Initially the Germans who invaded the Channel Islands seemed to be
so nice to the local people. Especially since their presence resulted in
a boom of the local economy. The Islanders felt they could get used to
the German presence as long as they kept up their relentless buying.
Soon things became a little less rosy, however. Radios were
confiscated, food was rationed and curfews were established. Even then,
some Islanders could still accept these terms. After all, weren't they
at war?
On September 15, 1942, a new Nazi order appeared in the
Evening Post, one that left the Islanders completely astonished.
British-born Islanders would be deported to undetermined locations in
Germany. The order came directly from Hitler himself. He was infuriated
with the United Kingdom for deporting German citizens from Iran. How
dare they! And he retaliated by deporting 1,186 British Islanders to
three different camps in Germany. They ended up staying in these camps
until the end of the war.
Another wave of deportations occurred
in February 1943, in retaliation of a British commando raid on an island
named Sark, where five Nazis were captured. Ninety Jersey Islanders were
rounded up, 18 for each German captured. It doesn't sound fair, does it?
The Islanders soon realized that these Germans were not there for
their good. They were the enemy, and their true colors would become more
and more evident.
Last time we discovered that those who
genuinely proclaim the hope of the Kingdom are sent from God Himself.
Sadly, in our midst there are weeds (just like the Nazis in Jersey) that
have been sowed by the enemy himself for the sole purpose to devastating
the message of hope.
In such circumstances we can't help but ask,
just as Jesus' disciples did "Do you want us to go and pull them up?"
(Matt 13:28b, NIV2)
It would make sense. If we are here to follow
in Jesus' footsteps, why tolerate those whose only purpose is to create
discord and havoc? Logically it should be our duty to weed them out!
Amazingly, Jesus has other plans. "'No,' he answered, 'because while
you are pulling the weeds, you may uproot the wheat with them." (Matt
13:29, NIV2)
It is not our role to eliminate the weed. If we
would do so, we would uproot some wheat as well. Also where would our
love be if we started to become exterminators? We may be judged by the
world for being hypocritical, thanks to these weedy individuals, but if
we end up starting to discriminate, wouldn't we be called by even less
flattering words?
After a particular director of university
relations was hired at a certain Bible College in the U.S., he solemnly
declared that he was an atheist. Wait! How did he get into that office?
Wouldn't he be a bad influence on these upcoming ministers of the Lord?
On the contrary! This man is astonished that no one is criticizing
him. Instead the student body and his colleagues have shown nothing but
love, love beyond anything he has ever experienced. Never in his life
has he received so many hugs. After all, isn't a seminary designed to be
a light in this world?
These "weeds" in a church's membership can
also feel that love. Instead of condemning them, we should pray that
they can meet our Savior face to face. We should also love them with all
of our hearts, even though they may hurt us at times. After all, Jesus
did not come to condemn the world, but to save: "For God did not send
his Son into the world to condemn the world, but to save the world
through him." (John 3:17, NIV2)
What will happen with these weeds
that seem so determined in their mission to remain prickly and
uninvited? That we will discover in our next devotional.
Do you
truly love me? How is this possible?
"For if, while we were God's
enemies, we were reconciled to him through the death of his Son, how
much more, having been reconciled, shall we be saved through his life!"
(Romans 5:10)
Rob Chaffart