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And Slew the Little Childer PDF Print E-mail
Liturgy and Worship - Church Year
Written by Douglas Wilson   
Saturday, 15 December 2012 10:08

Whenever you have to deal with something like the Connecticut shooting, something that simply crushes the heart, it is important to think carefully before speaking or writing. This is not the time to be debating gun control, drone attacks in the Middle East, and it is certainly not the time to be drawing ham-fisted comparisons to the abortion carnage. The reason for this is that the parents who are broken over this were parents who had chosen life, not parents who hadn’t. This does not mean that abortion is irrelevant to this tragedy, for it certainly is not, but we want to make sure we locate it as a clear point of gospel relevance. Otherwise we just come off as opportunists who are just looking for a chance to haul the topic of conversation over to a particular hobby horse. But in the aftermath of something sick like this, we need to reconnect with the permanent things. If we don’t point to transcendental realities in a time like this—gospel truths—then we might as well sign a peace treaty with the darkness now.

I have often said that nativity sets should include a set of Herod’s soldiers—that is as much a part of the Christmas story as the shepherds, or the star, or the wise men. These traditional figures all glorified Christ in His coming, but the reality of such bloody soldiers was the reason He came. Nothing illustrates the need for His mission to us better than that appalling loss to Ramah. An early English carol, “Unto Us is Born a Son,” has a verse that understands this juxtaposition of humility and adoration over against the haughtiness of pride and blood.

This did Herod sore affray,
And grievously bewilder
So he gave the word to slay,
And slew the little childer,
And slew the little childer.

And Rachel wept for her children, for they were no more.

Two things should stand out about this. First, while I noted that this is not the time to call out those who would use the tragedy to promote gun control—or to call them names on the Internet—we must confront those who would continue their lockdown policies of gospel control. And by gospel, I mean the whole counsel of God for a lost and sinful race—the restored order of things, repentance for sin, and true faith in the death, burial and resurrection of Jesus. If you want a society which refuses to name the name of Jesus, and yet is somehow free from these sorts of outrages, you want something that this sinful world cannot ever provide. We can have no salvation without a Savior. God sent a Savior to us, and we have no saviors of our own, just a lot of pretenders. His invitation to our generation is the same as it has been for every generation, and it is “come with me.” We cannot be saved unless we do.

It is not possible to build a culture around a denial of God-given standards, and then arbitrarily reintroduce those standards at your convenience, whenever you need a word like evil to describe what has just happened. Those words cannot just be whistled up. If we have banished them, and their definitions, and every possible support for them, we need to reckon with the fact that they are now gone. Cultural unbelief, which leads inexorably to cultural nihilism and despair, is utterly incapable of responding appropriately to things like this, while remaining fully capable of creating them. In the prophetic words of C.S. Lewis, “In a sort of ghastly simplicity we remove the organ and demand the function. We make men without chests and expect of them virtue and enterprise. We laugh at honour and are shocked to find traitors in our midst. We castrate and bid the geldings be fruitful.”

This shooting was horrendous, but far worse is the fact that our blind seers have no idea what to say about it. The horror happened, and it was immediately followed by the horror of countless individuals saying wildly inappropriate things about it. We have monsters in our midst, and vapidity in our highest council chambers, not to mention the monsters there too, and all of them want to slouch toward Bethlehem. God have mercy.

And so this leads to the second point. The reason we need to have fixed and God-given standards is not so that we might climb up some moralistic ladder, rebuilding a mythical past where these sorts of things didn’t happen to us. No, these sorts of things have always happened. We live on a screwed-up planet. We must have a God-given, fixed standard so that we may know why we need forgiveness so much. God’s law is not to pat us on the back and tell us what fine fellows we are. God’s law is given to provide a proper shape for our repentance. In moments like this, we are aghast, but our "repentance" is formless and void. We need the shape of God’s holy Word so that we know how shapeless we have become. We need the Spirit of God to move on our waters.

And here is where abortion really is relevant, along with all the other awful things we do to children. We do not need to talk about these things as political issues—however appropriate and necessary that may be in its time and place. But before we can even think about that, we need to come to grips with the fact that, at the personal level, it is plain that an aching bloodguilt rests upon our nation. I am not talking about our officials, though they are included. I am talking about the millions of us who have occasioned it, paid for it, obtained it, provided it, and funded it. According to Scripture, blood is something that returns to those who shed it. It also returns to the land where it was shed. And our vast reservoir of guilt is larger and deeper than it has ever been.

The only blood that does not return with compounded guilt is the blood of Jesus. His blood comes to us for cleansing, and not for condemnation. His blood does not return with guilt, and it is the only way that all the other guilt can be prevented from returning to us. An old gospel song points the only way to our salvation—“nothing but the blood of Jesus.” Nothing.

