"Burned alive: What to do about evil" by Stephen M. Miller for Wedsday, 4 February 2015 from Bible blog of award-winning bestselling Christian author, Stephen M. Miller.
TARGETING EVIL. How does God’s love figure into Islamic State (IS) terror tactics? Is putting IS out of everyone’s misery the loving thing to do? Photo by Jacksoncam/flickr.
VAPORIZING A TERRORIST in a drone attack. Is that Christian?Clearly, that’s what many Christians would love to do to those IS militants who burned alive a captured Jordanian pilot yesterday.
I got an email with a tough question about that.
Militants apparently wet the pilot in flammable liquid while he stood in a cage. Then they lit him up like a torch – or like Roman Emperor Nero once lit Christians tied to poles in the arena.
I refuse to watch the video, or any like it. But I listened to one reporter describe what she saw. Mid-report she had to pause to compose herself.
Here’s the thoughtful question that came in yesterday’s email.
How do we make sense of intentional cruelty in today’s world? We have ISIS beheading people and now today, burning people alive, all while they videotape it just for the sake of inflicting even more cruelty on those who were not there at the time. Plus we have the Boko Haram group intentionally inflicting cruelty on populations around them in Nigeria.
I know everyone is a sinner, but isn’t this beyond sin? Is there a difference between sin and evil? Does God love the ISIS and Boko Haram people just as he loves the rest of us? How do we conceptualize God’s love when faced with this intentional cruelty?
I don’t for a second think that all sins are equal in God’s eyes. They’re not equal in our eyes. And if God made us in his image, as the Genesis writer reported, I would expect God to treat a person who slaps someone in the face differently than he treats someone who burns people alive in religious genocide.
“How do we conceptualize God’s love when faced with this intentional cruelty?”
Christians conceptualize it differently.
Some see God’s love in the Gatling Gun cannon-fire of an A-10 Warthog, a twin-engine jet custom-made for strafing ground forces and shredding tanks.
Stop the aggressor. That’s what German pastor Dietrich Bonhoeffer tried to do: assassinate Hitler.
It makes sense to many Christians. Kill one to save millions.
The math seems right.
Take the Ukraine. Russian President Vladimir Putin probably will if he can.
The math solution works there, too. Assassinate Putin.
By all news reports, it seems as though he’s the infection that’s killing Ukrainians, along with Russian soldiers he’s sending into the battle to set up what looks like another annexation in the resurrection of the Soviet Empire.
Let me confess.
My human nature wants Putin dead.
It wants IS seared to pork rinds in the hellfire of a coalition army from every nation on the planet.
What to do about my spiritual nature?
I read yesterday about people coming out of IS – repulsed by what they saw, and worse, by what they had done. Unspeakable acts.
They come home as souls diminished.
- “Less” in the eyes of their family and friends.
- “Less” in the eyes of their suspicious nation.
- “Less” in the eyes looking back from the mirror.
My spirit has a mind of its own. It speaks to my human nature, somehow, in ways I don’t understand. And sometimes in ways that seem unnatural, irrational, naïve.
It tries to reason with me.
What should we do about a brainwashed army of souls being misled, caught up in the passion of what has been sold to them as a religious war?
My human nature says to kill them.
My spirit says we don’t need their blood because Jesus gave us his.
There’s a war on the ground in the Middle East and Africa and beyond.
But for many Christians, there’s a war closer home – inside our heads.
We’re not sure what to do.
We want justice for the dead and we want peace for the living.
But we serve a Man whose idea of justice is to forgive and whose idea of peace is to trust his Father.
Paul wrote a letter of warning to Christians in what is now Turkey. It strikes me eerie that today his words sound appropriate not only for Christians, but perhaps even more so for IS.
“Love others as much as you love yourself. But if you keep attacking each other like wild animals, you had better watch out or you will destroy yourselves” (Galatians 5:14-15).
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