I didn’t really care for the answer choices, because life isn’t binary. There are many values and shades to such things. As a hopefully faithful Catholic, I can say that the explosion of a nuclear device over a population of persons is morally wrong. Then, I remembered that the world had gotten so far off track with tyranny and expansionism of evil ideologies, that in the 1940’s it seemed to be a reasonable solution, and the people involved with it, did so out of a feeling of necessity to end a thus far 2 part series of ever escalating horror which may well have taken millions more lives, and placed billions of persons into lives which would have hardly seemed worth living. The world of men made a choice from among the tools at it’s disposal. Did it make the right one? Maybe not. To combat evil with evil is never right. But then love isn’t always pretty, and tied up with a pink bow either. Was it hard love? or was it murder? Were the atrocities of the Nazis and the imperialists hard love? or were they murder, torture and slavery. Was ending those things right? Did God want man to end those things? Did we prevent untold suffering, or did we raise a new kind of horror to live with until Christ returns?
I answered “we had to do it”, which it turns out is the minority view when prevented as a binary choice. It was impulsive. The truth is, I haven’t worked out an answer to this one. Nor has God seen fit to bless me with a simple answer on this one to soothe my own prayerful heart. It’s so horrible, I don’t want to form a personal opinion on it until my properly catechized conscience tells me I may. So these are mysteries of man. Not of God.
Jesus tells us that all will be made known, and brought to light on the last day. I believe Jesus. I will accept truth on that day. In the mean time, I’ll pray that man made a reasonable decision on that fateful day which brought about an end to the second world war. And most of all, I’ll pray that mankind never has to make a decision of that magnitude again, and that Christ will bring us home long before we reach such a horrid boiling point on earth again.
For all those souls who participated in the two great wars, or the American Revolution, or the war between the states. The huge ideological wars which changed the world forever, may God look with favor on their souls, as he instilled the vigor of certain belief in them as they fought with courage for what they loved.
Blessings,
Steven