Tuesday, May 3, 2011

Both American and Christian

Since the death of Usama Bin Laden there have been many celebrations across our country. Many Christians have questioned the idea of celebrating the death of even such a terrible man. And they are right to question this. As Christians we should never ever celebrate the death of a person who does not know the Lord. It is a tragic event when someone dies without the Lord. Just as we should celebrate with the angels anytime someone gets saved, we should mourn the death of someone who dies outside of the knowledge of Christ. However, I submit that the majority of celebration was not over the death of this man. It was rather a celebration of justice. It was a celebration of closure for the family members of over 3,000 dead Americans murdered on September 11, 2001. A celebration of the end of a tyrant. A celebration of the death of an enemy of Israel. It was a celebration of the fact that unlike Korea, unlike Vietnam, unlike Beruit, unlike Somalia the 2,340 deaths of coalition forces in Afghanistan were not in vain. It was, like the celebration of VE and VJ days at the end of World War II, not a celebration of one man's death, but rather of one country's ability to stay the course and bring justice to one of this century's greatest criminals. And that is worth celebrating, even as we mourn the death of another soul lost without Christ.

Monday, May 2, 2011

The Royal Wedding

Like most American males, I grew extremely tired of the coverage of the royal wedding last week, until I realized something. On Thursday, April 28th, Kate Middleton was a commoner. However, on April 29 after 11:00 AM, she was the Duchess of Cambridge, forever after known Princess Kate. She did not do anything special to become a princess or a duchess, except catch the eye of Prince William. He decided to make her his bride and as a result of HIS decision she is now a princess.
Do you see it yet? We were once commoners, ordinary people. However, the Prince of Peace saw us and decided He wanted to make us His bride. Now, not as a result of anything we have done, but solely as a result of HIS decision we are no longer commoners, but now we are Royalty, the Bride of Christ.
I read that over 2 billion people watched William and Kate's wedding. How many will be at the Marriage Supper of the Lamb? I don't know the exact number, but John said it was a multitude from every tribe, kindred, nation, and tongue. If only we could realize the importance of that wedding. Praise the Lord, I am no longer a commoner but now a joint heir with Jesus.