Adolf
Hitler is wearing a white double-breasted jacket and black trousers. On
his arm is a red band with a black swastika. In another scene, he wears
a gray suit with a fedora and talks with Heinrich Himmler, the overseer
of the Holocaust camps.
These
are some of the home movies shot by Eva Braun and her friends at the
Berghof, Hitler’s retreat in southeastern Germany. Braun was Hitler’s
longtime girlfriend and briefly his wife. The Alpine scenery in the
background is stunning.
When you saw today’s headline and read the accompanying story, what was your reaction?
Mine
was one of disgust mixed with curiosity. No figure in modern history
conjures (or deserves) more revulsion than Adolf Hitler. At the same
time, to see him as he was, recorded by friends in a relaxed
environment, is historically unique.
What I didn’t feel was fear.
Neither
I nor anyone in my family was threatened personally by the Holocaust. I
was obviously not old enough to fight the Germans in World War II. Due
to my longtime love for Israelis, I grieve for them when Hitler’s name
and legacy come up. But I feel no existential angst.
For most of us, most of the bad news in the news feels the same way.
A gas explosion
yesterday in a North Carolina building killed one person and injured
seventeen others. A twenty-year-old college student in South Carolina
died after what is being called an “accidental fall” at a fraternity party last weekend.
We
feel sorrow for these victims and their families, but unless we know
them personally, they don’t touch us personally. Even reports that California is overdue for a major earthquake don’t affect us viscerally unless we live in California or know someone who does.
What has and hasn’t changed about death
You and I live in a day when technological advances have insulated us from the constant threat of death. Or so we think.
There
was a time when hunger, disease, war, natural disasters, and predators
were an ever-present reality for most humans. Today, government programs
keep even the most impoverished of us from starvation. Medicine is more
advanced than ever.
Wars
are fought overseas by volunteers and technology. Natural disasters
still endanger us, but modern buildings and response systems are better
than ever. Predators are seldom an issue for urban and suburban
dwellers.
As
a result, death seems less a present-tense threat than perhaps at any
time in human history. Of course, this appearance is not reality. It is
still “appointed for man to die once, and after that comes judgment” (Hebrews 9:27). It is true for each of us that “you do not know what tomorrow will bring” (James 4:14).
There’s another crucial spiritual principle here as well.
When no one “dies”
At
sixty years of age, I’m old enough to remember when one of the main
appeals of Christianity was its promise of life after death. In a world
where humans were frail and life was fickle, being prepared for death
was obviously a good thing.
Today,
we have euphemized death and anesthetized ourselves to its reality. Few
people die at home. Few people witness the deaths of others firsthand.
No one actually “dies”—they “move on” or “go to a better place.”
Since few people are afraid of dying today or of going to hell
when they do eventually “depart,” our appeal to them as Christians can
no longer be based primarily on the benefits of our faith for the next
life.
As a result, it is vital that we show our culture why following Jesus is the best life in this life.
God’s plan is “good and acceptable and perfect”
Jesus came so that his followers “may have life and have it abundantly” (John 10:10). God’s will for us is “good and acceptable and perfect” (Romans 12:2). He intends to “supply every need of yours according to his riches in glory in Christ Jesus” (Philippians 4:19). The Lord “is able to do far more abundantly than all we ask or think, according to the power at work within us” (Ephesians 3:20).
Have you made your Father the King of your life today (Matthew 6:33)? Have you asked his Spirit to take control of your day (Ephesians 5:18)? Have you prayed for the Spirit to manifest his “fruit” in your life (Galatians 5:22–23)? Will you tell someone what God has done for you so they can experience his incredible grace and love (Mark 5:19)?
If
you and I live out all that God has for us today and tell others how
they can find the life we have, our witness to our post-Christian
culture will be compelling and powerful.
Consider an example.
Focus on this life for the next life
Chris Seiple
is a graduate of Stanford and the Naval Postgraduate School with a PhD
from The Fletcher School of Law & Diplomacy. He is a former Marine
infantry officer and a founding member of the Pentagon’s Strategic
Initiatives Group.
He is also living with stage 4 cancer and a brain tumor.
Writing in the Washington Post, Dr. Seiple focuses on living today while trusting Jesus for tomorrow.
He testifies: “I am grateful for the blessing of living in the present,
between the ‘already’ and the ‘not yet.’ In the Bible, Jesus asks his
followers: If he made and cares for the ‘lilies of the field’ in all of
their finite beauty, how much more will he care for us?”
Dr.
Seiple concludes: “I believe death is but the doorway to the rest of
life, but until it is time to step through, I want to live like the
lilies, expectantly, with enough for today.”
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Jim Denison, Ph.D., speaks and writes on cultural and contemporary
issues. He is a trusted author and subject matter expert in areas where
faith and current events intersect. His Daily Article provides leading
insight for discerning today’s news from a biblical perspective.
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