NBC News and Easter? Really?
NBC News delivered an Easter message on Good Friday!
I’m a
broadcast journalist (no longer on the air)(“Thank the Lord,” some might say!),
and I know that NBC executives would be appalled if they thought they had
delivered a Jesus story. But that’s exactly what happened.
It was
the Evening News with Lester Holt. Always looking for a good newscast closer,
they found this one. “In 1998, Randall Bagley shot and killed Donald
Mitchell during a Maryland robbery. When Bagley asked for a sentence reduction
24 years later, Mitchell's son Idris stunned the courtroom by announcing his
forgiveness and asking the judge to release him. Lester Holt shares more on
this moving story of forgiveness.”
As you
know, I’m no longer in the news reporting business…I now speak up for people
behind bars. Time and again I am saddened by the lack of forgiveness by otherwise
very kind and decent people. When convicted criminals plead for a second
chance, the phrase Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those who trespass
against us gets ignored. Victims of heinous crimes and their families speak
in these hearings, often in anger and hatred. “My murdered daughter doesn’t get
a second chance…why should this person?”
As a prisoner
advocate, one of my favorite stories took place on Good Friday, as told by Dr. Luke:
One criminal taunted
Jesus, saying, “Are you not the Messiah? Save yourself and us.” And then the
other thief rebuked him, saying, “Have you no fear of God, for you are subject
to the same condemnation? And indeed, we have been condemned justly, for the
sentence we received corresponds to our crimes, but this man has done nothing
criminal.” Then he said, “Jesus, remember me when you come into your kingdom.”
Jesus told him, “This day you will be with me in paradise.”
Jesus’
followers were so traumatized by the whole crucifixion scene that I’m betting
they never caught the significance of this little scene, involving a criminal sometimes
named Dismas. As I see it, Jesus used this little prelude episode to explain
the whole message of Easter. It’s forgiveness!
On March 25, the
Catholic Church observes the Feast of St. Dismas. I like that! As a person who
works and mingles with inmates, the story has deep meaning for me. It should
also have deep meaning for every person behind bars. But
the message is also for victims of crime and their families. As followers of
this itinerant preacher, we, too, must forgive.
The Easter message,
underscored by NBC, is for all of us. It is especially good news for those
behind bars.
He is risen! We are forgiven!
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