Point of View
BREAKPOINT: ‘God looks lovingly upon us despite our own natures’
By CHARLES COLSON
BreakPoint
Published February 17, 2005
In the wake of the tsunami that claimed more than 220,000
lives, some people were asking hard questions. Faced with such
devastation, they wanted to know, how was it possible to believe
in a good, all-powerful God?
Now stories are leaking out about whats going on in the
aftermath of the tsunami. The reports are sketchy and anecdotal
so far, but they already have people asking another, equally
important, question: Is it possible to believe in the goodness of
man?
Women and children in refugee camps have been sexually abused.
One teenage girl told a story of being raped by a man moments
after he had pulled her to safety. At the same time, children
separated from their families have been illegally taken out of
the country and placed for adoption. And other stories of human
trafficking are circulating.
Now at this point the numbers are small, and many of the
reports unconfirmed. But as reporter Jaci Schneider, writing in
the Abilene Christian University magazine, explained,
The region of South Asia ... was already known for the
trafficking of children for forced slavery and prostitution and
has become even more susceptible to those atrocities. In just one
region of Indonesia, at least 13,000 children might have become
orphans. Even if their parents are alive, they have been
separated, and it may take weeks to be reunited with their
families. These children are more vulnerable than ever to a
practice that, as Schneider points out, was going on long before
the tsunami called the worlds attention to that region.
Washington Post reporter DeNeen L. Brown adds, Those
who have long worked in disaster zones say human predators are
part of a pattern. The natural disaster strikes, people die,
people mourn, compassion and aid roll inand so do the
predators. Tragically, weve seen it happen just
recently with reports of UN workers in Africa abusing and
exploiting the people they were there to help.
The stories from Asia led Brown to make a lame attempt to try
to explain the problem of human evil. She quotes psychologists
who state that people behave this way when they are overwhelmed
with stress, or when their needs are not being met. But in the
end, she was not able to come up with any real explanation of the
root problem. She could only conclude, It raises questions
about the nature of humanity and its capacity for evil, for
wickedness.
Indeed, it doesquestions I have heard through years of
prison ministry from those who want to believe that human nature
is basically good. Its not. Forget the excuses.
It may be hard to believe that God is good during a time of
natural disaster, but it becomes easier when we recognize just
how depraved human beings can be. Seeing the kind of evil that
humanity is capable of, we know that something has gone
tragically wrong with the whole world, including creation. Thats
what we mean by the Fall: It is very real, despite secular
societys desire to ignore it or to excuse it away. But then
when we look at Gods work of redemption and mercy, it helps
us understand that God looks lovingly upon us despite our own
natures and that, by His grace, He understands more about
goodness than we ever will.
Copyright © 2004 Prison Fellowship. Used with permission.