I couldn’t bear to watch any of the coverage of the Casey Anthony murder trial. I heard snippets of information on occasion: intimations of incest; a car that “smelled of death”; fist fights breaking out as the curious and obsessed (the profoundly bored?) tried to get a seat in the Florida courtroom. These revelations were not only dreadful but
disheartening. Why do people seek out such bad, sad news? Why do they find such vicarious pleasure (what else could it be? they keep going back for more) in the misery of others?
One answer is that cable TV sucks viewers in with their round-the-clock coverage of sensational news stories. Indeed, on-air personalities like Nancy Grace don’t merely report the latest happenings in a case like Casey Anthony’s (they wouldn’t be able to fill 24 hours of BREAKING NEWS! if that’s all they did); rather, they help to manufacture the “news” they want us to consume.
There’s been plenty of criticism in the last couple of days of the pundits who have pronounced on this case for the last three years and, especially, for the last few days. The conventional wisdom throughout the trial seems to have been that Anthony would be convicted–that even though it was a circumstantial case it was a powerful one. When the verdict was read on Tuesday the dropped jaws of said pundits became as newsworthy as the the jury’s surprise decision. (Again, cable TV creating the news it must then report).
But perhaps most discouraging–chilling, even–has been the response of the people who invested so much of their time and energy in the courtroom drama and in television’s non-stop coverage of it. Presuming to know the players intimately–Casey and her family, the defense team, the state’s lawyers (and why wouldn’t they? having admitted they’ve been glued to the trial for the last eight weeks)–these diehard observers have made their opinions known on Facebook, Twitter, and in old-fashioned TV interviews: they are outraged that “there is no justice for Caylee,” the dead child.
But what many of them seem to want is vengeance. And for those who bring God into the picture, what they seem to assume is karma–that good is always rewarded and evil is always punished. My uninformed hunch is that Casey Anthony was directly involved in her daughter’s death. But I can understand the jury’s verdict. They weren’t charged with getting “justice for Caylee”; they were expected to weigh the evidence presented to them and to decide if it points to guilt beyond reasonable doubt. Their “not guilty” verdict on the murder, manslaughter, and child abuse charges does not mean that Casey is innocent.
Yet while she may not be innocent she is a beloved child of God. Those who follow a first-century peripatetic rabbi know that we live by grace, not by karma, and that the love of God for all of God’s creatures is unconditional. As one theologian has put it,
God does not cease to love us even when we commit evil . . . God’s love for us is unconditional, unmerited, unqualified, unreserved, absolute, immutable. We cannot earn it, no matter how hard we try. We cannot lose it, no matter how hard we try. God does not change his mind. He is eternally and hopelessly in love with the creatures he made in his image.
For those of us who believe in this God, the hard part, of course, is to embody this kind of love–to make it evident, alive, available even (especially) to the unloveable, even to sociopaths (and maybe worse) like Casey Anthony.
July 7, 2011 at 2:01 pm
Well-stated!
July 7, 2011 at 3:11 pm
A very good word. I have been preaching a gospel grounded in and pervaded by God’s unconditional love for some time now . I wish I could live it at well as I can preach it.
July 7, 2011 at 3:33 pm
I appreciate the cautions you offer here. Reminds me of the not-so-long-ago death of a certain terrorist leader in Pakistan and the social media convictions posted thereafter.
July 7, 2011 at 6:04 pm
Thank you for this post. I discovered your remarks after posting my own yesterday at http://www.irregularchristian.com/2011/07/casey-anthony-verdict-response-part-one.html
July 8, 2011 at 2:21 am
[...] Originally posted at Intersections. [...]
July 8, 2011 at 3:00 am
outstanding, thank you
July 8, 2011 at 12:18 pm
Thank you! I did not follow this trial closely, and was nothing short of dumbstruck at the anger and vitriol, particularly from the media. I believe these reactions point to the pain and hurt in our world, and reflect the anguish in our own hearts; is it easier to create a “monster” onto which we foist all of our own fears, hatred and anger than it is to look deeply within?
I am grateful for your voice.
July 9, 2011 at 9:20 am
I agree with what has been stated above. I really appreciate your post. I have been struck by how many seem to have no understanding of how the justice system works. We are innocent until proven guilty – but certain media figures (Nancy Grace especially) tried and convicted her before the trial even began. From what I read despite the general feeling that Casey had something to do with Caylee’s death, nevertheless there was little evidence that was not circumstantial. Juries cannot convict on hunches – if there is no evidence then they cannot convict. And the point of the trial is not to get justice for Caylee. Anyway, thank you for your comments they do help keep things in perspective…. Blessings… SBD+
July 13, 2011 at 8:20 am
Amen!
July 9, 2011 at 6:59 pm
Debra, I retweeted this today as it mirrors a post of yesterday by Rev.Brett Levy entitled “I Love Casey Anthony”. With such a startling title, the similar message bring home God’s enduring love for all. Thanks for sharing this uplifting post in the sea of media venom for Casey and others. I believe that while she may be free, she will be living a hell on earth like no other.
July 10, 2011 at 8:31 pm
Thanks, everyone, for your comments. And thanks for the heads up about your blog, Casey T. I appreciate your thoughts on this sad story.
July 11, 2011 at 1:54 pm
Debra Dean,
Very sobering article, and a very good one for us to think about after some of the uproar has died down some. I posted on my fb page, and will give it a blog on Family Fountain. wb
July 11, 2011 at 3:22 pm
A perfect article to explain how I feel about Casey Anthony and the rage that surrounded her verdict. What a great article. I recommend it to all who call themselves Christian. Thanks Jay P. for finding this.
July 12, 2011 at 10:39 am
Regarding the manifacture of news. I spend alot of time (too much probably) listening to the News on NPR. This is a good way, I believe to stay well-informed, yet I’m often struck by just how many stories reported are in fact about reporters, or media companies, or the influence of the press on this or that issue. It seems at times a bit narcissistic. I hear far more stories about such things than I do about, say, world hunger.
It is true that there is nothing we can do to lose God’s love (though we Wesleyans do believe one could fall from a state of saving grace). It might be worth exploring the connections between God’s love and God’s justice – even God’s punishment or chastisement for certain evils because I suspect (as was the case with my own very wise and loving parents) there is a deep connection to be found there.
July 12, 2011 at 2:17 pm
I found this quite helpful in reflecting on connections between the parable of the weeds and the wheat (this Sunday’s lectionary from Matthew 13) and who judges good and evil, how we respond to evil, justice and nature of punishment. Thank you!
July 14, 2011 at 3:25 pm
Yes I to believe God loves all even Casey and He will love her until ,if guilty,
and unrepentant, she steps into whatever is prepared for those who don’t repent.
July 16, 2011 at 7:05 am
[...] Can we love in a culture of vengeance? Debra Dean Murphy suggests if we follow Jesus we must. [...]
July 17, 2011 at 12:49 pm
nonsense
civil justice for murders is not vengeance
yes, she can be forgiven if she repents (like as all), of which she shows no sign. A repentant murder confesses her sin and takes her civil punishment gladly. “Forgive me but don’t send me to prison” is not repentance.
July 18, 2011 at 3:28 pm
Thank you! I posted this on my FB. Blessings.
August 5, 2011 at 12:10 pm
[...] this observation doesn’t even get at a host of other troubling trends: manufacturing stories for a populace trained to expect news to break 24/7; polling readers/viewers in order to [...]