Written by Rusty Wright
"Give me your money," snarled the young intruder. He climbed my
staircase, brandishing a knife and flashlight. Noises in the basement
had distracted my Sunday afternoon study. I investigated when the sounds
persisted. On the way to the basement I came face to face with a
menacing looking 20 year-old. Recognizing the danger, I gave him the
dollar bill in my wallet, then opened drawers as he ordered. My eyes
kept darting back to the flashing knife blade. He snatched a small
plastic bag containing white detergent. "What's this?" he demanded.
"Laundry soap." "No, it's drugs," he countered.
Perhaps he was on drugs or out for revenge and had the wrong house. I
assured him I hadn't stolen his truck. When he seemed convinced of his
error, he became nervous, cut the kitchen phone line, and headed for the
door, "Just don't call the cops," he pleaded. Then he fled.
On the phone to 911, my heart pounding, I described the invader.
Reports, investigations, and questioning ensued. For the next several
nights' sleep was fitful. Reinforcing the doors helped increase feelings
of security. So did the news that this criminal was captured and
sentenced to three years in prison.
But if this could happen in my own home, what hope was there for genuine safety?
FARAWAY THOUGHTS
The petite, fortyish woman sat in the imposing gray room with a high,
ornate ceiling, her thumb toying with the ring on her left hand.
Despite murmuring in the background, Melissa's thoughts were far away in
the past, 15 years earlier--her wedding day. Bright lights, festive
flowers, and joyful friends filled the church. She felt secure seeing
Tom's smile and welcoming gaze as she strode down the aisle. "Do you
take this woman to be your lawful wedded wife ... for as long as you
both shall live?" asked the black-robed minister. "I do," replied Tom
with confidence,
A tear meandered down her cheek. Suddenly everyone in the gray room
rose as if something important were happening. The entrance of another
black-robed man interrupted Melissa's daydream. She heard Tom's voice:
"Your honor, I am convinced that this marriage cannot be saved. There is
no hope of reconciliation."
No hope? she wondered. Does he think that our 15 years of life, work,
children, promises, struggles and successes amounted to nothing?
With her dreams dashed, the possibility of more unrealized
expectations loomed enormously painful, was anything worth hoping for
anymore?
IMAGES OF OUR WORLD
"Turning to international news we have some startling video to show
you from Eastern Europe," intoned the television newscaster somberly.
"We must warn you that the pictures you are about to see are quite
graphic and, because of the violence they depict, may not be suitable
for small children."
The screen fills with images of emaciated, shirtless men, apparently
prisoners behind a barbed-wire fence. The despair on their faces haunts
you. Next come scenes of what was an outdoor marketplace. A bomb had
landed at midday, sending shredded canvas, shattered tables, bloodied
limbs, and broken bodies everywhere. Then the scene switches to hot,
tired, thirsty Caribbean refugees in overloaded rafts, bobbing in the
ocean.
The TV images seem familiar by now and almost blend together. Where
was that carnage and starvation? Somalia? Rwanda? Sudan? South Africa?
A vulture stalks a starving infant. Middle Eastern children throw
stones. Their relatives wield automatic weapons. Their leaders shake
hands and hail peace on the White House lawn. Will it last? Might a
terrorist state harvest a nuclear bomb?
Can peace come to these troubled nations? Agreements are signed and
broken. Often chaos reigns. "The world has gone bad," you decide, "What
hope is there of people ever getting along?"
There is a good chance that you or someone you know has been a crime
victim. Marriage is supposed to last forever. Now divorce increasingly
rips apart hearts and homes, and with prospects of international peace
rising and falling like a refugee raft on a stormy sea, is there
anything that can save us from destroying ourselves? Will a baby born
into our world today live to reach adulthood?
HUNGRY FOR HOPE
Two millennia ago a baby was born into a similarly troubled world. A
foreign power occupied his parents' homeland. Poverty, greed, theft, and
corruption were commonplace. Marriages faltered. Authorities ruled that
a husband could divorce his wife simply for burning supper.
At the time of this baby's birth, people were hungry for hope. They
wanted freedom from violence, family strife, and political uncertainty.
They wanted the assurance that somebody loved and cared for them, that
life counted for something, that they could muster the strength to face
daily challenges at home and work.
Ironically, some saw hope in the birth of this particular baby. His
mother, during her engagement, had become pregnant out of wedlock while
strangely claiming to remain a virgin. Though he was born in a humble
stable, learned leaders traveled great distances to have the child as a
king.
In his youth scholars marveled at his wisdom. In his thirties he
began to publicly offer peace, freedom, purpose, inner strength, and
hope to the masses. His message caught on.
A woman who had suffered five failed marriages found in his teaching
"living water" to quench her spiritual and emotional thirst. A wealthy
but corrupt government worker decided to give half of what he owned to
the poor and repay fourfold those he had swindled. Hungry people were
fed. Sick people became well.
The young man's family thought he had flipped. His enemies plotted
his demise and paid one of his followers to betray this innocent man.
His closest friends deserted him. He was tried, convicted, sentenced,
and executed. In agony during his execution he yelled out a quotation
from one of his nation's most revered ancient writers: "My God, my God.
Why have you forsaken me?"{1} At that moment he felt very alone, perhaps even hopeless.
FORSAKEN
Many crime victims feel forsaken by God. So do many divorced people,
war prisoners, and starving refugees. But this young man's cry of
desperation carried added significance because of its historical
allusion.
