| COMMENTARYRegaining Hope from HopelessnessBy Norris BurkesContributing Columnist
 
CBN.com 
   (ChaplainNorris.com) 
  -- Leaving the church potluck Thursday afternoon, I encountered a woman particularly 
  given to histrionics.
 "Pastor, did you hear about the man shooting at elementary school kids?" "No," I said. "Sounds horrid." But considering the source I let the subject 
    revert to next week's potluck and said my good byes. A few minutes out of the driveway, I turned on the radio to hear reports 
    of a massive emergency response at Cleveland Elementary School where scores 
    of students had been shot by a man with an automatic weapon. Having been recently trained to provide pastoral care for mass casualties, 
    I naively considered myself prepared and veered off toward the school. Minutes later I was offering the on-scene commander my assistance as a local 
    pastor with training in Trauma Pastoral Care. He paused only a moment before 
    sending me into a room where parents and counselors were told to wait for 
    a list from admitting hospitals. I was seated with a Cambodian mother and her 11-year-old son. She didn't 
    speak English, but I think somehow she knew the room was a kind of ruse. The 
    other parents still seemed hopeful, but the counselors knew that we were only 
    awaiting final confirmation of the deaths. We did not wait long. Soon the list came, but without an interpreter for 
    the mother, I had few options. I held the list in front of her, placed my 
    finger on her daughter's name, squeezed my lips together as if to hold back 
    the terrible words, and shook my head sadly. The woman recognized her daughter's name and asked, "Sh-di?" I did not quite 
    understand her, and our eyes collided with a pained look of confusion. "Sh-di?" she repeated. Squinting to convey my attempt to understand, she echoed her question. This 
    time I understood. "She die?" she said, with a raised tone of a question. "Yes," I said, looking into her stoic face. "She die, yes. I'm so sorry. 
    She die." Her eyes swept the room searching for a second opinion, but received only 
    a confirming nod from her son. She did not cry. Neither she nor her son even moved. But suddenly, in something 
    that can only be described as a sort of emotional ventriloquism, her grief 
    began to squeeze through her son's eyes and a small tear traced a path along 
    his frozen face. The memory of that woman and her son ends there. It seems as if they left 
    very quickly after that. But, in stark contrast to that one single tear, the 
    tears of the staff flowed the rest of the day without ceasing. Teachers cried for the students and for their heroic colleague who was injured 
    shielding children from the hail of bullets. The principal cried for the children 
    she held as they "bled out." And by the end of the day I was crying too as the dreadfulness of what happened 
    began its paralyzing work on me. The paralysis was so complete that when administrators 
    asked for volunteers to complete a brief training class on counseling children, 
    I did not raise my hand. I could not volunteer. The horror of the event had put a crack in my soul 
    bigger than the entire schoolyard. But as the Leonard Cohen song goes, "There are cracks, cracks in everything. 
    That's how the light gets in." Over the next several months, God's light began to filter through that crack 
    and guide me into two of the most fulfilling purposes I have yet known. First the humbling confrontation with my own fears of inadequacy started 
    a fire in my heart that grew into a full-blown calling and eighteen months 
    later, I began my training to become the hospital chaplain I am today. But perhaps even better than that, the horror and hopelessness I felt over 
    being unable to save any of those children translated into another way to 
    help children - adoption. One year after Cleveland, my wife and I welcomed three new children - all 
    siblings - into our home. God certainly had nothing to do with causing this tragedy, but I am wholly 
    convinced that God had everything to do with the rebuilding of lives after 
    the tragedy. For more information about Norris Burkes please log onto his website at 
    www.chaplainnorris.com. 
     
 
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