Tuesday, May 3, 2011

my hope isn't in the death of men

Ever since the news of Bin Laden's death I've been very disturbed by the response of those who claim Christ.  Facebook and Twitter were littered Sunday night with celebratory statements over his death.  One person said "I seriously have never been this happy over hearing about someones death. Im not even going to be able to go to sleep. Usama Bin Laden is dead. Rest in hell."

I was at my brother's house with some other friends and we just sat around with jaws dropped open as the night progressed and revealed people's utter glee at the fact that Osama Bin Laden had died and gone to hell.  These were people who professed to be our brother and sisters in Christ.  We're God's kids, guys!  What has happened to our thinking?  Sure, we say that we would never delight in seeing a soul go to hell, but it's like we forgot that Bin Laden is a soul too.

One friend posted Ezekiel 33:11.  " As I live, declares the Lord GOD, I have no pleasure in the death of the wicked, but that the wicked turn from his way and live; turn back, turn back from your evil ways, for why will you die, O house of Israel?"  According to this, God isn't doing a victory dance, so why are we?

The following post is written by a friend of a friend.  But he hit the nail on the head.  Read on.  It's worth your time.


Tragedy of Tragedies: Osama Bin Laden and the Christian Response
There is no doubt that Osama Bin Laden’s life was marked by heinous action and unspeakable terror. It is a tragedy that so many innocent lives were lost by the hate in that man’s heart. And it is a tragedy as well that any man had to live his life engulfed in that same hate.   But today I awoke to a new tragedy. As I read the celebratory response to Bin Laden’s death by Christians whom I love and respect, I grew sick to my stomach. Then dismayed. Then angry.   After all, we Christians are the ones who spend our lives purveying the good news that we are graciously spared from being treated as our sins deserve. I find it ironic at best, that we - as recipients of such undeserved grace - are the very ones parading in the streets that this “bastard finally got what he deserved.” If you’re offended by the language, be more offended by the hypocrisy.   If America has suffered any persecution at all in recent memory, we suffered it at the hands of Osama Bin Laden. He hated us for our wealth, our infidelity, and our religious freedom. And today it’s been told without doubt that the proper American response is to hate him in return. “But I tell you: Love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be sons of your Father in heaven (Matt. 5:43-46).” Do we really find the Bible infallible when it calls us to actions like that?   The terrifying-to-face truth of Scripture is that the very root of sin that drove Osama Bin Laden to kill thousands of people is vying for my heart too. If we lose touch with that - if we somehow think of ourselves as less debased in the height of our own sin - than we’ve lost touch with the Christian story and the very need for a Savior in the first place.   Perhaps even more shocking is the image of our Abba Father lovingly knitting together Osama Bin Laden in his mother’s womb. It is an affront to consider Bin Laden to be made in the imago dei. But then again, the Bible is an affront. To be clear, I am not at all saying Bin Laden’s actions were godly or anything other than evil. I am not saying God approves his terror or hate, or even that Bin Laden shouldn’t have been forcibly stopped from doing what he was doing. But that does not change the fact that a tragic end to a tragic life ought to give us a more reason to repent and mourn than hoot and holler.   Today it was us Christians who led the festive parade through the streets of culture. Yet God calls his people to respond to social wickedness with recognition of our own guilt, and our own need for humility and repentance. Today we acted even more convinced, cocksure and smug, that God is somehow inherently on America’s side. Yet God used Assyria to judge Israel, then turned around and judged Assyria too (*see bottom). Saddest of all, today we took more joy in the presumptuous thought of a man’s eternal separation from God than the hope that our Redeemer God might have somehow redeemed even this situation.   How incredibly revealing that we take more joy in imagining our enemy rotting in hell than encountering redemption?   How hypocritical that we then claim to have a heart to see the lost come to Christ?   How near-sighted to forget that our beloved Apostle Paul was once the mass-murdering terrorist Paul?   And how blind to not recognize that our riotous celebration over lost life through execution isn’t all that different than Bin Laden’s actions on 9/11?   It’s been said that our love will be the one undeniable thing to help this world know that the Christian story is true. If this is the case, then I wonder what the world knows today?   I know 9/11 hurt a lot of people. And I know Jesus weeps too. But if our reaction to world events is more immersed in our identity as Americans than as citizens of another Kingdom then we’ve lost the plot of the Christian story and the radical call of Jesus’ teaching. We can celebrate a man’s death and potential separation from God all we like. It is, after all, a free country. You can even call it patriotism. But please don’t call it Christianity.   Today I thought of Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a great theologian and pastor. Bonhoeffer found himself in a similar situation as us, face to face with an evil man who had killed thousands (Adolf Hitler). Bonhoeffer’s response is instructive to us – he personally took action against the evil and on multiple occasions Bonhoeffer plotted to assassinate Hitler.  Yet Bonhoeffer knew that just because he was called to take necessary action against evil did not mean he had to succumb to hating his enemy’s soul or rejoicing in their separation from God. His strikingly relevant words below teach us that we can actively confront our enemies without rejoicing in their destruction.   “Jesus Christ lived in the midst of his enemies. On the Cross he was utterly alone, surrounded by evildoers and mockers. For this cause he had come, to bring peace to the enemies of God. So the Christian, too, belongs not in the seclusion of a cloistered life but in the thick of foes. There is his commission, his work. ‘The kingdom is to be in the midst of your enemies. And he who will not suffer this does not want to be of the Kingdom of Christ; he wants to be among friends, to sit among roses and lilies, not with the bad people but the devout people. O you blasphemers and betrayers of Christ! If Christ had done what you are doing who would ever have been spared.’”   *This particular idea admittedly and blatantly stolen from a great blog post by Glenn Packiam at glennpackiam.com.
By: Jordan Warner

4 comments:

  1. Good thoughts! It echoes my same reaction to the whole fiasco. We have become what we despise about our enemy. It's not right.

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  2. Thank you for posting! Very helpful!

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  3. While I understand (and agree to some extent) there is another side to this story. I do believe that we should have some form of sorrow for this man and his eternal soul, but I also believe that we do have the right to rejoice over this man's death. This man's problem was not simply with America, it is more specifically against Christianity and against Jehovah God. Multiple Biblical accounts will show that when in war situations, God told His people to wipe out the enemy and then we often see them rejoicing. I believe the tragedy comes when we become unbalanced (to either extreme).

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  4. The rejoicing done after a victorious battle was praise to God for His deliverance. Not certain that those surrounding the Whitehouse had Christ on thier minds as much as revenge. Good post!

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