abortion

  • Sarah Palin told us so

    Interesting brief opinion article about contemporary medical ethics, by Cal Thomas (http://online.worldmag.com/2010/12/30/she-told-us-so/)

     

    She told us so

    Written by Cal Thomas
    December 30, 10:11 AM

    Sarah Palin deserves an apology. When she said that the new healthcare law would lead to "death panels" deciding who gets life-saving treatment and who does not, she was roundly denounced and ridiculed.

    Now we learn, courtesy of one of the ridiculers - The New York Times - that she was right. Under a new policy not included in the law for fear the administration’s real end-of-life game would be exposed, a rule issued by the recess-appointed Dr. Donald M. Berwick, administrator of the Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services, calls for the government to pay doctors to advise patients on options for ending their lives. These could include directives to forgo aggressive treatment that could extend their lives.

    This rule will inevitably lead to bureaucrats deciding who is "fit" to live and who is not. The effect this might have on public opinion, which by a solid majority opposes Obamacare, is clear from an email obtained by the Times. It is from Rep. Earl Blumenauer, D-Ore., who sent it to people working with him on the issue. Oregon and Washington are the only states with assisted-suicide laws, a preview of what is to come at the federal level if this new regulation is allowed to stand. Blumenauer wrote in his November email:

    "While we are very happy with the result, we won’t be shouting it from the rooftops because we aren’t out of the woods yet. This regulation could be modified or reversed, especially if Republican leaders try to use this small provision to perpetuate the ‘death panel’ myth."

    Ah, but it’s not a myth, and that’s where Palin nailed it. All inhumanities begin with small steps; otherwise the public might rebel against a policy that went straight to the "final solution." All human life was once regarded as having value, because even government saw it as "endowed by our Creator." This doctrine separates us from plants, microorganisms, and animals.

    Doctors once swore an oath, which reads in part: "I will not give a lethal drug to anyone if I am asked, nor will I advise such a plan; and similarly I will not give a woman a pessary to cause an abortion." Did Dr. Berwick, a fan of rationed care and the British National Health Service, ever take that oath? If he did, it appears he no longer believes it.

    Do you see where this leads? First the prohibition against abortion is removed and "doctors" now perform them. Then the assault on the infirm and elderly begins. Once the definition of human life changes, all human lives become potentially expendable if they don’t measure up to constantly "evolving" government standards.

    It will all be dressed up with the best possible motives behind it and sold to the public as the ultimate benefit. The killings, uh, terminations, will take place out of sight so as not to disturb the masses who might have a few embers of a past morality still burning in their souls. People will sign documents testifying to their desire to die, and the government will see it as a means of "reducing the surplus population," to quote Charles Dickens.

    When life is seen as having ultimate value, individuals and their doctors can make decisions about treatment that are in the best interests of patients. But when government is looking to cut costs as the highest good and offers to pay doctors to tell patients during their annual visits that they can choose to end their lives rather than continue treatment, that is more than the proverbial camel’s nose under the tent. That is the next step on the way to physician-assisted suicide and, if not stopped, government-mandated euthanasia.

    It can’t happen here? Based on what standard? Yes it can happen in America, and it will if the new Congress doesn’t stop it.

     

    I agree with Cal Thomas.  The basic problem is that a large and increasing number of Americans is turning away from the Bible as their source of moral grounding and authority.  The Bible teaches that humans are created in the image of God, and thus they may not be killed (except in a few specific punishment scenarios).  Thus it used to be said that humans are "endowed by their Creator with certain unalienable rights; that among these are life, liberty, and the pursuit of happiness."  Especially, humans may not be killed for the sake of convenience, whether they are old, sick, unborn, mentally or physically handicapped, or otherwise dependent.

    Once one rejects the Bible, human life becomes of similar value to animal life, and one's "right to live" becomes allegedly dependent on other people's consent.   And specifically, the government's consent.  If the government doesn't have the funds to pay for your medical coverage and decides that you are expendable, your "right to live" is theoretically immediately removed.

