from Israel My Glory, Volume 68, Number 4
Who Writes the Last Chapter?
July/August 2010 Editorial
by Elwood McQuaid
Just when some of the “leading
lights” of the international
diplomatic community thought
progress might be brewing in
the quest to tame the Iranian mullocracy
through UN sanctions, the
lid came off.
The world’s insatiable conviction
that talking softly and carrying no
stick, big or small, will one day
bring Tehran’s dictators to heel is a
fantasy of futility. And while wellintentioned
Western leaders talk
peace, Iran’s President Mahmoud
Ahmadinejad keeps telling the
world he is not interested.
Strategy summits are answered
by smoke-trailing missiles; boasts of
genocide against the State of Israel;
and, most recently, a posted notice
that Iran will soon have a threestage
ballistic missile capable of
reaching the United States. To top it
off, the mullahs recently staged a
spectacular weapons parade that
brought back memories of the
Nazis’ colossal military extravaganzas
of the 1930s.
Common sense, now in extremely
short supply in most nations’
capitals, would suspect this elaborate
preparation of weapons is a
prelude to the first excuse to use
them. With time on Iran’s side, its
road to nuclear capability is all but
assured as Western diplomats dither
away the months and years with
fruitless consultations. Eventually
their conversations will turn to reactions
as mushroom clouds appear
over their cities.
Squarely on the table these days
for all to see are the problems that
grow out of a faulty concept of the
nature of man and a failure to recognize
evil in the world and that people and regimes are out to kill
us. This wickedness did not develop
because people were deprived
of material baubles or were
spanked as children or were reared
in socially deprived situations. The
all but universally denied fact
these days is that sin is real, all
people are sinners, and no divine
thread flows through the offspring
of Adam. In the vernacular of
another time, we are sinners by
nature, practice, and choice.
A prominent preacher who moves
in the sphere of the positive thinkers
was quoted recently as saying his
mission is to be positive. “I don’t
deal with the sin stuff,” he said.
How then do you confront the issue
where the remedy for the universal
human need actually begins?
Transformation of life, character,
and conduct are a direct consequence
of what the Bible refers to as
the new birth. And for all of the
present prejudice against any such
notion, 2,000 years of testimonials
tell the story of the gospel’s efficacy
when internalized by the new birth.
Recognizing its substance affords
us three positive choices:
•Develop national security
based on strength and the willingness
to deal with evil forces with
unremittingly unified commitment.
•Turn back to God both personally
and corporately. It’s called
repentance in the words of the Book.
The biblical record is replete with
instances of Israel, God’s Chosen
People, drifting out of the orbit of
God’s will, only to encounter dire
circumstances that called for repentance
and a return to its roots.
•Revival. It’s rather striking that
in a time when it is unquestionably needed most, national revival is
rarely thought of or spoken of,
and little effort is made to pray for
it. Most noteworthy is the fact that
many evangelicals have given up
on the mandate and turned in
other directions to address community
needs.
The question is often asked
whether it is possible for God to
move in transformational ways in
the current climate of militant
rejection of everything associated
with God, the Bible, Christianity,
and our churches. The answer is
to examine the record—biblical
and postbiblical.
Nineveh, a mecca of godlessness
in ancient days, was about to experience
the fiery wrath of an offended
God. The reluctant prophet
Jonah was sent to spread the news
of impending destruction. That’s
not merely Bible lore. It’s fact.
When all was said and done, the
nation turned en masse to God and
was spared. Nor can it be denied
that in the history of decadent
Europe and the United States,
revivals at strategic times swept the
land and brought new hope and life
to the nations.
Revival, of course, originates with
God, not with us. But when He
decides to step in, whatever the
mechanism, things change; and individuals
find the “abundant life”
Jesus promised.
Yes, evil is what it is. But the last
chapter will be written by the
Creator of the universe, with whom
all things are possible.
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