The Fog of Defeat: When the Full Message Arrives
It is said that on the evening of June 18, 1815, a man stood
in the tower of England’s Winchester Cathedral gazing anxiously out to sea.
At last, he found what he was looking for – a ship sending a
signal by use of lights. He strained to see the message. All of England held
its breath with him, wanting to know the outcome of the war between their
military leader, the Duke of Wellington, and the French dictator Napoleon
Bonaparte. Bonaparte, who had once ruled all of Europe bar England remained a
threat, and now the decisive Battle of Waterloo had been fought.
So, as he stood in the tower of Winchester Cathedral our man
waited to relay the news that would determine England’s future. The signal came
just as a heavy fog was rolling in. It only just got through, but how he wished
it hadn’t, for the signal read: “Wellington defeated”
The man signalled to other stations and the news spread
across the countryside, bringing great gloom and sadness. But then a great
reversal. The fog lifted, and the message was sent again, this time in full:
“Wellington defeated the enemy”. Joy? Happiness? Delirium! Wellington had won!
On Good Friday it seemed the message was “Christ defeated”,
but three days later we discover that the message had not been received in
full. The resurrection reverses what we initially thought and declares “Christ
defeated the enemy!”
Source: unknown.