19 Apr, 2007

Teachers, fellow students were disturbed by man 'who never spoke a word'

BLACKSBURG, Va. - They met across the professor's desk. One on one. The chairman of the English department and the silent, brooding student who never took his sunglasses off.

He had so upset other instructors that Virginia Tech officials asked whether the professor wanted protection. Lucinda Roy declined. She thought Cho Seung Hui exuded loneliness, and she volunteered to teach him by herself, to spare her colleagues. The subject of the class was poetry.

Roy, other officials, investigators, acquaintances and neighbors helped fill in a dark portrait Tuesday of the bespectacled young South Korean citizen who had sought bizarre expression in literature and then massacred 32 fellow students and teachers here Monday in the worst shooting rampage in U.S. history. As police closed in, he shot himself and was found on the floor of a classroom building with his weapons nearby.

Cho, of Centreville, the son of immigrants who run a dry cleaning business and the brother of a State Department contractor who graduated from Princeton, was described by those who encountered him over the years as at times angry, menacing, disturbed and so depressed that he seemed near tears.

He often spoke in a whisper, if at all, refused to open up to teachers and classmates, and kept himself locked behind a facade of a hat, sunglasses and silence.

Unanswered questions
Authorities still are not sure what set him off and what propelled him Monday as he stalked the halls and classrooms of Norris Hall with two semiautomatic pistols, chaining doors closed and murdering and maiming as he went.

Authorities found two three-page notes in his dorm room after the shootings. They weren't suicide notes and provided no clue about why he did what he did. Instead, they were expletive-filled rants against the rich and privileged, even naming people who he thought had kept him down, federal and state law enforcement sources said. Two government officials said he had been treated for mental health problems.

Police also are uncertain why Cho stopped and shot himself to death in Norris Hall, where most of his victims lay scattered around him.

Any comprehension of what happened seemed to come only in hindsight.

photo & story courtesy msnbc.com, 04/18/07

He needed Jesus

Few imagined what Cho Seung Hui would do.

Luke 4:16-21

Jesus Rejected at Nazareth

16 And he came to Nazareth, where he had been brought up. And as was his custom, he went to the synagogue on the Sabbath day, and he stood up to read. 17 And the scroll of the prophet Isaiah was given to him. He unrolled the scroll and found the place where it was written,

18 “The Spirit of the Lord is upon me,
because he has anointed me
to proclaim good news to the poor.
He has sent me to proclaim liberty to the captives
and recovering of sight to the blind,
to set at liberty those who are oppressed,

19 to proclaim the year of the Lord's favor.”

20 And he rolled up the scroll and gave it back to the attendant and sat down. And the eyes of all in the synagogue were fixed on him. 21 And he began to say to them, “Today this Scripture has been fulfilled in your hearing.” (ESV)

What does today's God's Story scripture teach us about Jesus being The Good News?

In this passage, Jesus is quoting from Isaiah 61 and letting people know that He is fulfilling the prophet's picture of the future.

At the time of Isaiah's words Israel was still a conquered and oppressed people, so Isaiah must have been referring to the future Messiah - Jesus Christ.

The bottom line is that Jesus is The Good News now and forever for the nation of Israel and to everyone today who will receive Him as Savior. Jesus has compassion for the poor, the captives, the blind, and the oppressed. He offers His love, grace, forgiveness and hope.

As we learn more about Cho Seung Hui's story, it's obvious that his evil act was more than a sudden outburst of anger. My heart breaks for him because it seems that Cho was captive to the lies of Satan and blind to the freedom he could have had in Jesus Christ.

Cho was and is now eternally responsible for his choices.

But you have to wonder...was there ever a time when someone tried to learn Cho's story? Did any follower of Jesus ever try to connect their story and God's Story to Cho's story?

How can we connect today's God's Story scripture to our lives?

Thank God that He sent His Son Jesus to be The Good News! Ask His Spirit to help you, a follower of Jesus, to be good news as you communicate The Good News to a broken world. Ask Jesus to help you recognize the opportunities He will give you to tell others your story and God's Story because you have listened to their story...

How can connect today's story, God's Story scripture and our story to others?

  • Pray every day for the joy you have in Christ to be evident to others.
  • Pray for God's Spirit to give you the compassion of Christ and to notice someone who is captive to Satan's lies and blind to the Truth of Christ.
  • Use the unfolding story of Cho in conversation with friends who need Jesus. By talking about Cho's pain and needs, you may learn more of your friends' stories.
  • Pray for the students and families connected to the tragedy at Virginia Tech to experience the comfort that only God can provide. Pray that followers of Jesus who are close to that community of grief will be able to connect their story and God's Story to those who need Jesus.
  • Pray for Cho's family to experience Christ's love through the love of Christ's followers.
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The Daily Bide is brought to you by a team of writers from Youth for Christ/USA. The writers all have various years of experience in youth ministry but share a common bond in serving Jesus and discovering what it means to abide deeply everyday and to connect God's Story with those around them. A number of the Daily Bide writers have also written portions of our 3Story® resources. You can check out our resources at the 3Story.org website or connect with our writers at 3story@yfc.net. If you have a question or a story you would like to share, please reference the Daily Bide date in your email.

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