Max Lucado Some of you love to work with jigsaw puzzles. You take a jumble of disconnected pieces and arrange them in the right order. Certain folks are so proud of their work they glaze and frame the finished product. Easy to understand why. The tedious task of interlocking the curves and the humps at just the right place can result in a satisfying and beautiful picture. Don't we love to see the pieces fit together? And, these days, our country is facing yet another one clumsy piece of the human puzzle: war. At this writing, war has just begun. What are we supposed to do with war? A quarter of a million American troops are marching in the sand of foreign soil. Even as I write, bombs seek targets, bullets rob youth, and soldiers interrogate prisoners. With only one step into the new millennium we face an ancient question: Why does God allow war? The question is not a new one. According to the Canadian Army Journal, war has dominated documented history. Since 3600 B.C., the world has known only 292 years of peace. During this period there have been 14,531 wars. An estimated 3,640,000,000 lives have been lost in them. The value of them would pay for a golden belt around the world, 97 miles wide and 33 feet deep. War, so costly. War, so awful. The dying, the maiming. Those who aren't scarred physically are likely to be scarred emotionally. War bookmarks history and lives. We divide history into pre- and post-war eras. People are remembered as ones who fought in such-and-such war. The smoke of battle lingers long after the bodies are buried and the armistice is signed. Then why does God allow it? The answer begins by looking at the puzzle from his perspective. My limited experience with jigsaw puzzles has taught me the importance of the picture on the outside of the box. If you don't see the picture from the angle of the maker, the challenge is just too great. If we don't see war and human conflict from God's perspective, our discussion will be futile. Any discussion of war must revolve around the character of God. First, remember that we have a loving God. Scripture overflows with this essential truth. "He loves whatever is just and good, and his unfailing love fills the earth." (Psalm 33:5) "The Lord has appeared of old to me, saying: 'Yes, I have loved you with an everlasting love; Therefore with lovingkindness I have drawn you.' " (Jeremiah 31:3) "Behold what manner of love the Father has bestowed on us, that we should be called children of God!" (1 John 3:1) "I will make you my wife forever, showing you righteousness and justice, unfailing love and compassion." (Hosea 2:19) If we are going to consider God and war, we must begin with God and love. Every heavenly action is born out of passion for his children. God only does what is good. Just as important, God only does what is just. We have a just God. The Bible's answer to that question may surprise you. Man's enemy is sin. Self-centeredness ravages our hearts. From the very beginning the wages of self-centeredness has been death. "A man reaps what he sows." (Gal. 6:7) If you sow seeds of peace, you reap the fruits of peace. But sow seeds of destruction and the result is destruction. "...those who plant trouble and cultivate evil will harvest the same." (Job 4:8) War is a fruit of sin. War is one of them. On a larger scale, no doubt. In a more terrible form, certainly. But war with Iraq is born in the same hospital as a quarrel with your neighbor. The hospital of sin. Before we blame international conflict on finances or boundaries or religion, we must lay the blame where God does: our sinful nature. "Where do wars and fights come from among you? Do they not come from your desires for pleasure that war in your members?" (James 4:1) It's not so much that war is sin, but that war is a consequence of sin, a result of the lust and desires that wage war within us. James
goes on to say: Whether it's two toddlers fighting in a playroom or two super-powers directing nuclear missiles at each other; the cause of conflict is the same. Selfishness. One side cannot get what they want so they demand their way. They fight. War is the fruit of sin. To ask God to prohibit war, then, is to ask him to prohibit the consequence of human behavior. Something he has never been wont to do. As long as there is sin there will be war. War is a tool of God. Can people grow so wicked, so pagan, so vile that God justifiably destroys them? Can leaders be so evil and cruel that God, knowing the hardness of their hearts, righteously removes them from the earth? Apparently so. He did so with Sodom and Gomorrah. He did so with the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Hivites and Jebusites. "As for the towns of the nations the Lord your God is giving you as a special possession, destroy every living thing in them. You must completely destroy the Hittites, Amorites, Canaanites, Perizzites, Hivites, and Jebusites, just as the Lord your God has commanded you. This will keep the people of the land from teaching you their detestable customs in the worship of their gods, which would cause you to sin deeply against the Lord your God." (Deut. 20:16-18) God has used warfare as a form of judgment against the enemies of God. In fact, He uses warfare as judgment against his own people when
they become enemies of God. God's priority is the salvation of souls. When a people-group blockades his plan, does he not have the right to remove them? He is the God who knows "the end from the beginning" (Isa. 46:10). He knows the hearts of men and protects his people by punishing the evil of their wicked neighbors. Is it not God's right to punish evil? Is it not appropriate for the one who tells us to hate that which is evil to punish that which is evil? Of course it is. And--this is crucial--he uses governments to do so. Scripture elevates the role of government to a high place. Their position is a God-given assignment. Paul echoes this truth three
times: War is divinely delegated to government. Unpunished evil is, itself, evil. Have we stumbled upon an inconsistency? Do we find God calling for war one time and "cheek-turning" another? Is this a double standard? I don't think so. The government is called to turn the other cheek. We call this diplomacy, negotiation, and compromise. If such efforts prove fruitless, and if the leaders feel their constituency is under threat, they can then take steps to protect the innocent. Consider this truth from a personal standpoint. If someone criticizes me, I am called to "turn the other cheek." I forgive. But what if they criticize my wife and daughters. What if they threaten them? What if a perpetrator tells me he is coming after my family? What do I do? Simple, I protect the innocent. I take steps to insure their safety. "But, Max. aren't you called to love your enemies?" Absolutely. And I will love him in jail. Why? Because, to leave my family unprotected would be to abdicate my responsibility as family leader. It is a higher evil to let evil go unpunished than to punish those who would harm innocents. Has the United States reached such a point with Saddam Hussein? Only the authorities of a nation can answer that question. But if they perceive a real and present danger, their godly response is to protect the country. I agree with the view of C.S. Lewis. Again, the purpose of war is to punish the wicked and protect the innocent. Where does that leave us? That leaves us on our knees. "I urge you, first of all, to pray for all people. As you make your requests, plead for God's mercy upon them, and give thanks. Pray this way for kings and all others who are in authority, so that we can live in peace and quietness, in godliness and dignity ...So wherever you assemble, I want men to pray with holy hands lifted up to God, free from anger and controversy." (1 Tim. 2:1-2, 8) If ever we need to trust the promise of Romans 8:28, it is times like these: Remember these key thoughts: Let us pray for our President and those in authority. Let us give thanks for our President who begins his day on his knees with an open Bible in his lap. And, let us pray for a speedy end to this conflict. ~Max Lucado
|
Ministry Articles @ Crosswalk.com