When will it ever end?
For 4 terrible years, ‘When will it ever end?’ had been the question everybody wasasking. Then came November 11th and the armistice, but when did World War I really end?
Remembrance Sunday this year is probably as much a celebration of the end of the First World War as a remembrance of all those caught up in its terrible carnage, particularly on the Western Front. It coincides exactly with the time, 100 years ago, when the guns fell silent at 11am on the 11 th day of the 11 th month in 1918. It was the moment when a great sigh of relief must have gone up all across Europe and what
was then the British Empire.
But Armistice Day, as November 11 th is called, is commemorating the agreement to stop the hostilities between the opposing sides, the cease fire. It is really celebrating a truce and not the end of the war. In fact, that armistice had to be extended 4 times before peace was finally signed.
The formal ending of the war came with the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on 28 th June 1919, which is why some memorials to the war dead say 1914-1919 rather than 1914-1918. The signing took place exactly 5 years after the assassination of Archduke Franz Ferdinand in Sarajevo, the act which set in motion the sequence of events which led to the start of the war.
For Britain, the state of war with Germany did not cease until 10th January 1920 when the peace treaty was ratified, and the formal peace treaties with combatants were not completed until the signing of the Treaty of Lausanne on 24 th July 1923 between the Allies and the Ottoman Empire, soon to become the Republic of Turkey.
It took only a month from the Archduke’s assassination for hostilities to break out and less than 6 weeks for Germany, Russia, France and Britain to become involved. It took nearly 5 years from the armistice to resolve the conflict and even then it left problems and grudges which led to a resumption of fighting only 21 years later. So ‘the war to end all wars’ never lived up to that description, as no war ever will.
It is quicker and easier to start a conflict than it is to finish it and restore peace, at any level of ‘conflict’. It is better not to get to the point at which conflict is even contemplated, which is why Jesus, the One proclaimed as the Prince of Peace (Isaiah 9.6) says that if ‘you suddenly remember a grudge a friend has against you...immediately go...and make things right’ (Matthew 5.23-24[The Message]). Jesus continued His teaching by saying, ‘I’m telling you to love your enemies. Let them bring out the best in you, not the worst’ (Matthew 5.44[The Message]). That’s not easy, but it could save a whole lot of sorrow and pain, grief and heartache for ourselves and many others, and perhaps even resolve the eternal question about wars, ‘When will it ever end?’.








