Man can be deadly. In the past, man decided that wolves were vermin.
After all, these detestable creatures went after our livestock! That's
unheard of! They had to be eliminated!
Interestingly enough, when
Algonquin Provincial Park was founded in 1893, protection was given to
all animals except one: The wolf! Isn't that sad? The park rangers would
set snares everywhere to catch wolves, and every year, fifty to sixty
wolves were exterminated.
Then someone higher up in the Ontario
Ministry of Natural Resources decided to research more about wolves. He
found out that wolves were part of the ecosystem and without them, the
ecosystem may be imbalanced. Wolves were important after all!
Sadly, this research came a bit too late to save the wolves from
extermination in most parts of the world, but not in Algonquin
Provincial Park.
But then man (Which includes women as well!) Can
be self-destructive as well: "Let's not pretend this is easier than it
really is. If you want to live a morally pure life, here's what you have
to do: You have to blind your right eye the moment you catch it in a
lustful leer. You have to choose to live one-eyed or else be dumped on a
moral trash pile. And you have to chop off your right hand the moment
you notice it raised threateningly. Better a bloody stump than your
entire being discarded for good in the dump." (Matt 5:29-30, MSG)
Sin is deadly. Not honoring our Heavenly Father is deadly. Thinking
solely about ourselves is deadly. Who among us would like to end up
being "dumped on a moral trash pile"? Not me! I hunger for integrity!
Imagine not feeling God's presence within us any longer. That would be
way worse than death itself!
Those leery looks, those vehement
words we speak forth from our mouths, the unforgiveness that lingers
within us, these things will not lead us to bliss, but to our
self-imposed destruction.
At all cost we should do anything in
our power to avoid such a catastrophe. Just like we tried to destroy the
wolf but we shouldn't have, we shouldn't destroy ourselves. And for
what? Lust? Murder? Selfishness? Unforgiveness that eats us live? Is it
really worth it? Once we dabble into the forbidden, it's quite hard to
get out of the resulting addiction. Yes, sin is addictive. If we don't
forgive someone for example, we will tend to not forgive other people as
well. We cannot free ourselves without help.
It's only possible
when we decide to come running to our Heavenly Father who will
figuratively chop off these habits done by our looks, arms and thoughts.
We need our Heavenly Father's help to experience victory. Not through
our own efforts, but through the very One who willingly died on a lonely
cross so that we could experience victory. When He was risen, He became
our assurance that we will be victorious: "But thanks be to God! He
gives us the victory through our Lord Jesus Christ." (1Cor 15:57, NIV2)
We can linger in our destructive mindsets and never feel peace,
which will eventually lead to self-destruction, or we can bask in
victory thanks to the Risen One. Good News, the Risen One has promised:
"Whoever comes to me I will never drive away." (John 6:37b, NIV2) Your
victory is guaranteed!
My son and I had the privilege to see a
wolf walking on the road of Algonquin Provincial Park. We stopped our
car, took our cameras, and while he walked peacefully near our car, we
were able to take photos of this beautiful creature.
That same
evening a man came into the men's washroom. I was brushing my teeth. He
was boasting that he had seen a bear with her cub. "Wow!" I said. "That
must have been the highlight of your day!" He agreed. Then I told him
about the wolf that we had seen. He told me: "I'd rather see a wolf than
a bear!"
Those wolves that were labelled vermin are now a
privileged sight to see. The same will happen when our Father gives us
victory. When we are free, many will see it as a privilege to meet us in
person to shake out hands!
Rob Chaffart