So we must confess that while the spirit of Christ is alive in the world, the spirit of Herod is not yet gone. And the only way to expel that kind of darkness is to boldly proclaim that Jesus came into this world precisely to destroy this kind of darkness through His death and resurrection. He was born in Bethlehem from Mary, and He was born again in Jerusalem, the first born from the dead. His grave, just like Mary, was full of grace.

This is a darkness that must be confronted, and it can only be confronted by believers who are prepared to wield the gospel—not as a sectarian talking point, but as real gospel for real sin, real balm for real pain, real light for real darkness. So go find your children, hug the little childer, thank God for the life that is in them, and teach them the Christmas story. We need it so much.



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Timothy Murray  - Thank you Pastor Wils  Saturday, December 15, 2012 12:03 pm
Thank you for your wise counsel.
Jeff Wencel  Saturday, December 15, 2012 2:23 pm
Thanks for the Gospel response. And though you said that the tragedy ought not to be spoken of in connection with abortion, I'm glad you still got around to making the connection. We do, after all, suffer about 200 Newtowns every day. The difference is, as you point out, the daily Newtowns are chosen and voted for by thousands of parents, and millions of Americans.
jay niemeyer  Saturday, December 15, 2012 3:57 pm
Perhaps the best thing I've read on this blog, period. Thank you.
William Eberwein  - Thank you  Saturday, December 15, 2012 5:37 pm
I was about to get "ham-handed" and your essay slowed me down. Thank you. I will be praying before speaking on this topic.

"Gospel control" - brilliant!

Bill E
katecho  - thank you pastor  Saturday, December 15, 2012 7:10 pm
This act of mass murder seems like a statement of hatred against an entire society, as if it was intended to maximize everyone's pain. He couldn't attack the entire society around him, but he could attack the most helpless representatives of that society.

I appreciate Doug's call to not let this one event take our focus off of the Gospel, especially during this season. This event can instead drive us deeper into the very reason for the incarnation. It becomes another call for cultural repentance, out of darkness and guilt into the great light of this one guiltless blood.

"The only blood that does not return with compounded guilt is the blood of Jesus. His blood comes to us for cleansing, and not for condemnation."

Amen to that.

I had initially felt like responding to this massacre with something about the dangers of government schools, but instead I'll share a statistic that had helped to slow me down a bit in my reaction:
Quote:
"Still, over the past few years, shootings in K-12 schools have become increasingly rare. After reaching a high of 63 deaths in the 2006-2007 school year, the number of people killed in "school-associated" incidents dropped to 33 last year - lowest in two decades, according to the U.S. Department of Education."
Rayia  Saturday, December 15, 2012 8:09 pm
Thank you.
dan soltys  Saturday, December 15, 2012 10:13 pm
"According to Scripture, blood is something that returns to those who shed it. It also returns to the land where it was shed."

What passages do you have in mind here? Galatians 6:7-8 (a man reaps what he sows)? Am I on the right track? Anything else?

Powerful post, by the way. Amen.

Dan
katecho  Saturday, December 15, 2012 10:34 pm
Perhaps also these passages:
Quote:
"Then Jesus said to him, "Put your sword back into its place; for all those who take up the sword shall perish by the sword." - Matthew 26:52


Quote:
"And surely I will require your lifeblood; from every beast I will require it. And from every man, from every man's brother I will require the life of man. Whoever sheds man's blood, By man his blood shall be shed, For in the image of God He made man." - Genesis 9:5-6
dan soltys  Saturday, December 15, 2012 10:50 pm
Thanks katecho. Those are good references. BTW, what kind of nickname/username is 'katecho'? Is it Kate Cho? Is it ka-techo? I see your postings and cannot sound-it-out in my head.

Dan
katecho  Saturday, December 15, 2012 10:43 pm
Code:
This Flower whose fragrance tender,
with sweetness fills the air.
Dispels with glorious splendor,
the darkness everywhere.

Christmas mood music: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OzInT-PiAJw
elisabeth thunderberry  - re:Kate see Hoe!  Sunday, December 16, 2012 7:23 pm
CODE: BACK AT YA
WasteLand In Plainfield, VT
When he takes from her, she holds back
With aggressive and harsh gentleness
He renders no thanks to God's creation
Within the laws of magic faierie dust
So then what appears as sacred
Is really far less, it is coward-like suspension
Profane and gnostic,an earth-bound trash
Reflecting death,rendered ungrateful vice
For here is a woman,and here is her enemy
Gathered in this, this battlefield bed

poem for Corey Furman 8)
Valerie (Kyriosity)  Sunday, December 16, 2012 12:03 am
Doug -- Thanks for this. Helped me hone my thinking into something I hope more resembles a silk purse than a ham's fist.

