In light of all that happened last week in America, namely, the shootings in Connecticut that resulted in the deaths of young children and their teachers, a lot of questions have been asked. Are American gun laws not strict enough? Are they too strict? Is the issue even about gun control? Is the issue how the mentally handicapped are cared for in this country? Is the issue the creation of an overly-aggressive culture from video games and movies? How can we make schools safer?.... The list goes on and on. Ultimately, can we ever have the "right" answers? People have been killing each other for centuries, for millennium! It started in Exodus 4 when Cain murdered his brother, Abel, in the fields, or you could say it technically started even before that, when Eve and Adam first allowed themselves to be tempted by Satan all the way back in Genesis 3, right at the dawn of humanity. That day they began to die as they passed out of the Garden of Eden, their genes and flesh and all the world condemned to the slow decay of time. Long before those children in Connecticut were even born, children all over the world were dying in unsafe workhouses, being prostituted on the streets before they were even ten, forced into military service, and murdered at birth because of physical imperfections or disabilities. Ancient (and not-so-ancient) societies used to believe that every thing about a country, even its people, became spoils of war in victory. Women became toys, children became target practice, men became slaves. Entire cultures of people have been wiped out of the histories of the world. Families have been destroyed.
We have progressed since then... or so we claim. Yet the same things still happen. Children are still murdered, are still trafficked into the sex trade, are still worked to death, are still forced into military service, are still murdered before they have a chance to live. Women and men are still treated as less-than-human, both in the ways they always have been... and in the more "refined" ways of civilized society. How many of us have been annoyed to arrive at a store and find it closed? How many of us have snapped waiting in line and seeing a cashier just up and leave? How many of us have looked down on people in "labor" positions because they "don't have a 'real' job?" Have we really changed at all? Or we just make more of an effort to hide what humanity has always been: morally bankrupt.
"Blessed are the meek, for they will inherit the earth." -Matthew 5:5(NIV)
What does being "meek" have to do with all that I have just said? Being meek here isn't talking about being a pushover, about letting people say and do whatever they want to us because we're "nice Christians." No. Being meek here means moving on from what we talked about last week in my entry "That is our comfort...", where we talked about how easy it is to recognize that we living in a sick world and mourn it. This passage is about the next step... and perhaps the most difficult: recognizing we are completely unable to change the way the world is. Meekness - humbleness - is recognizing that we are just as corrupt as the world and are in no position to be able to change this overwhelming wickedness. We couldn't even save twenty children in our own backyard. Yes, we may reduce the deaths... but we will never be able to stop the evil in this world from rearing its ugly head in some other way. It will always come back, each time more tricky than before... each time spreading through us like a cancer.
You may disagree, but think of every Utopian society man has tried to create: the Soviet Union, the Third Reich, the Republic of China, the Democratic Republic of Korea, the Roman Empire, the British Empire, the United States of America... Each one of these nations had a view, in their own way, that they were bringing on a better order than had ever been known before. Yet... has anything really changed since the sun rose on any one of these nations? No.
So where do we turn? How can we go on knowing that ultimately, all our efforts to create a perfect world are meaningless in ending the overall existence of evil?
"I heard a loud shout from the throne, saying, 'Look, God’s home is now among his people! He will live with them, and they will be his people. God himself will be with them. He will wipe every tear from their eyes, and there will be no more death or sorrow or crying or pain. All these things are gone forever.' And the one sitting on the throne said, 'Look, I am making everything new!'"
- Revelation 21:3-5a(NLT)
When Christ returns... the existence of evil will end. All these things that cause us to mourn, that remind us of how powerless we are alone... will be overthrown. God, Himself, will live with us... and will heal the world from what it has become. That is the earth we have to inherit, not this broken husk on which we now place our feet. SO:
"Do not lose heart. Though outwardly we are wasting away, yet inwardly we are being renewed day by day. For our light and momentary troubles are achieving for us an eternal glory that far outweighs them all. So we fix our eyes not on what is seen, but on what is unseen. For what is seen is temporary, but what is unseen is eternal." - 2 Corinthians 4:16b-18(NIV)
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