Thirteen-year-old Lauren Landavazo was walking home from school last Friday when she was
shot and killed. Authorities arrested Kody Lott Sunday afternoon and he later confessed to the shooting,
claiming that the devil helped him plan out the crime.
If this tragedy doesn't make you angry, I could tell you more stories in today's news—a teenager who
assaulted a girl and bragged about it on Facebook, thirty-seven children who were
hospitalized after a chlorine gas attack in Syria, thirteen people who were
shot to death over the Labor Day weekend in Chicago.
My point is not to depress you this morning. Rather, it is to think with you about the anger you feel at stories like these.
I was reading in 1 Samuel yesterday and was struck by this verse: when
King Saul was notified that the people of Jabesh-gilead were under
siege, "the Spirit of God rushed upon Saul when he heard these words,
and his anger was greatly kindled" (1 Samuel 11:6).
As I reflected on the anger produced by the Holy Spirit in the heart of
Saul, I thought immediately of the anger of Jesus. For instance, when
our Lord encountered Pharisees who valued their Sabbath laws over a man
with a withered hand, "he looked around at them with anger, grieved at
their hardness of heart" (Mark 3:5).
When Jesus found money-changers defrauding people at the Temple, he
drove them out of the area, poured out their coins, and overturned their
tables (John 2:15). He called King Herod a "fox" (Luke 13:32) and
repeatedly denounced scribes and Pharisees as "hypocrites" (Matthew 23).
The "gentle Jesus, meek and mild" of hymnology is seldom found in the
Bible. Rather, we find in the Son the same attitude toward sin as we
encounter in his Father. There are at least
375 references
in the Old Testament to the wrath of God. The New Testament continues
the theme: "The wrath of God is revealed from heaven against all
ungodliness and unrighteousness of men, who by their unrighteousness
suppress the truth" (Romans 1:18).
Here's my point: the closer we are to God, the more our hearts will
reflect his heart. And God's heart breaks when he sees our sin—not
because he doesn't love sinners, but because he does. Because he knows
the pain and grief and death that sin always and inevitably produces
(Romans 6:23). Because he rejoices over us (Zephaniah 3:17) and wants
only what is best for us (Romans 12:2).
The God who loves all his children wants us to feel the same way. The
next time you see immorality portrayed on television or in the news,
watch your reaction. If you shake your head in disgust, your heart does
not reflect the heart of God. If you grieve for them and pray for them,
you have the heart of your Father.
Lost people act like lost people. They are unable to understand what is
"spiritually discerned" (1 Corinthians 2:15). Rather than dismissing or
rejecting them, we are called to love them as our Lord loves us. After
all, we were once as lost as they are. Jesus died for us, not because we
are good but because we are not (Romans 5:8).
A missionary once prayed, "Lord, break my heart for what breaks your heart." Would you make his prayer yours today?
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