Witnesses
Witnesses

Witnesses

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<p>In his poem &ldquo;The Witnesses,&rdquo; Henry Wadsworth Longfellow (1807&ndash;1882) described a sunken slave ship. As he wrote of &ldquo;skeletons in chains,&rdquo; Longfellow mourned slavery&rsquo;s countless nameless victims. The concluding stanza reads, &ldquo;These are the woes of Slaves,/ They glare from the abyss;/ They cry from unknown graves,/ We are the Witnesses!&rdquo;</p> <p>But who do these witnesses speak to? Isn&rsquo;t such silent testimony futile?</p> <p>There is a Witness who sees it all. When Cain murdered Abel, he pretended nothing had happened. &ldquo;Am I my brother&rsquo;s keeper?&rdquo; he said dismissively to God. But God said, &ldquo;Your brother&rsquo;s blood cries out to me from the ground. Now you are under a curse and driven from the ground, which opened its mouth to receive your brother&rsquo;s blood from your hand&rdquo; (Genesis 4:10&ndash;11).</p> <p>Cain&rsquo;s name lives on as a warning. &ldquo;Do not be like Cain, who belonged to the evil one and murdered his brother,&rdquo; John the disciple cautioned (1 John 3:12). Abel&rsquo;s name lives on too, but in a dramatically different way. &ldquo;By faith Abel brought God a better offering than Cain did,&rdquo; said the writer of Hebrews. &ldquo;By faith Abel still speaks&rdquo; (11:4).</p> <p>Abel still speaks! So do the bones of those long-forgotten slaves. We do well to remember all such victims, and to oppose oppression wherever we see it. God sees it all. His justice <em>will</em> triumph.</p>

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cameron_91

cameron_91

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