---------

Dan -- katecho (who's been scarce around these parts for a few years...good to see him again) explained his name once upon a time: http://www.studylight.org/lex/grk/view.cgi?number=2722
Phillip Harrison  Sunday, December 16, 2012 5:42 am
Fantastic article, and it made me immediately ashamed for allowing myself to get caught up in several inane arguments on Facebook about guns.
But then I go to Drudge and I see this headline:
"Dem. lawmaker: To get gun control, Obama must ‘exploit’ shooting".
This is gonna be hard.

Chris Oswald  - Not a matter of what he had  Sunday, December 16, 2012 12:31 pm
It shouldn’t be surprising that those in the political field respond to the slaughter of 20 children in Newton Connecticut by talking about gun control. The government’s primary function is to take things away. It has no power to give, only to take. So it will always seek solutions by the removal or restriction of something. But the problem with the man who killed these children wasn’t with what he had in his possession but rather with what he lacked.
Brittany Martin  Sunday, December 16, 2012 12:46 pm
Thank you for this post. My missionary friends in the Congo say that part of Christmas pageants there include a scene of King Herod slaying babies--complete with children in the audience helping by running away and screaming from his soldiers.
elisabeth thunderberry  - How long to expel to the spirit of Herod?  Sunday, December 16, 2012 1:54 pm
Pastor Wilson, do christians go into hiding?
Jason A.  - Thanks  Sunday, December 16, 2012 6:01 pm
Thanks Doug. Long time reader here, but felt compelled to register just to tell you how much of a blessing this piece is.
Isaiah Taylor  - Thank You for the eye opener...  Sunday, December 16, 2012 8:20 pm
Pastor Wilson,

Thank you for this eye opener! I wish I had read this before I got myself into a heap of trouble! This (https://plus.google.com/102051970413321829832/posts/fKHfUeoufnr) is the post that I put up, and within an hour, it had 50 hate comments... Not good.
katecho  Monday, December 17, 2012 11:43 am
Wow, Isaiah. Rough crowd. Seething even. I'm glad you apologized and retracted at the end. That took humility.

Those reactions are very revealing though. Almost bloodthirsty. Very hard hearts.

I think we Christians are learning to make a transition to minority status. We no longer speak to a sympathetic culture. It no longer thinks in Christian moral categories and is openly hostile to them. An authoritative appeal to Scripture doesn't convict the heart of the culture like it once did. There has been a hardening and a sealing off. The reaction is just increasingly violent. I'm not saying we should stop making an authoritative, public, and prophetic appeal in the proper context, but it seems those contexts are shrinking rapidly.

This transition may be overdue though. We may recover a proper sense of humility by assuming the minority role (even if we are a very large minority). We should not forget that our God loves to make a display of His power through weakness. God also resists and judges the proud. If God is giving our culture over to its own depravity, then we may not be able to restrain it even by force. I think we do serve the role of mercy to try to stand in the way, but in the face of God's own judgment it is like standing in front of a bus. We should expect to be ignored and run over in the public square.

Our seat has been taken away from the table. Why did we want a seat at that table? This may actually be a good thing at this point, since Christian principles are now less likely to be identified with the resulting chaos. There comes a time when we can't effectively resist from inside the system, playing by its rules. Our persuasion must then come from the outside. But this is actually freeing, because we are no longer constrained by their rule book. Secular godlessness has assumed the majority stage and the reins of power. Let's see how they do with the ball. Going by Psalm 2, I predict an almost immediate face plant and fumble.

As conservative and Christian voices are shouted down and driven out, I would expect verbal arguments will cool as a result. Secularism will pick up steam with its political opposition removed. But as Christians transition to cultural weakness and peripheral status, we will find that we are actually more persuasive when we live out our principles rather than simply argue them. I believe the Church will become more focused, and we will probably even become more broadly knit together as a result, assuming we don't fight over remaining scraps of secular power and influence. As the State blunders, the Church may even recover some of its rightful roles that the government usurped awhile back.

On the abortion issue, I am increasingly convinced to look for God's power to be revealed through weakness.
Isaiah Taylor  - RE  Tuesday, December 18, 2012 7:04 am
I do agree that Christ works through our minority, but it sure was nice when Christianity was the centerpiece of America.
Byron Heward  Sunday, December 16, 2012 10:03 pm
The heart of man is desperately wicked and evil and who can know it. Once more an indictment comes and we receive a good paddling from God. He simply withdraws His spirit a few millimeters and all hell breaks loose. I for one appreciate Pastor Wilson and his wisdom on these types of tragedies. Another clarion call to the church to repent of her iniquities.