  • more thoughts on the coming distress (especially in USA)

    Regarding the "crash" (collapse of peace and economic prosperity in the USA and beyond) which some people (including myself) see on the horizon...

    underlying cause:
    - millions of individual unsaved Americans, a collective nation turning gradually further from God (we were never God's chosen people, and we were only a "Christian nation" in the sense of being composed of a high percentage of people espousing Christianity or judeo-christian morality (e.g. one might just as well say that we used to be a "Caucasian nation" or some other such originally shared characteristic), and not in the sense of possessing a divine national charter)

    proximal causes:
      ==>> abortion (twenty thousand precious unborn humans murdered per week in America)
    -> recognition of homosexual 'marriages'
    -> abandoning Israel
    cultural factors leading to the decline
    - divorce, homosexuality and the breakdown of the family
    - removing the Bible from the public square (especially schools) and requiring secularistic science teaching
    - affluence --> laziness (engineering school enrollment, etc)
    - feminism (more girls now going to college than boys, divorce epidemic, etc, cf. Mohler articles such as http://www.albertmohler.com/2009/10/23/feminism-unfulfilled-why-are-so-many-women-unhappy/
    http://www.albertmohler.com/2010/02/09/newsnote-where-are-the-young-men/
    http://www.albertmohler.com/2010/02/05/newsnote-masculinity-in-a-can-fight-club-at-church-and-the-crisis-of-manhood/
    http://www.albertmohler.com/2009/10/28/the-divorce-divide-a-national-embarrassment/)
    - media evil: Hollywood movies, tv shows, pornography, etc

    factors in the predicted coming economic collapse of the USA and subsequent one-world government
    Global:
    - sovereign debt (of many nations, e.g. Greece, Spain, Ireland, Britain, and the USA...)
    - oil dependency - for transportation, food growing and transporting, manufacturing, energy, etc
    - nuclear Iran (dilemma: if pre-emptive attack of Iran, risk losing 'world goodwill', if wait/sanctions, risk nuclear war and/or an EMP-bomb attack against Israel, Europe, USA, etc) http://pajamasmedia.com/blog/the-time-to-act-against-iran-is-fast-approaching/?singlepage=true
    USA:
      - national sovereign debt - $14 trillion and growing - now equal to 100% of the 2010 GDP
    - continued expansion of government entitlement programs like welfare, unemployment, disability, medicare, etc
    - social security collapsing due to borrowing - e.g. paying out more than it takes in, starting 2010 http://www.investors.com/NewsAndAnalysis/Article/539411/201007061804/Are-Overdue-Reports-Concealing-ObamaCare-Impact-On-Medicare-.aspx
    - the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan - approximately $1 billion spent so far
    - the subprime mortgage crisis due to Clinton-era FreddieMac/FannieMae intervention - http://pajamasmedia.com/rogerkimball/2008/09/29/who-caused-the-biggest-financial-crisis-since-the-great-depression/
    - 12 million illegal immigrants taking up millions of dollars in local services
    - high personal credit card debt, $8000 average per household
    - the Obama $700 billion 'stimulus' bill of 2009
    - the national healthcare bill of 2010, taking effect gradually over the next 5 years
    - Bush tax cuts expiring in 2011

    Predictions
      - something will trigger a global economic meltdown
    - runaway money-printing / inflation will occur in USA and the dollar will lose most or all of its value (cf. Argentina, Zimbabwe)
    - some level of national turmoil will occur, especially acutely in the cities with riots when gas and food run out
    - Christians will experience major persecution

    At some point, the world will transition to a one-world Islamic government and everyone who accepts the new world leader will receive an implanted RFID microchip allowing them to buy and sell.  However, the timing of the transition is not known... the USA meltdown might occur many years before the world transition, or within a few weeks or months.   God might grant many more years to the earth before bringing the final end of the age.

    Recommendations
    - http://tim223.xanga.com/722854326/preparing-for-the-coming-distress/ (Rejoice in Jesus Christ all day long!    and prepare in a few prudent earthly ways)
    - Pray for revival in the USA...
    - More ideas: www.transitionus.org  ,  www.postpeakliving.com

     

     

     

  • Five Minutes

    Do you have 5 minutes to spare toward the cause of saving millions of innocent lives?  Do you have 5 minutes to spare for the sake of your country?

    The United States' president's health care bills are currently being debated and voted upon in Congress.  They have been stripped of the protections of conscience freedoms and protections against funding abortion with tax dollars.  In other words, if it passes, millions more innocent young human lives will be killed over the next years.   Here's a link with some more information: http://www.albertmohler.com/2010/03/16/this-is-life-were-talking-about-abortion-and-the-health-care-bill/

    You have an opportunity to contact your senators and representatives to oppose it.  You can email, call, or fax them.  Here's the link for your Representative: https://writerep.house.gov/writerep/welcome.shtml  , and here's the link for your Senator: http://www.senate.gov/general/contact_information/senators_cfm.cfm

    Do you have five minutes to save a baby's life?

