Sommes-Main

"Being born in 1960 and growing up in the English West Country, stories of the Second World War were still fresh. My own grandfather had been a London fireman during the Blitz. To a schoolboy, there was some sense in the 1939-45 war. It was against the aggression of Adolf Hitler and his allies - it was against the great evils he threatened to bring upon the whole world. The Second World War made sense, insofar as any war made sense.

The First World War was different, though, it was hard to understand how it had happened in the first place and hard to understand how the years of awful carnage were allowed to continue. My mother would explain how the monarchs of the opposing countries were related; if that was the case, why did they engage in such an awful conflict? My thinking was further coloured by Richard Attenborough's satirical musical, "Oh, what a lovely war;" the terrible losses of the First World War were the consequence of idiotic leadership, lions led by donkeys, or so we were told.

Moving to live in Northern Ireland in the 1980s, I encountered a version of history in which the First World War had a hugely important place, and placed great emphasis upon the Battle of the Somme. History was imbued with huge religious symbolism shaped by a 19th Century spirituality in which both Roman Catholics and Evangelical Protestants emphasized blood sacrifice. While Irish nationalists saw the Easter Rising in Dublin at Easter 1916 as being the blood sacrifice that bought their freedom; in Loyalist communities in Northern Ireland, the liberating blood sacrifice was made by the men of the 36th (Ulster) Division on 1st July 1916.

Being someone who regarded the Sermon on the Mount as at the heart of Jesus' teaching, thinking that being a peacemaker was what Jesus expected, I recoiled at traditions that exalted violence: how could one claim to be a Christian and delight in military conflict? The First World War seemed part of a history I would prefer to avoid.

Strangely, it was moving to Dublin that prompted questions. There was a brass war memorial plaque on the wall at the back of the church; it bore the names of ten young men, three of whom had died on 1st July 1916. The Battle of the Somme was obviously a much more complex affair than I had imagined. One name that of Private Percy Horner, became the focus for investigating the story of those men. Percy Horner was twenty years old, I knew where he lived, I knew where he went to school. Percy Horner disappeared completely on that first day of the Somme, blown to pieces or buried under tons of earth. His only memorial is his name being inscribed on the memorial arch at Thiepval, and on the plaque at the back of that church. What had Percy Horner's war been about?

I began visiting the Western Front and in 2010, I began to take groups of church people there.  There was a need to try to provide some interpretation, some meaning for Christian people, for how could we continue to pretend to believe in a Sovereign God if we simply said that moments that changed history, were nothing to do with him?

But what meaning was there? Stand in any of the countless cemeteries and attempt an explanation and whatever words one uses are at best trite and simplistic, and invariably wrong. Our Western Front visits have included moments to stand and read passages of poetry or prose, and it was in such moments there has been a sense of something different. The people with the task of trying to give meaning to those awful events as they took place were the army chaplains, two of whom were well known writers. The Revd Geoffrey Studdert Kennedy and Fr William Doyle SJ came from different traditions, but shared a common approach in attempting no explanation of the horrors, and asserting no faith in a God other than one who was with us in our suffering. A century later, their writings remain the best Christian perspective on the horrors of that July a hundred years ago."

God With Us is being broadcast on Premier Christian Radio at 9.30 am, repeated at 10.00 pm on Friday 1st July and  at 2pm on 2nd July. 

Click here to go to Premier Christian Radio Player

 

Written by Colm Flanagan, Premier's Northern Ireland Producer

Click play below to listen to the Somme's Documentary, 'God With Us':