I
love the song This Is My Father's
World: "O let me ne'er forget that though the wrong seems oft so
strong, God is the Ruler yet." Our Father's kingdom "shall never be
destroyed" (Dan.
2:44), and, ultimately, good will triumph, even if some of
God's people fail in their duties and are lost. No amount of sin in the
world, and no amount of indifference to sin by the church, can thwart the
final victory of righteousness. But meanwhile, what God's people choose to
do can and will affect the eternal destiny of particular souls. And many of
us who constitute the Lord's church are acting as if we were content to
let the world go to hell.
God
is asking us at present to live and do His work "in the midst of a crooked
and perverse generation" (Phil.
2:15).
The world has rejected the sovereignty of its rightful King and submitted to
an Invader. C. S. Lewis hit the mark when he referred to our world as
"enemy-occupied territory." Jesus, the true King Himself, said that Satan
was "the ruler of this world" (John
12:31
NKJV). It
so happens that the devil holds most of the human race under his dominion.
He has wreaked havoc in God's good creation, filling it with deceit,
corruption, and violence. His malignant intent to destroy mankind is, with
too few exceptions, being horribly fulfilled.
It
ought to break our hearts just to think of what the Evil One is doing in our
Father's world. We ought to be livid with indignant rage at what is being
done to the honor of our Creator and be pouring out our very last drops of
strength struggling to rescue the perishing. But instead, a strange pall of
stillness and silence hangs over the people of God. As the juggernaut of
Satan's work grinds forward, crushing our loved ones, our neighbors, and our
fellow citizens, we are staying safely out of the way, quietly letting it
happen.
What can we be thinking? Have we simply given up? Have we surrendered to
despair and finally begun to doubt that God has what it takes to overcome
His enemy? Have we been so frightened by the titanic strength of evil around
us that we are afraid to step forth and fight? Have we huddled in our
trembling little congregations for so long we have forgotten the unseen
armies of heaven? Are we defeated? Timid? Embarrassed? Do we just not care
that the honor of our beloved God is being dragged through the slime? Is it
a matter of no concern to us that Satan is demolishing the communities in
which we live, devouring souls all around us, and destroying the beauty and
goodness of everything his filthy hand touches? Just what is going on?
I
truly believe that Satan is not persecuting Christians in the United States
because he does not need to! We do not represent any serious threat to him.
He surely knows by now that, even in communities where there is a "faithful"
congregation of "disciples," he can do whatever he wants in our
neighborhoods, and we will do no more than fret about it in our Bible
classes. He is too clever to waste his limited resources persecuting people
who are doing him no harm, people who are making no encroachments on his
territory. Why should he
pay any attention to us?
Now, it is not as though we never call upon one another to be more
"militant." My fear, however, is that, because of the nature and the
circumstances of these calls, Satan may find they help as much as they hurt
him, and that, in practice, they will bring about no militance of the kind
that really threatens his realm. Sometimes, when we preach and write about
the need for greater militance, we have been dangerously limited in our view
of what we need to be militant against.
Only the naive would deny we need to aggressively oppose the damage that can
still be done by denominational and institutional ideology. But while we
have spent precious time and energy arguing about the relative urgency of
false religion's threat today, Satan has been slaughtering us with the
simple lie that religion of any kind
is irrelevant to people's needs. The body of Christ is wounded. It is
hemorrhaging the very lifeblood of its faith and devotion and commitment to
its Head. Is the devil's assassination of people's souls with the weapon of
indifference a crime we can
afford to be less militant about than his other atrocities? Where did we get
the notion that preachers are soft
who see the need to be militant against
this evil? The very idea smells
of the abyss itself. In fact, it would take nothing less than the perverse
ingenuity of the devil himself to think of a way to get the
Lord's own people to distract
one another from some of
the worst dangers they face by crying for more "militance" elsewhere! As
long as we restrict our militance to the selected areas we
prefer to fight in, Satan will
continue to have his way in our communities, and he can disregard our
limited "interference."
