Seven years ago, we lived just over an hour from Manhattan. The church I worked in was on the border of Connecticut and Rhode Island, near a nuclear submarine base in Groton. I remember going into the office and somebody commenting about a plane hitting the World Trade Center. I turned on the TV, watched in horror as smoke billowed from the first tower, just as millions had begun to do that morning.
Then the second plane hit.
I had a mentoring call scheduled with my dear friend, Bill Armerding, who lived in Vancouver. I called him shortly after 9am, 6am his time. I said, "We'll have to postpone our call." He turned on the TV too.
I called my wife... strangely worried that I might not see her again. The silly thing was that she worked just down the street... but nobody could figure out what was happening. It's a remarkable thing how in this tragic moment I just wanted to be with her. Being apart from her at that moment seemed very wrong.
Those in our office mentioned that our neighbor had a family member who worked at the WTC. As I started to go out the door to walk over to their house, praying that I would have words to say and love to offer, another plane hit the Pentegon. Our Day Care provider had a brother who worked there. Our son was at her home. I called her, nervously hoping that I wasn't going to be the one to share the news with her... but she was already waiting to hear from her family... at least it was the end of the building that was under construction. She was worried, but calm, and said she would keep our son for the day unless she heard news to change that plan.
It wasn't long before the busy flight path above us, which ran between Boston and New York, grew quiet. The sky was completely bare of activity by noon. As I again picked up the nerve to walk over to the neighbor's house, I noticed the eerie silence in the sky. Then I heard a distant rumble. I actually remember stopping in the middle of the parking lot of our church, not knowing if the growing roar was a dangerous sound or not. It grew and grew until it began shaking everything around me. At the height of the tremble a military jet screamed right over the church steeple... I'm guessing only about 100 feet off the ground. I think my heart just about stopped.
I never did hear what happened to our neighbor's brother. They had left for New York City already by the time I made it over to their house. We didn't see them much after that. (Our Day Care provider's brother was fine... but obviously shaken by the events.)
A good friend of ours worked as a chief officer on one of the nuclear subs stationed in Groton. He was quickly deployed and spent a few months under the seas... popping up in odd places in the world... waiting for orders. Others from our church went down to ground zero to help with Salvation Army and Red Cross recovery efforts. The firemen and police officers connected to our church were forever changed... and took shifts going to Manhattan to assist their brothers and sisters in uniform. Many others in our church had sons and daughters who joined the military... and who have now been off to war.
That day marked a new struggle, for millions of people, with the reality of evil in our world. We could watch evil in action. And it made me throw up later that day. I hate evil. It destroys.
I remember praying that God would be in the midst of the rubble, with those who perished, with those who were perishing, with those whose families were horrified and worried and looking for loved ones, and with our world, which suddenly, on a brilliantly clear day, had become so clouded with darkness.
There's so much more to reflect upon... and maybe you'd like to take a few moments to recall what you were doing at that moment seven years ago. Maybe some other time I'll share how a few days later in September of 2001, I met Regis Philbin at McDonalds... and offered prayer for New York... but I'll stop the story telling for now.
