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Wednesday, March 28, 2012

The Worst

"And I will execute great vengeance upon them with furious rebukes; and they shall know that I AM the LORD, when I shall lay my vengeance upon them."
-Ezekiel 25:17

Yes, this is the very same line of scripture quoted in Pulp Fiction, but in the Biblical context God is giving a prophecy regarding the Philistines. Specifically, they sought to destroy Judah with malice and vengeance in their hearts, so the Lord swore to annihilate them. There are various verses in the Bible regarding the vengeance of the LORD upon those that seek the blood of his people and those that openly mock His name. You know, I honestly think that we, as Christians, must come to a point where we stop playing the whole "I'm a sinner, I'm only human, I can't fully change my ways" game that this culture is so accustomed to, because we have got to draw a line at some point between who we are the Bride of Christ and who is the enemy of God. We must remember that there is an enemy that wishes to rape and kill the Bride of Christ, and although God will have his vengeance upon the enemy a thousand times over, in this life and at the End of Days, we must fight him at every turn, resisting not just the sin in our own hearts but those that would wish to make us compromise our beliefs and openly defy the Spirit of God, for those people are literally abominations in the eyes of God-there's no getting around it.

I say all of this to address not just Bonhoeffer's decision to kill Hitler, but the all the drama surrounding Joseph Kony, a man that Invisible Children has declared, in no uncertain terms, is on the same level of evil as Hitler. If you've actually put in some legitimate research about the crisis and have done more than just watch the 30 min video, you would agree that Kony is (or was) worthy of being compared to Hitler in light of his human and heretical atrocities. You may remember that I even supported KONY 2012, shared the video on some of my Facebook groups and had at least two Bible verses to bolster my resolve, namely verses asking the Godly to seek justice and defend the oppressed. I no longer actively support the IC's efforts to catch Kony, but the question I have struggled with throughout all of this is: what exactly are the people of God supposed to do about Kony? We all have a sort of ministry that we live out on a day to day basis, but should part of that ministry really involve donating money and activity to a secular organization that works with a corrupt regime to catch a madman that hasn't truly been active in the region for several years? Do we pray that we catch Kony ourselves and put him to justice for his crimes against the Lord or do we stand back and focus our time in other places, letting him do evil and cause suffering while we focus on the typical homeless/foreign/unreached fronts?

It's not the same situation, but it is similar to Bonhoeffer's in that he was a theologian, a man of the scripture, who found himself plotting to kill not just a terrorist but the very ruler of the country he was born in. Bonhoeffer was a preacher, not a rebel; a lover, not a fighter, and yet he found himself compelled to not just teach his people and keep them from harm but destroy the source of the problem itself. It seems that we would have an obligation, as the church (salt and light of the world, living beings filled with the fire of God), to resist the evils of this world in every way possible, perhaps even going as far as to bring down the very same dark tower that causes those problems. If we call ourselves disciples, we must entirely focus ourselves upon Christ, who, while he did suffer and die on the cross, faced his death and those that befouled his church with a fierce resolution that few people will ever know in their lifetimes. What if we followed the same fierce example of Christ's resolution on the cross to face our sins and those that oppress the church? What if we actually took action, in His name and for His glory, against those that defied the name of the LORD and took that is rightfully His? The ancient Israelites did the same thing-why shouldn't we?

Notice that this is less of a definitive statement on what I believe, but a look into the questioning surrounding Kony and Hitler in the eyes of God. If we are to transcend the culture we live in and actually look at the Word of God says, we will discover what God actually thinks. We just have to be willing to do so, and we must do so before we can ever hope to expand God's kingdom in any mission front. Feel free to comment or complain as you wish, thank you for reading, I commented on Josh Spell's Heidegger's Miserable "Faith".

1 comment:

  1. First of all.... My roommate, Jessica Hughes says AMEN!!
    Great blog Hunter. I have also been wrestling with how Christians should approach such great matters of "social justice". What do we do about cases which require immediate violent action for the problem to be solved effectively? Now, a modern-day christian army physically pursuing Kony on their own... now that is an interesting picture... Would Bonhoeffer lead such an army?

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