Who shall separate us from the love of Christ? Shall…persecution…?
The
question asked is a personal one. Not “what” can separate us but “who”?
The inference is our enemy, Satan, who tries every tactic he can garner
to make us think we can be separated from Christ’s love. Today we look
at his tactic of “persecution.”
Heart-pounding terror—that’s what
most Cambodians felt when Pol Pot seized power in 1975. Setan Lee was a
young teen-aged medical student when the Khmer Rouge communist forces
took over control of Cambodia. Their horrors and atrocities against
their own citizens brought the label “Killing Fields” to the era. Setan
was in the most vulnerable class as an educated young person. By God’s
grace alone he survived the ensuing persecution, starvation and
hardships. But as the young man gained strength, hatred for the Khmer
Rouge gripped his heart. He plotted how he would get revenge, especially
on the guard named Er. “She was the lady who I hated and I wanted to
kill,” he said.
When the Vietnamese invaded Cambodia in 1978,
many prisoners fled the slave camps. Setan was one of thousands who
began the dangerous journey to freedom in Thailand. He walked to the
border and en route a preacher led him to faith in Jesus. He was later
amazed to find all his family alive, except for his brother, who had
been killed by the Khmer Rouge. Together, the family went to a Thai
refugee camp, where Setan Lee became a young preacher.
One day, while preaching in a camp of 35,000 refugees on this text in Romans 8:35,
an eerie feeling swept over him. As he looked over the many faces in
the crowd, he spotted the guard Er in the crowd. “I prayed and asked the
Lord to take control of me,” he said.
“First, I wanted to kill
her,” he added, “but then something told me to have compassion and mercy
toward her.” Lee told Er, “I forgive you for what you have done to me
and my friends. I want you to believe in Jesus. He forgave me for what I
wanted to do to you. So, in return, I forgive you. And it’s not me, but
God.”
Although Lee prayed for Er, he never saw her again. He
feared the Khmer Rouge’s grip on her life pulled her back into the
jungle, yet he knew the Lord of the Universe had helped him forgive her
for the persecution she had inflicted on him for years.
When I
heard Setan share his amazing story, he concluded, “I realized through
it all, that persecution could not separate me from the love of Christ.”
RESPONSE: I will live this day aware that persecution can never separate me from Christ’s love.
PRAYER:
Thank You Lord for the wonderful lessons we learn from the persecuted
who know that it cannot separate them from You. May I know this
assurance today no matter what I face.
No comments:
Post a Comment