People rhetorically ask where God was on 9/11 as though He wasn't anywhere. Or they ask it accusingly, the
way a detective asks a suspect if he has an alibi. "Where were you on
the morning of September the 11th?""Can anyone confirm your alibi?"
God was there, at every point in time and space of significance in
the events of that day. He was in the date; He was in our mouths; He was
in an open Bible found at the crash site (more on that in a moment); a
powerful distortion of Him was the motive force behind the men who
committed those first two attacks and a truer picture of Him was the
motive force behind the men and women who stopped the third.

In fact, an invocation of His name was the first thing I heard when the
attack occurred. I was on the air that morning in Pittsburgh. I already
knew that one tower had been struck by a jet. One of my regulars was on
the line with me when the second plane struck, "Oh, God!" Shock,
adrenaline, and perhaps fear. "It's horrible, the jet just
disappeared...it's as though the tower just swallowed it up." Yes, it
was fear, and a deep sadness.
The next time I heard His name was in Hebrew. The station owner decided
to bring the other two hosts into the studio with me for live
conversation. Lynne Cullen: smart, Jewish, liberal, dovish on everything
except Israel. Naturally, we were talking about the role of Israel in
all of this. Lynne took a call from one of her regulars, a Farrakhanite
named Cynthia. "You know actually we are the real Israel, the Africans
in America, we're the real Jews."
The Nation of Islam people were reliable progressive allies and most
days Lynne would have just taken it for the sake of solidarity. But not
that day: cheeks flushing, voice rising, eyes flashing "Shema Israel
Adonai Elohaynu, Adonai Ehad!" Silence "Can you translate that,
Cynthia?!"
"No, I can't"
"Then you aren't a Jew!!"
Click.
There was that name again. Adonai, The Lord.
Thirty thousand feet above my head, though I didn't know it at the time,
a man was invoking his name for courage and for comfort. "Our Father who
art in Heaven..." said Todd Beamer into his cell phone. "Hallowed by
Thy name" the operator that had been chosen to route that particular
call on that particular day, intoned along with him. And then the famous
"Let's roll". Ora et Labora, pray and work.