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BucHuma10-06-90 |
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Humanitarian
Jesus Social
Justice and the Cross Christian
Buckley & Ryan Dobson Moody
Publishers, 2010, 218 pp. ISBN 978-0-8024-5263-4 |
Buckley is a lawyer, entrepreneur and writer, the
founder of thinkmoretruth.com. Dobson
is found of KOR ministries and cohost of Family
Talk with Dr. James Dobson. In
multiple ways the authors say that humanitarian ministry is incomplete
without the gospel. About 2/3 of the
book consists of interviews with leaders of 15 humanitarian
organizations. [I read only the
authors’ contribution, not the interviews. dlm] “Christ was a humanitarian for sure, but not the
kind you would expect. He healed many,
when He had the power to heal all. He
fed many, when He had the power to feed all.
He restored a few to life, liberated a few from suffering, and
redressed a few injustices. But in all
these matters, His work was totally incomplete from a statistical
perspective. In fact, of all His work
and effort, He actually focused on just one ultimate task. …
Christ healed, He fed, He touched, and He loved; but above all, He
conquered death and sin to provide an eternal solution to brokenness and
separation.” (14) “Christ understood the reality that we see with
physical eyes, the visible consequences of a broken world in our lives, but
we often fail to see with spiritual eyes the eternal consequences that go
with them.” “Each of us, whether we
realize it or not, needs to see Christ for who He really is. We need to have a powerful encounter with
our Creator that can transform our eternal destinies, not just our physical
circumstances.” (20) “The hungry need food, but we all need
redemption. The blind need sight, but
we all need to see our condition and separation from God. Every encounter between God and us has these
two dimensions—the physical and the spiritual.” (21) “The focus of Christ’s life, as given by His
father, was to provide a singular opportunity for whosoever might believe in
Him to not perish but have everlasting, reconciled life with Him. This fact is the cornerstone of
Scripture. Yet on His way to the
cross, Christ invested His life in people.”
(21) “Christ didn’t minimize His compassionate work of
healing and delivering the oppressed, but He also made clear that He came to
preach….” (23) “Of all the good that can be done in the world,
what good should be done and why?
Is ‘doing good, good enough,’ or are we called to something
more?” (24) “On the one hand, we may be tempted to totally
abandon social investment in furtherance of the message of salvation and
resolutely focus on the pre-eminence of eternity, choosing to center on
Christ’s death and resurrection and the need for spiritual rebirth. On the other hand, we may be tempted to
dilute, if not abandon, the gospel for the achievement of temporal social
goods, choosing to focus on Christ’s acts of love and call to care for the
poor and needy.” (25) “Jesus was a humanitarian, but of a unique
kind. He healed to reveal true
healing. He fed to reveal true
food. He quenched thirst to reveal
everlasting water. Christ’s actions
were temporal, but His intended impact was for His every word and deed to be
eternally transforming.” (26) “Today, a new form of ‘social gospel’ appears to
be emerging…. This version of the
social gospel can be understood to suggest that Christianity is almost
exclusively encompassed by the concepts of ‘love’ and ‘doing good.’ It accepts the second of the Great
Commandments—love your neighbor as yourself—but
makes little reference to the first—love your Lord God with all your heart,
mind, and soul.” (37) Three important truths: “Truth 1. Eternity is real. We are eternal beings, confined for a
season to this physical reality, confronted with God’s plan of
redemption.” We will continue to exist
throughout eternity, either with or without the presence of God. The reality of this life is only a small
part of reality. Our eternal condition
is a primary concern of Scripture.
Note that the early church leaders spent the majority of their time
preaching and teaching about Christ crucified and resurrected. “Truth 2. Temporal Investment is important. Christ’s life and teachings compel us to
invest in the temporal problems of His creation.” Christ walked the earth healing, feeding,
touching, and loving. He gave the
second Great Commandment to love our neighbor. And He gave us the parable of the Good
Samaritan to define who our neighbors are.
“Truth 3.
Every servant has a master.
Every Christian is called to serve Christ in His continuing work of
reconciling the lost to Himself.” “We
don’t add Christ to our lives; we give Him our lives as servants….” “And while they appealed for His healing touch,
He in turn appealed to them to be reconciled.
And He still does. God, our
creator, is in fact pleading for His creation to come to Him. That is why, in the final analysis, God is
not asking us to fix His creation. He
is not asking us to just help His creation.
He is not asking us to simply emulate His actions. He is calling people to Himself through
us.” (51) “When we define evangelism as just what we say,
as a verbal call that requires a response, we improperly segregate it from
who we are and what we do. But if we
define it just as what we do and segregate it from who Christ is and what He
said, then we forget that while Christ existed with people and met their
needs, He called for a response. … We have a Master and He is calling us to
live in such a way that the world is evangelized—so that every human is
confronted with Christ and offered the chance to accept His sacrifice and
surrender to His Lordship.” (53) “When he met the woman at the well, it was living
water that He was offering, not the kind we can get out of the ground. When He hung on the cross, He responded to
the eternal need of the thief, not his physical need. And when He was lost by His parents and
found in the temple, it was His Father’s will He was about, not the agenda of
His parents on earth.” (57) “…we must always view our temporal endeavors in
light of the reality of eternity and the fact that we will all stand before
the Savior at the moment of our last breath.” (58) “No matter what we do in this life to improve our
condition or the condition of mankind in general, it will all be rendered
meaningless at the last breath of equality, unless what we did reaches into
eternity.” (59) “We get it wrong if we say that doing ‘good’ is
‘not good.’ … But we also get it wrong if we don’t realize that ‘doing good isn’t good enough’ unless it is tied to eternity.” (61) “The
biblical paradigm for fixing the brokenness of this earth is not by human
endeavor through progressive restoration or renovation, but rather by divine
re-creation.” (68) “We could spend an entire life serving people and
never once risk offending anyone. But
if we open our mouths and share the biblical gospel of salvation, then we
risk offense, humiliation, and scorn.
We risk being called unloving, narrow-minded, and intolerant. We risk being persecuted rather than
praised. … Christ opened His mouth and
the apostles did the same. The
consequences for almost all of them were severe, but if you if you asked any
of them, they would confirm it was worth it.
Our evangelism must include what we do and who we are, but it must
also include words.” (70) “Of this
we can be certain: a person’s eternal destiny is not transformed by a good
deed done on their behalf, but by their experiencing a life-altering personal
meeting with the risen Christ.” (75) “There is no greater calling, no greater mission,
no greater work than to carry in us the hope of glory, the presence of the
risen Lord, and the words of eternal life.
We should carry in our hands food, water, medicine, justice, and
relief, in any and every form. But our
hearts, minds, and souls must be reserved for Christ alone. The hope of glory is Christ in us, not what
we do on His behalf.” (76) “…while you and I might be able to treat the
symptoms of sin, only God holds the cure.” (76) |
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