One
testimony to how limited our real militance can be is the fact that we can
be so "militant" on the one hand and do so little personal evangelism on the
other. I speak to my own shame when I say that I know how easy it is for a
gospel preacher to restrict his militance to the pulpit and the word
processor. If we are as concerned about defending truth and righteousness as
we like to appear, why are we not out there in the trenches where
thousands of souls are being
slain every day? Why are we content to try to save the few who will come
hear us preach or read our articles? All our militant rhetoric aside,
how many perishing souls have any of us actually
rescued during the last year?
We are often so busy militantly comparing ourselves among ourselves, and
militantly biting and devouring one another, that we can scarcely find the
time to "wage the good
warfare" (1
Tim.
1:18).
What we need is to make sure our militance against evil is actually that,
and not merely a cover for carnal combat. We need to be obsessed with the
godly militance that will take as a personal affront what Satan is doing up
and down the very streets we live on, such that we contest the claim he has
laid to any soul within our reach.
One
of my own problems has long been the tendency to confuse the
victims of the Enemy and with
the Enemy himself. I have acted and spoken in such a way that those in sin
thought I was mad at them,
or wanted to harm them. But
it is the devil whom we ought to hate without remorse. His work ought to
actually anger us. For our fellow men,
though, even the vilest of them, we are to have the benevolent, tender love
of our Father, who "is not willing that any should perish but that all
should come to repentance" (2
Pet. 3:9). Despise us as they may, mistreat us as they often
will, resist being rescued as they are prone to do, we never, ever have the
right to do anything but act in good will toward other human beings. They
are not our enemies. They have been victimized
by the Enemy. And they deserve
to know, as we gird on the towel and stoop to wash their feet, that we would
give our souls for theirs, if it were possible. It is time we learned how to
be tough with sin while
gentle with people (2
Tim.
2:24-26).
As
we labor in evangelism -- with love for the Lord, compassion for our fellow
man, and hatred for Satan -- we are privileged to work with the attitude of
triumphant overcomers. For too long we have fed our minds on defeat, when we
should have been thrilling to the vision of the disciple whom the Lord
loved: "Then I saw heaven opened, and behold, a white horse. And He who sat
on him was called Faithful and True, and in righteousness He judges and
makes war. His eyes were like a flame of fire, and on His head were many
crowns. He had a name written that no one knew except Himself. He was
clothed with a robe dipped in blood, and His name is called The Word of God.
And the armies in heaven, clothed in fine linen, white and clean, followed
Him on white horses. Now out of His mouth goes a sharp sword, that with it
He should strike the nations. And He Himself will rule them with a rod of
iron. He Himself treads the winepress of the fierceness and wrath of
Almighty God. And He has on His robe and on His thigh a name written: KING
OF KINGS AND LORD OF LORDS" (Rev.
19:11-16).
I
challenge you, along with myself, to answer the Lord's call to arms. Afflict
your soul with penitent sorrow for your past indifference to His holiness
and your callous disregard for dying souls. Soldiers of Christ, arise! Put
your armor on! Be strong, and quit yourselves like men! Be eaten up with
zeal for your Lord's honor. Become inflamed with passionate indignation at
what has been allowed to happen in your locality. Take the insult
personally. Vow that, God being your Helper, you are simply not going to
stand by and take it any longer. Whether alone or arm in arm with your
brethren, commit yourself to the proposition that evil will not go unopposed
where you live even one day longer.
Rattle the devil's cage!
Get his attention! Give him to understand that he no longer will be allowed
to have it all his way. Get out-of-doors and go on the
offensive. Resist the devil.
But keep clear in your mind who the Enemy actually is. Learn loving-kindness
for those who are his victims. Weep
o'er the erring one! Lift up
the fallen! Dedicate the rest of your life to nursing the bloody wounds of
those who have been brutalized by Satan. And know, as you labor to care for
the dying, that "he who turns a sinner from the error of his way will
save a soul from death and
cover a multitude of sins" (Jas.
5:20).
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