Here’s what’s wrong with the world:
The other day I saw my friend Caleb
walking on the sidewalk with a McDonald’s bag in his hand. I happen to know that he’s going through a
difficult time in his life right now—nothing noticeable on the outside, but inside
he’s getting tired. He’s told me
so. As he walked by a trashcan he tossed
his McDonald’s in it’s general direction, but missed, and kept going.
It was then
that I saw another person I know, her name is Jean. Jean is what you’d call an eco-freak; she’d
sell her grandma into slavery to save a tree.
Unfortunately she’d just seen Caleb miss the trashcan and quickened her
pace to kept catch up with him. After
she’d thrown the bag in the trash she said, “Hey, you missed your target, you
know.” Caleb turned around. “So?”
Uh oh.
For at least three minutes Jean was
in his face giving him a speech about the environment and what “people like
you” are doing to it. She said how he
was dishonoring the earth in a way that meant, “you’re a criminal and I’m a
saint.” Zero respect. It made me sick, but Caleb just stood there and took
it—he didn’t say a word. Finally, she
finished her spiel as though rebuking a little kid, “Don’t you know that the
way you treat creation is the way you treat the Creator?”
“WHAT? You’ve got to be kidding me”, I thought,
“what an idiot!”
Doesn’t she get that he is creation? And not just a part of it, but the very
pinnacle; God’s own image. Doesn’t she
get that she is dishonoring him? Her little rant stripped him of all dignity
and she has the nerve to lecture him about
disrespecting creation! It’s people like
her that are ruining the world.
What an
idiot.
But here’s the problem: The way you treat creation is the way you
treat the Creator.
You see, if she was wrong then so
am I. I hated her in those few
minutes. Not the way we usually think of
hate, you know, the diabolical laughter kind you see on cartoons, but a subtler
sort that gets annoyed when she’s around, that wouldn’t be sad to see her fail,
that whispers, “what an idiot.” This is
hate too, and I’m guilty.
If there’s something wrong with her
then there’s something wrong with me;
something wrong with me for hating
her. It’s people like me that are
ruining the world. I hated Jean for
hating Caleb, and you can hate me for it.
Before you know it the entire world is tied together in this crime
against each other, against humanity, and against God. Because the way you treat creation is the way
you treat the Creator.
If Jean’s guilty, then we’re all
guilty, and that’s what makes hate so powerful.
Like Gandhi said, “An eye for an eyes makes the whole world blind.”
But isn’t my hate justified because
she hated him? Can’t I hate the
hater? Not without making it right for
someone else to hate me, and for someone else to hate them, and on and on ‘till
all our hands are doused with blood.
This hatred of man—hatred of God—deserves death; I deserve death. The whole
planet hangs under the shadow of death because of hate.
That’s what
makes death so powerful. That’s what’s
wrong with the world.
And that’s what makes Jesus’ love
the ultimate power, the last laugh. He
said “love your enemies and pray for them.”
He said to love those who hate.
Even those who hate you.
He looked hate
in the face, took hate’s hand, and let hate lead him to his death.
He loved
hate.
This was the first time anyone had
ever loved like this. Only this type of
love is more powerful than hate (“For even sinners love their friends”). Only this type of love is more powerful than
death. And so Jesus concurred death with
the most secret, most sacred, undefeatable, insoluble, buzzer-beating,
hell-robbing, death-defying, power of all—love.
And so he conquers me daily.
Conquers my
hate. Conquers that subtle little whisper,
“What an idiot.”
This is how the world was saved.
This is how to save the world.
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