You’ve probably received a text similar to the one above (it’s okay, just a link to NBC news). You immediately delete and report as junk, but if you are like me, you feel a little annoyed by the whole thing. What about those we know who don’t delete and report as junk, what about those who may be victimized by the scam? Who are these people sending bogus messages that prey on the unaware and unsuspecting?
The turnpike toll scam is just one in a trillion-dollar (don’t worry, just a link to USA Today) industry of high tech robbery.
I find myself wanting not justice, but vengeance. We don’t know if David, the Sweet Psalmist of Israel, was the victim of a phishing scam when he wrote in Psalm 35, but it sounds as if he may have been:
For without cause they hid their net for me;
without cause they dug a pit for my life.
Let destruction come upon him when he does not know it!
And let the net that he hid ensnare him;
let him fall into it—to his destruction!
Yes! May those toll fee scammers be ensnared in their own net, may they fall into their own pit!
Of course, justice is unlikely to be had, vengeance is improbable. Our cyber villains hide behind a wall of digital anonymity, their bots in China or Dubai, Russia or Iran, far from the longest arm of the law.
We live in an evil time, but much of the evil is faceless, contained in code and funded by oligarchs and billionaires who never show up at Davos or aspire to be famous as well as rich. We will never know their names and faces, but the damage they do is greater by far than any evil wrought by Jesse James or Bonnie and Clyde.
It may be that the invisibility of so many who do wrong in our evil time drives us to obsession with the few names we know. We do not recognize the evil ideologists of the left or the right, so we aim our scorn, target our venom, at Elon Musk or Oprah Winfrey. Sell your Tesla or boycott Bud Light. Surely this is 1933 or 1984, we try to convince a public that knows neither history nor literature.
Christians of a certain ilk make a sport of identifying the contemporary figure who is most certainly the Antichrist of the Apocalypse. Maybe that is why the Apostle John writes, “as you have heard that antichrist is coming, so now many antichrists have come.” (1 John 2:18). Like the Gerasene demon, evil’s name is Legion for there are many of them (Mark 5:9).
Jesus sent Legion into a herd of pigs that ran headlong into the Sea of Galilee. But he taught his disciples to love their enemies and pray for those who were persecuting them (Matthew 5:44). Paul says we are to overcome evil with good (Romans 12:21). Paul quotes Deuteronomy 32 when he reminds his readers, “Vengeance is mine, says the Lord.” (Romans 12:19.
How do we live in a world of faceless evil? We love our neighbors, even reminding them to delete and report as junk those phishing scams about their E-Z Pass accounts. We refuse the evil ideologists left and right. We trust God. We don’t key our neighbor’s Tesla, and we don’t drink Bud Light, mostly because it is lousy beer.