part
II).
The dialogue
is between a Cardassian adult and his child. The Cardassians are one of the
many enemies of Earth and her allies in the fictional Star Trek Universe. And
one of the themes that Star Trek readily explores is the idea that our enemies
are often a lot more like us than we might want to admit. It is often
advantageous for us to portray the enemy as monsters. In this case, the enemy
is projecting, and the particular human in question is Jon-Luc Picard, the
esteemed fictional captain of the Starship Enterprise.
It makes
sense to make the enemy into something that they are not. It is a lot harder to
kill your next-door neighbor than someone from across the world, unless, of
course, your neighbor is a bad person. And it is something that happens in real
life, not just in a fictional science fiction universe. We often make our enemies
into something quite different from us.
During World
War I, this universal sameness was part of the problem of the "Christmas
Truce." We still argue how widespread the truce really was, but in the
places where the truce did happen, when the soldiers emerged from their
trenches to sing carols, exchange gifts, and, in some tellings of the story,
play soccer with the enemy, one of the discoveries was that the soldier in the
trench across from you wasn't a monster, but just another person very much like
you. And it proved very hard to share food with the enemy one day and shoot at
them the next. Thus, the Christmas Truce occurred on the first Christmas of the
war, but not on any subsequent Christmases. By then, the enemy had become
something else; they were monsters who deserved to be killed, not people who
shared the same hopes and fears as those who fought beside you.
Politics
follows a similar storyline. The opposition is crazy; the people of a different
political stripe are enemies of the nation and don't want the same things that
you do. They don't love their children the way we do. It is us vs them, and
they are different from who we are.
There is no
evidence that Habakkuk has ever had any contact with the enemy. But he has a
stereotypical idea of who they are. They are different from us. Even their
horses are different. They are faster than the leopards, and they are fiercer
than wolves. When you go up against them, you won't have a chance to win.
Was any of
this true? No. Habakkuk's description of the enemy was likely propaganda
straight from the enemy. After all, hadn't they rolled through the land up
until now? Had anyone been able to stand up against their power? But the
propaganda served the purposes of God, who had turned this stubborn people over
to their enemies because of their disobedience. The battle was already over,
because God had decided it, and he allowed the propaganda to take root among
the people of Judah.
Tomorrow's
Scripture Reading: Habakkuk 2