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Tsunami and Repentance
From pulpits to news programs, from the New York Times to the Wall Street
Journal,
the message of the tsunami was missed. It is a double grief when lives are lost
and lessons are not learned. Every deadly calamity is a merciful call from God for
the living to repent. “Weep
with those who weep,”
the Bible says. Yes, but let us also weep for our own rebellion against the
living God. Lesson one: weep for the dead. Lesson two: weep for yourselves. Every deadly
calamity is a merciful call from God for the living to repent. That was Jesus'
stunning statement to those who brought Him news of calamity. The tower of
Siloam had fallen, and 18 people were crushed. “What about this, Jesus?” they
asked. He answered, “Do
you think that they were worse offenders than all the others who lived in
Jerusalem? No, I tell you; but unless you repent, you will all likewise perish” (Luke 13:4-5). The point of every
deadly calamity is this: Repent! Let our hearts be broken that God means so
little to us. Grieve that He is a whipping boy to be blamed for pain, but not
praised for pleasure. Lament that He makes headlines only when man mocks His
power, but no headlines for ten thousand days of wrath withheld. Let us rend
our hearts that we love life more than we love Jesus Christ. Let us cast
ourselves on the mercy of our Maker. He offers it through the death and
resurrection of His Son. This is the point of
all pleasure and all pain. Pleasure says: “God is like this, only better; don't
make an idol out of me. I only point.” Pain says: “What sin deserves is like
this, only worse; don't take offense at me. I am a merciful warning.” But the topless
sunbathers amid the tsunami aftermath in Phuket, Thailand did not get the
message. Neither did the man who barely escaped the mighty wave with the help
of a jungle gym and palm-leaf roof. He concluded, “I am left with an immense
respect for the power of nature.” He missed it. The point is: reverence for the
Creator, not respect for creation. Writing in the New York Times, David Brooks
rightly scorns the celebration of nature's might: “When Thoreau [celebrates]
savage wildness of nature, he sounds, this week, like a boy who has seen a war
movie and thinks he has experienced the glory of combat.” But Brooks sees no message in the
calamity: “This is a moment to feel deeply bad, for the dead and for those of
us who have no explanation.” David Hart, writing
in the Wall
Street Journal,
goes beyond Brooks and pronounces: “No Christian is licensed to utter odious
banalities about God's inscrutable counsels or blasphemous suggestions that all
this mysteriously serves God's good ends.” These responses are
foreseen in Scripture: “I
killed your young men with the sword...yet you did not return to me, declares
the Lord”
(Amos 4:10). “They
cursed the name of God who had power over these plagues. They did not repent
and give Him glory”
(Rev. 16:9). Contrary to Hart's
pronouncement, the Christian Scriptures do indeed license us to speak of God's
“inscrutable counsels” and how He works in all things for mysterious good ends.
To call this banal and blasphemous is like a bird calling the wind under its
wing wicked. Jesus said that the
minutest event in nature is under the control of God. “Are not two
sparrows sold for a penny? And not one of them will fall to the ground apart
from your Father”
(Matt. 10:29). He said this to give hope to those who would be killed for His
name. He Himself stood on
the sea and stopped the waves with a single word (Mark 4:39). Even if nature or
Satan unleashed the deadly tidal wave, one word from Jesus would have stopped
it. He did not speak it. This means there is design in this suffering. And all
His designs are wise and just and good. One of His designs
is my repentance. Therefore I will not put God on trial. That is not my place.
And only because of Christ will the waves that one day carry me away bring me
safely to His side. Come. Repentance is a good place to be. Desiring God Ministries www.desiringGod.org Via MissionNet |
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