Current events often prompt a raw emotion within individuals that results in over reactions. Despite your political or religious affiliations, when something like the Sandy Hook Elementary shootings strikes a nerve by touching your heart, its extremely difficult to think rationally. Like a runaway train, thoughts race through your mind trying to make sense of this tragedy. Meanwhile, lawmakers are flocking to Congress attempting to ban guns and develop plans for impenetrable schools. While their motives may have good intentions, this is an example of fatalistic thinking.
As parents struggle with fear over the safety of their own children, America has discovered in 2012 that there is no such thing as a bullet proof mall, movie theater or school. Though countless people continue to ask “where is God,” I have yet to hear an accurate biblical response to who is in charge of this world. According to Ephesians 2:2, Satan is the ruler of the air. The apostle Paul is simply restating the Devil’s own words from Matthew 4:8-9. When Adam and Eve sinned in Genesis 3, there was a transition in authority over the earth from Adam to the Devil. The serpent’s motives for tempting Eve was to acquire control over the kingdoms of the world as revealed in Luke 4:6. In the same way, politicians are making a similar power grab, endeavoring to seize control of every aspect of your life, eliminating freedoms in the name of protection.
If I’ve ruined your day or made you even more depressed, I want to conclude this piece with a ray of sunshine. After warning people of the dangers of the flesh in Romans 7, the apostle Paul brings a message of hope in chapter 8. The climax of this great news occurs in Romans 8:37-39. Neither death, nor demons or whatever the future holds can separate God’s children from the love of Jesus. Not even the powers of the Devil himself can thwart any reservation you have made for eternity, 1 John 5:13. Therefore, clear your mind from the confusion of evil by taking a dose of God’s precious promises found in the Bible. The pain from Newtown will linger, but in the end, Christ’s victory over the cross will lead to triumph, Colossians 2:13-15.
by Jay Mankus