Saving Babies and Saving Sinners
From Gospel Translations
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But then come the pictures. The pictures don’t lie. Everything can lie but the pictures. We can escape anything but the pictures. Worldwide indignation came from the pictures. Without the pictures it is unimaginable, it can’t have been like that. Or: yes, it could have, but I can’t come close to feeling what I should feel—not without the pictures. | But then come the pictures. The pictures don’t lie. Everything can lie but the pictures. We can escape anything but the pictures. Worldwide indignation came from the pictures. Without the pictures it is unimaginable, it can’t have been like that. Or: yes, it could have, but I can’t come close to feeling what I should feel—not without the pictures. | ||
- | So it is with abortion. It is the pictures that stun me this morning—the incredible scenes from '' | + | So it is with abortion. It is the pictures that stun me this morning—the incredible scenes from ''Eclipse of Reason'', and the photographs of legally mangled corpses. What shall I do? Would petitions and prayers really have sufficed in Nazi Germany? |
But then I think of the immensity and horror of the sin of disbelieving God. I think of the reality of hell and the word pictures in the Bible (“And the smoke of their torment goes up for ever and ever, and they have no rest day or night …” Revelation 14:11). | But then I think of the immensity and horror of the sin of disbelieving God. I think of the reality of hell and the word pictures in the Bible (“And the smoke of their torment goes up for ever and ever, and they have no rest day or night …” Revelation 14:11). |
Current revision as of 20:53, 21 December 2016
By John Piper
About Ministry
Part of the series Taste & See
I am frustrated that I have only one life to live for Christ. This morning (Monday) after breakfast I was again distressed, very distressed, at the thought of the thousands of unborn children that are legally crushed to death by sterile medical instruments. I lay down on my bed and stared at the ceiling. The immensity of the horror of bloody little legs and arms and heads dismembered and piled on a clinic tissue returned again and again.
For three years Noël and I lived a few miles from Dachau, the concentration camp outside Munich, Germany. It is open to the public. There are pictures. It is only because there are pictures that we believe it happened. Without pictures there would be no belief. We walked through the gas chambers. We walked through the oven rooms. We walked between the stacked bunks. But that is not real. They are like props. It didn’t really happen here in this very spot. Not really.
But then come the pictures. The pictures don’t lie. Everything can lie but the pictures. We can escape anything but the pictures. Worldwide indignation came from the pictures. Without the pictures it is unimaginable, it can’t have been like that. Or: yes, it could have, but I can’t come close to feeling what I should feel—not without the pictures.
So it is with abortion. It is the pictures that stun me this morning—the incredible scenes from Eclipse of Reason, and the photographs of legally mangled corpses. What shall I do? Would petitions and prayers really have sufficed in Nazi Germany?
But then I think of the immensity and horror of the sin of disbelieving God. I think of the reality of hell and the word pictures in the Bible (“And the smoke of their torment goes up for ever and ever, and they have no rest day or night …” Revelation 14:11).
And it hits me what an utter inconsistency it is to feel indignant as a Christian about the holocaust of abortion but not about the holocaust of sinners perishing in unbelief. Killing babies is a horrendous evil and their destruction is hellish. But not trusting God is a more horrendous evil and the destruction of unbelieving people is not hellish but hell.
Therefore I am frustrated that I have only one life to live for the glory of Christ. One life should surely be devoted to stopping the carnage (we must speak graphically or we lie) of abortion. And another life should surely be devoted to saving people from hell.
What shall I do? What is the solution to my frustration? The solution is the diversity of the members of the Church of Jesus Christ. I cannot go to all the unreached peoples of the world with the good news of forgiveness. I cannot spend all the time I would like writing and speaking and traveling and agitating for the cause of threatened children. The only solution I know is you!
Which horror in the world today makes you ache most? Where will you pour yourself out in the few years we have before we give an account to the righteous Judge of all the earth?
Seeking the face of God,
Pastor John