Into an eternity of righteousness and peace
Hans Fiene at the Federalist comes right out and says it – God did those people killed in Sutherland Springs a favor.
For those with little understanding of and less regard for the Christian faith, there may be no greater image of prayer’s futility than Christians being gunned down mid-supplication. But for those familiar with the Bible’s promises concerning prayer and violence, nothing could be further from the truth. When those saints of First Baptist Church were murdered yesterday, God wasn’t ignoring their prayers. He was answering them.
“Deliver us from evil.” Millions of Christians throughout the world pray these words every Sunday morning. While it doesn’t appear that the Lord’s Prayer is formally a part of the worship services at First Baptist Church in Sutherland Springs, I have no doubt that members of that congregation have prayed these words countless times in their lives.
So then everyone should just die right now, infants included.
When we pray these words, we are certainly praying that God would deliver us from evil temporally—that is, in this earthly life. Through these words, we are asking God to send his holy angels to guard us from those who would seek to destroy us with knives and bombs and bullets. It may seem, on the surface, that God was refusing to give such protection to his Texan children. But we are also praying that God would deliver us from evil eternally. Through these same words, we are asking God to deliver us out of this evil world and into his heavenly glory, where no violence, persecution, cruelty, or hatred will ever afflict us again.
So the best thing is to be dead, so everyone should just get dead as fast as possible. Why isn’t Hans Fiene getting dead?
We also pray in the Lord’s Prayer that God’s will be done. Sometimes, his will is done by allowing temporal evil to be the means through which he delivers us from eternal evil. Despite the best (or, more accurately, the worst) intentions of the wicked against his children, God hoists them on their own petard by using their wickedness to give those children his victory, even as the wicked often mock the prayers of their prey.
Well that’s really nice of God, but why not just prevent us from being born in the first place? If we need to be delivered, why not just skip the whole thing?
Because of Christ’s saving death and resurrection, death no longer has any power over those who belong to him through faith. So the enemies of the gospel can pour out their murderous rage upon Christians, but all they can truly accomplish is placing us into the arms of our savior.
So atheists should do believers a favor and kill them all? Does he really want to say that?
So when a madman with a rifle sought to persecute the faithful at First Baptist Church on Sunday morning, he failed. Just like those who put Christ to death, and just like those who have brought violence to believers in every generation, this man only succeeded in being the means through which God delivered his children from this evil world into an eternity of righteousness and peace.
But if that’s true, why aren’t God’s children walking off cliffs and in front of trains?
Obama said the same thing at the funeral for Clemenza Pinckney in Charleston, you may remember – he said the “he works in mysterious ways” thing. It is indeed mysterious.
Sounds like we should be giving the gunman a national award.
This is a sick worldview. And what about the loved ones who are left behind to mourn? Or those who were injured and will have to live in pain, but were not delivered to eternal grace?
It’s painful, watching someone trying so hard to believe something.
Ah but then there is a problem: the suicide exemption. Suicide being a sin means you die with an unrepented sin and hence go to hell for eternal torture. (Take that, people that commit suicide out of depression / despair crisis!) Therefore while we can’t expect him to encourage suicide, this guy should be praying for an anti-christian pogrom on a scale that puts the Nazi’s anti-jew efforts to shame.
That is, if he is at all interested in being consistent. Any bets?
So what’s the problem with abortion, again?
Fldteslalivia, Jesus said ‘suffer little children’, not ‘foetuses’.
Knew how to cover the bases did J.C.
You know, it wasn’t too long ago that evangelicals discovered that abortion was wrong:
http://www.patheos.com/blogs/slacktivist/2012/02/18/the-biblical-view-thats-younger-than-the-happy-meal/