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Week 7, Day 46 - Leading Justice to Victory

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"Here is my servant whom I have chosen, the one I love, in whom I delight; I will put my Spirit on him, and he will proclaim justice to the nations. He will not quarrel or cry out; no one will hear his voice in the streets. A bruised reed he will not break, and a smoldering wick he will not snuff out, till he leads justice to victory. In his name the nations will put their hope."  ~Matthew 12:18-21

REFLECT

Forty-one-year-old Abdul Rahman stood before a judge in Kabul, Afghanistan to answer for accusations that he had converted to Christianity. He did not deny the charge. He did not deny the Bible put before him as evidence. He had become a believer in Christ sixteen years earlier while working with a group that was engaged in a medical mission.

The Afghan court was in a bind. The new constitution of the country allowed for at least limited freedom of religion, but according to cultural Islamic standards in Afghanistan, apostasy from Islam was punishable by death. A gathering of five hundred clerics and students demonstrated at a mosque, demanding that the man either return to Islam or face death. A senior cleric declared that if the courts did not bring "justice," then he would incite people to "pull him to pieces."

In the end, the incident became an international spectacle. Presidents, prime ministers, and the Pope made appeals for mercy. And maybe no one would have noticed this "bent reed" if not for Hussain Andaryas, an Afghan Christian living in the West who spoke up, got widespread media attention, and put the spotlight on the injustice.

There is a cost to discipleship. Dietrich Bonhoeffer, a prominent protesting minister in World War II Germany, was jailed and eventually executed by hanging with piano wire, stripped naked in the courtyard of a concentration camp. They did it to him days before the liberation of the camp - a completely senseless act. His book, The Cost of Discipleship, anticipated the ultimate price - his own martyrdom.

There is a reason for hope in justice. The Gospel of Matthew quotes Isaiah where the prophet says that the Messiah would come and "proclaim justice to the nations." But not only that. He would "lead justice to victory." Bonhoeffer knew he was on the side of the right, the side of justice, even though he was subject to the ultimate injustice because of it. In the final judgment of history, his murderers faced justice. Bonhoeffer - like the "suffering servant" of Isaiah, the Lord himself - faced martyrdom.

MAKE IT REAL

Search the Internet today for the phrase "persecuted church." Read one or two real-life stories and reflect on what they mean. Read chapter 37, "The First Evangelists", in Desire of Ages.

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Day 47

 



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