Righting Wrongs


One of the greatest roadblocks that face people confronted with the Gospel is if God is good why does He let bad things happen to good people? Of course, usually the person asking this question is thinking of a particular someone who they believe is good and didn’t deserve the bad things that befell them. Attempting to comfort them with the fact that the rain falls on the righteous and the unrighteous usually doesn’t work. They want to understand why their particular loved one had to suffer.

An attempt to answer this particular question has been made previously and I won’t attempt to do so here again. However, a conversation that I had recently brought this question up again. Having tried to address the broader question, the conversationalist made it more specific; “if Jesus says we are to love our enemies, why did God command Israelites to go to war with their’s? Isn’t this a contradiction in God’s character?” I faltered and my response was less than adequate, however I promised I would consider the question further. I knew one thing though – it wasn’t a question of God’s character, it was a question of my understanding. God’s character is consistent, my understanding of it, not so much.

Having done what I promised, this is what I believe. Rebellion to God is rooted in pride. Pride considers oneself greater than others and so when we are wronged, we attempt to correct the injustice done against us. When we love our enemies, we are acknowledging that any sin committed against me is really sin against God and it is therefore His to avenge. When Jesus (and God) commands us to love our enemies His reminding us that we too were His enemies and it is only through His sacrificial love that we were able to have a relationship with Him and a place in heaven. Therefore, who are we to met out personal justice to others?

However, there are times that God uses us and bestows leadership upon others – in the form of government, church leaders, and other authority – to be instruments of His work and distributors of His justice. The Israelites weren’t commanded to go to war in order to avenge the justice done against them; they were told to fight so that God’s justice could be manifest. This is a rightly established process that God has established to get a society functioning. He places people in positions of authority to do His work. As followers of Him, we’re to follow rightly and godly authority that He has established.

It hopefully goes without saying that a thousand clarifications could be added to this brief synopsis. We are not required to follow the acts of a despot just because they have hijacked a position of authority. Evil men are instruments of their own desires, not God’s. But just because a godly system has been corrupted, doesn’t mean that the principle, when rightly established doesn’t stand.

The ironic part of all this is that we are more likely to fight against the injustice done to us personally than to correct the offense against God which permeates our world. The disparity lies in our character, not God’s.

Continue Reading

Fighting for the Strong Man

Growing up, I was the only ten year old I knew who got tension headaches. As I got older, I would tell people “I’m a world class worrier” and I was. If there was anything to be concerned about, I could probably find it. I think part of it was caused by my tendency to do a lot of listening. If you talk to any group of people long enough, you’re bound to discover that somewhere, someone has something not right in their lives. I’m the type of person who takes on the burden of others, so despite all evidence for the irrationality of doing so, I worried.

Later in life, I realized how contrary this was to much of Scripture, and I would like to believe that I’ve gotten better about worrying. I still tend to be sensitive to the trials of others but I’ve also learned that praying for someone is the best and sometimes only thing I can do. While I learned the truth of this in practice, it was only recently that I recognized the theory that supported it. After all, worrying about one of God’s children presumed that somehow He no longer had things under control. My worry was a demonstration of a lack of trust; it was, in short, sin.

Along with this realization, however, came something else. Recently its been impressed upon my heart that I’m more apt to defend myself than I am to fight for God. When my feelings are hurt, when an injustice has been committed against me, I’m quick to demand an accounting. However, just like worrying demonstrated by lack of faith, so does my desire to fight for what I believe is rightly mine. If I truly believed that God had my best in view, I wouldn’t feel the need to struggle for my own place. Instead, I would trust that He would carry this fight for me.

The mental picture that brought this home to me was imagining myself walking down the street with a man whose very strength was evident by his presence. If suddenly our physical well-being was threatened, it would be silly for me to try to engage in the fight. The best thing for everyone concerned would be for me to get out of the way, and let him take care of that which offends us. Similarly, when my place in life is threatened, fighting on God’s behalf is just as ridiculous. When I try to take up the battle, all I do is get in the way.

I would no more take up the strong man’s fight, then I would try to leap tall buildings in a single bound. Realizing that my strength is totally insufficient and that there is One who has fought the battle and won, makes the temptation to try a little easier to resist.

(Sidebar – As I began this blog, I note that my last post was Jan. 30. I knew that I hadn’t written in a while, but I had no idea it had been over a month. The prolonged absence was not caused by a dearth of things to write about, but having too little time to do it in. In the next several days, I hope to take some small steps to rectifying the depletion.)

Continue Reading