It's Saturday morning, 10:22am. I am working my Saturday shift for the month. I primarily respond to emails sent to the Admissions Office. When I left work yesterday, I left with a sense of accomplishment: the inbox was completely cleared out when I left to go home. This morning, there were 64 messages waiting. At least half of them are hateful letters of disdain for a recent news article published about Liberty University. Each email filled with words like "biggot," "hypocrites," "hope you enjoy Hell," etc. So ugly.
Part of me finds the need to defend myself. The other part of me is just frustrated. I'm not even really that frustrated about the actual situation, but rather the nature of people. When people groups have opposing view points, both point to "freedom of speech." I don't believe in tolerance, since I believe in absolute Truth. But I do believe in grace, love, and compassion. I see fallacy in hateful emails calling any group hateful. I do understand expressing concerns and opposing view points; that I can reckon with. I can understand asking questions and challenging opposing positions, but cannot fathom the logic in sending hate messages claiming someone is hateful. Isn't that the pot calling the kettle black? It is truly tiresome.
As Christians, we mustn't hate. We must stand for Truth, but even Jesus prayed for those killing Him as He hung on the cross. Stephen, too, prayed for those stoning Him. Why, then, in an age of "free speech," and "personal rights," do we slander and kill each other for opposing view points? I don't expect that we all see eye-to-eye. I do expect that we reason, talk, ask questions...not throw stones in glass houses. Who wants to listen to someone hating them, no matter what side you're on with a position? Instead, let us love each other as human beings, created in the imago dei, and seek to ask questions, challenge positions in Truth and concern, and pray for each other.
Saturday, May 23, 2009
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Today I read a news article about three men arrested for pursuing Jihad in New York City. Militant tactics were to be used to kill the infidel. Fox News headlines quoted "...if he were to die a martyr, he would go to paradise." My heart ached for that man.
You see, when it comes down to it, people want the same thing: to love and be loved. We all want perfection, beauty, splendor. We are made for it. We ache for it. Somehow in the mix-ups and mess ups, people kill for it! Our selfish pursuits will do whatever we think is necessary for admiration, affection, and hope.
People have an innate sense of justice. We know when something is not the way that it is supposed to be, even if we cannot exactly pinpoint what that means. So we battle for correction, fight against seeming (or actual) injustice, and ultimately, we fight for perfection.
Filanthropists, businessmen, missionaries, teachers, presidents, bank tellers, grocery store clerks, trash collectors, and the unemployed strive for it. Radical extremists fight for it. Men will blow themselves up in planes, cars, or otherwise for the hope of paradise. So even a murderer aches for it, and therefore, is worth compassion and sympathy even if warped, evil ways of getting it are used.
We long for the hope of things to come. Lies have been told about how to attain it, but the truth is we don't attain it. We are freely given it. We have all grasped at the wind for perfection, beauty, and what we are made for. Through Christ, we can take hold of that for which He has taken hold of us---the beauty and hope of something far greater than we can attain ourselves.
You see, when it comes down to it, people want the same thing: to love and be loved. We all want perfection, beauty, splendor. We are made for it. We ache for it. Somehow in the mix-ups and mess ups, people kill for it! Our selfish pursuits will do whatever we think is necessary for admiration, affection, and hope.
People have an innate sense of justice. We know when something is not the way that it is supposed to be, even if we cannot exactly pinpoint what that means. So we battle for correction, fight against seeming (or actual) injustice, and ultimately, we fight for perfection.
Filanthropists, businessmen, missionaries, teachers, presidents, bank tellers, grocery store clerks, trash collectors, and the unemployed strive for it. Radical extremists fight for it. Men will blow themselves up in planes, cars, or otherwise for the hope of paradise. So even a murderer aches for it, and therefore, is worth compassion and sympathy even if warped, evil ways of getting it are used.
We long for the hope of things to come. Lies have been told about how to attain it, but the truth is we don't attain it. We are freely given it. We have all grasped at the wind for perfection, beauty, and what we are made for. Through Christ, we can take hold of that for which He has taken hold of us---the beauty and hope of something far greater than we can attain ourselves.
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