The words had appeared about a thousand years earlier in a song
written by a king. The details of the song are remarkably similar to the
suffering the young man endured. It said, "All who see me mock me; they
hurl insults, shaking their heads .... They have pierced my hands and
my feet.... They divide my garments among them and cast lots for my
clothing."{2}
Historians record precisely this behavior during the young man's execution.{3} It was as if a divine drama were unfolding as the man slipped into death.
Researchers have uncovered more than 300 predictions or prophesies
literally fulfilled in the life and death of this unique individual.
Many of these statements written hundreds of years before his birth-were
beyond his human control. One correctly foretold the place of his
birth. {4} Another said he would be born of a virgin. {5} He would be preceded by a messenger who would prepare the way for his work, {6} He would enter the capital city as a king but riding on a donkeys back {7} He would be betrayed for thirty pieces of Silver, {8} pierced, {9} executed among thieves, {10} and yet, though wounded, {11} he would suffer no broken bones.{12}
Peter Stoner, a California mathematics professor, calculated the
chance probability of just eight of these 300 prophecies coming true in
one person. Using conservative estimates, Stoner concluded that the
probability is 1 in 10 to the 17th power that those eight could be
fulfilled by a fluke.
He says 1017silver dollars would
cover the state of Texas two feet deep. Mark one coin with red
fingernail polish. Stir the whole batch thoroughly. What chance would a
blindfolded person have of picking the marked coin on the first try? One
in 1017, the same chance that just eight of the 300 prophecies "just happened" to come true in this man, Jesus. {13}
In his dying cry from the cross Jesus reminded His hearers that His
life and death precisely fulfilled God's previously stated plan.
According to the biblical perspective, at the moment of death Jesus
experienced the equivalent of eternal separation from God in our place
so that we might be forgiven and find new life.
He took the penalty due for all the crime, injustice, evil, sin, and shortcomings of the world-including yours and mine.
Though sinless Himself, He likely felt guilty and abandoned. Then-again in fulfillment of prophecy {14}
and contrary to natural law-He came back to life. As somewhat of a
skeptic I investigated the evidence for Christ's resurrection and found
it to be one of the best-attested facts in history. {15} To the seeker Jesus Christ offers true inner peace, forgiveness, purpose, and strength for contented living.
SO WHAT?
"OK, great," you might say, "but what hope does this give the crime
or divorce victim, the hungry and bleeding refugee, the citizen
paralyzed by a world gone bad?" Will Jesus prevent every crime,
reconcile every troubled marriage, restore every refugee, stop every
war? No. God has given us free will. Suffering--even unjust
suffering--is a necessary consequence of sin.
Sometimes God does intervene to change circumstances. (I'm glad my
assailant became nervous and left.) Other times God gives those who
believe in Him strength to endure and confidence that He will see them
through. In the process, believers mature.
Most significantly we can hope in what He has told us about the
future. Seeing how God has fulfilled prophecies in the past gives us
confidence to believe those not yet fulfilled. Jesus promises eternal
life to all who trust Him for it: "Whoever hears my word and believes
him who sent me has eternal life and will not be condemned; he has
crossed over from death to life."{16}
He promised He would return to rescue people from this dying planet.{17}
He will judge all evil.{18}
Finally justice will prevail. Those who have chosen to place their
faith in Him will know true joy: "He shall wipe away every tear from
their eyes; and there shall no longer be any death; there shall no
longer be any mourning, or crying, or pain."{19}
Does God intend that we ignore temporal evil and mentally float off
into unrealistic ethereal bliss? Nor at all. God is in the business of
working through people to turn hearts to Him, resolve conflicts, make
peace. After my assailant went to prison, I felt motivated to tell him
that I forgave him because of Christ. He apologized, saying he, too, has
now come to believe in Jesus.
But through every trial, every injustice you suffer, you can know
that God is your friend and that one day He will set things right. You
can know that He is still on the throne of the universe and that He
cares for you. You can know this because His Son was born (Christmas is,
of course, a celebration of His birth), lived, died, and came back to
life in fulfillment of prophecy. Because of Jesus, if you personally
receive His free gift of forgiveness, you can have hope!
Will you trust Him?
Notes
1. Matthew 27:46.
2. Psalm 22.
3. Matthew 27:35-44; John 20:25.
4. Micah 5:2; Matthew 2:1.
5. Isaiah 7:14; Matthew 1:18, 24-25; Luke 1:26-35.
6. Malachi 3:1; Isaiah 40:3; Matthew 3:1-2.
7. Zechariah 9:9; John 12:15; Matthew 21: 1-9.
8. Zechariah 11:12; Matthew 26:15.
9. Zechariah 12:10; John 19:34, 37.
10. Isaiah 53:12.
11. Matthew 27:38; Isaiah 53:5; Zechariah 13:6; Matthew 27:26.
12. Psalm 34:20; John 19:33, 36.
13. Peter Stoner, Science Speaks, pp. 99-112.
14. Psalm 6:10; Acts 2:31-32.
15. Josh McDowell, Evidence That Demands a Verdict, pp. 185-273.
16. John 5:24.
17. 1 Thessalonians 4:13-18.
18. Revelation 20:10-15.
19. Revelation 21:4 NAS.
About the Author
Rusty Wright, former associate speaker and writer
with Probe Ministries, is an international lecturer, award-winning
author, and journalist who has spoken on six continents. He holds
Bachelor of Science (psychology) and Master of Theology degrees from
Duke and Oxford universities, respectively. www.RustyWright.com