Jump directly to the content

What the Gospel Has to Say about the California Christian College Shooting

A Korean seminarian reflects on last week's shooting at Oikos University.

My experiences taught me that the church is in a unique position to reach out to the immigrant community, to share God's love with the "sojourners" in our land. The church needs to understand that it's not enough to see only through the societal lens and say, "It was their society that was problematic." Neither is it enough to merely see through the individual lens and say, "It was their individual problems that needed attention." We must see through both lenses,  held together by a gospel perspective, and say,  "The problems in both the individual and society point to an underlying, universal norm in humanity." Because it doesn't really matter whether you're in an individually satisfying environment or a socially accepting one; the problem remains fixed and rooted in human nature. That is to say, in all of us. The only solution to this is the gospel, and the love it produces. The gospel gives the church reason to proactively put aside the "society vs. individual" debate (which is how the media is trying to portray most domestic issues) and reach out to the rejected and isolated with the gospel on the one hand and service on the other.

Why One Needs the Gospel

One Goh's community should have shown him the care a struggling immigrant needs, instead of isolating him for his poor English. But Goh also failed as an individual—in a fit of anger he unleashed his worst. One Goh is a perpetrator, but he is also a victim of other "perpetrators." Can we take from this what we must? Where there is a human being, there are bound to be problems. No one is exempt—liberal or conservative, religious or irreligious, immigrant or native, if you're breathing you're probably both the cause and the recipient of some form of human misery at some point in time. Why is this not more disturbing and urgent to us than everything else we see on the news combined?

The Bible, in this sense, is a book about what is urgent and fundamental. It is concerned with the most central problem mankind faces. The gospel comes to us with the premise that we've all missed the mark of perfection and gives the most basic human norm a three-letter name: sin. Humans are the cause of their own strife and conflicts; humanity is killing itself, and this has been our situation since the first sin in Genesis. The gospel demands a new order, a new kingdom, where people from every tribe and tongue will rejoice together and delight in a Savior who makes everyone new. It also provides one. 

The Scriptures reveal Jesus Christ, the Son of God, as the Savior King who came into our broken world to sympathize with us where we are, to bring a new order not with violent revolution but with radical love, which is demonstrated in his death and resurrection—all this for our liberation and renewal.

I believe One Goh needs a Savior in Jesus Christ, the true One who came to be rejected, ridiculed, and killed. He was an alien to his family, countrymen, and the world. He sympathizes with Goh, and came to die the death he should have died and live the life he should have lived, to make him new and to bring God's shalom on the earth—for One Goh and for us all.

If I see One L. Goh through this biblical lens, I cannot see him primarily as a disturbed Korean immigrant stuck in a broken system. He is primarily a broken man living among broken people who desperately need the gospel, people such as you and me.

Sungyak "John" Kim is currently studying for his M.A. in theological studies at Reformed Theological Seminary in Orlando, FL. He writes at http://sungyak.tumblr.com.

"Speaking Out" is Christianity Today's guest opinion column and (unlike an editorial) does not necessarily represent the opinion of the magazine.


Related Elsewhere:

Previous articles on school shootings include:

Owning Redemptive Grief after the Ohio School Shooting | Instead of speculating on why T. J. Lane killed three of his classmates, we are better off asking how to grieve the tragedy rightly. (March 1, 2012)
Amish Grace and the Rest of Us | The Amish response to the Nickel Mines shootings wasn't just plain Christianity. (September 17, 2007)
Where Is God When It Hurts? | A sermon given on the Virginia Tech campus two weeks after the shootings. Philip Yancey (June 6, 2007)

More from Christianity Today
Los samaritanos del día de hoy

Los samaritanos del día de hoy

Jesucristo nos muestra que bajo la piel, todos somos parientes.
The 'Handicap Icon' Gets New Life

The 'Handicap Icon' Gets New Life

New York’s revamped accessibility symbol began at a Christian college.
Sponsoring a Movement

Sponsoring a Movement

Former sponsored children like Moses Pulei pay it forward in their hometowns.
Sidelining the Stigma of Mental Illness

Sidelining the Stigma of Mental Illness

Amy Simpson challenges the church to step up its ministry to a vulnerable population.
Get Instant Access
Christianity Today Magazine
Subscribe now for a year (10 issues) at $24.95 for print, iPad, and instant web access.

International Orders

Join the Conversation

Edward Kim

April 12, 2012  2:55pm

This is the first publication that has given Koreans a platform to discuss the shooting from their perspective. Christianity Today should be lauded for that. I am a Christian and Korean American also and my take is less ecclesiastical. Korean culture is an anal retentive and "all-in" type culture that makes us alternatively a phenomenal missionary sending people (2nd in the world after the U.S. but I bet a lot of those U.S. missionaries are ethnic Koreans) as well as a culture that can spawn a paradoxical and Orwellian country like North Korea. We will pour everything into something, be it ship, car or cell phone manufacturing and be absolute world beating masters at it. When we fail it's often death before dishonor. That's why there are so many suicides in Korea. When one fails in life, taking one's own life is too often seen as the last path to redemption. In America, this has very oddly meant too many Koreans talking other's with them when they fail in life.

Report Abuse
Use your Christianity Today login to leave a comment on this article.
Not part of the community? Subscribe now, or register for a free account.
Login
or
Subscribe
or
Register

Don't Miss

Want to Change the World? Sponsor a Child

Want to Change the World? Sponsor a Child

A top economist shares the astounding news about that little picture hanging on our refrigerator.
Bumbling the Great Commission

Bumbling the Great Commission

Is our discipleship too narrow?

The Sightless, Wordless, Helpless Theologian

The Sightless, Wordless, Helpless Theologian

How our daughter's brief life showed us eternity.

more | current issue

Books & Culture

Our Lives, Our Fortunes, and Our Sacred Honor

Our Lives, Our Fortunes, and Our Sacred ...

The grand debate that...

Today's Christian Woman

The Perfect Wife Scorecard

The Perfect Wife Scorecard

I just knew I was failing...

Small Groups

Silence and Solitude

Silence and Solitude

These spiritual disciplines...

Out of Ur

Superman: Sermon Notes from Exile

Superman: Sermon Notes from Exile

Why I wrote sermon notes...

Facebook

CT eBooks & Bible Studies


Shopping