  • Raising a daughter is like watering your neighbor's garden

    "Raising a daughter is like watering your neighbor's garden."

    -- fascinating, horrible, quote from this article examining the trend of 'gendercide' (more and more baby girls being aborted around the world).

    This raises again the old questions of morality and altruism, for atheists.  Why should one be good to one's fellow man, if one does not believe in an afterlife?  Especially if it inconveniences you?  Why water your neighbor's garden?  Why succor people who are 'inconvenient' to care for and who don't have any potential to repay you (at least in the way you desire), like the baby girls of that article, or elderly people, or handicapped people?

    For those of us who believe in the one true God (described in the Bible) and His Son Jesus Christ, the reasons and motivations to love our neighbor (even when it requres self sacrifice) are compelling.  Not that we are trying to 'increase our reproductive success'.  Not that because we are 'guilted into it'...  Not because we are trying to earn our way to heaven... Not that we are trying to better our karma for a higher reincarnation and eventual absorption into nothingness... Not simply that it makes our earthly lives more pleasant in the long run...

    Instead, because we ourselves have already been shown huge, specific, mercy through Jesus' sacrifice of Himself to die for our sins.  And because God has already given us the undeserved hope and reward of eternal life in glory out of "the surpassing riches of His grace in kindness toward us in Christ Jesus".

    Why do we, disciples of Jesus Christ, go out of our way to help those who are struggling around us?  Because we want to - because it's what God did for us - because of the incredible inheritance that God has given us...

    Luke 14:12-14

    And He also went on to say to the one who had invited Him, "When you give a luncheon or a dinner, do not invite your friends or your brothers or your relatives or rich neighbors, otherwise they may also invite you in return and that will be your repayment. But when you give a reception, invite the poor, the crippled, the lame, the blind, and you will be blessed, since they do not have the means to repay you; for you will be repaid at the resurrection of the righteous."

  • Lamentations 3

    Some thoughts on Lamentations 3.    First, a brief intro.  Then the passage copied and pasted for you to read.   Then some thoughts.  Notice: this is a very long post.   I have kind of a backlog of xanga posts right now... I started this particular post more than a week ago, but haven't had time to finish it until now... and I have a few more things that I wanted to write about but haven't had time to write this week.

    -----

    Jeremiah was a young man who was called by God to give his nation a message.  He was scared and told God he didn't know how to speak and that he was only a youth.  God told him not to be afraid.

    Jeremiah told the inhabitants of Jerusalem to repent, or else God would judge them.  They laughed at him.

    Then the Babylonians came and besieged Jerusalem.  Jeremiah told the Jews that they should surrender, for their own good.  Now Jeremiah's neighbors didn't laugh at him anymore.  They called him a traitor.

    The king put him in jail, and he was thrown into an empty water pit and almost died by sinking into the mud at the bottom.  He was pulled out just in time by one of his friends.

    The Jews sent to the Pharaoh of Egypt for help against the Babylonans, despite Jeremiah's warning (from prison) not to do so.  Their attempt to enlist the Egyptians backfired.  Within a couple months, the Babylonians broke into Jerusalem and horrifically destroyed the city.

    Jeremiah was taken with the other captives to Babylon, where he wrote the poetry now known as the book of "Lamentations".   In chapters 1 and 2, he laments specific aspects of the destruction.  In Chapter 3, he gets a little more 'philosophical', drawing some conclusions from what he has learned in his grief.
    Lamentations 3, whole chapter

        1 I am the man who has seen affliction
    Because of the rod of His wrath.
    2He has driven me and made me walk
    In darkness and not in light.
    3Surely against me He has turned His hand
    Repeatedly all the day.
    4He has caused my flesh and my skin to waste away,
    He has broken my bones.
    5He has besieged and encompassed me with bitterness and hardship.
    6In dark places He has made me dwell,
    Like those who have long been dead.
    7He has walled me in so that I cannot go out;
    He has made my chain heavy.
    8Even when I cry out and call for help,
    He shuts out my prayer.
    9He has blocked my ways with hewn stone;
    He has made my paths crooked.
    10He is to me like a bear lying in wait,
    Like a lion in secret places.
    11He has turned aside my ways and torn me to pieces;
    He has made me desolate.
    12He bent His bow
    And set me as a target for the arrow.
    13He made the arrows of His quiver
    To enter into my inward parts.
    14I have become a laughingstock to all my people,
    Their mocking song all the day.
    15He has filled me with bitterness,
    He has made me drunk with wormwood.
    16He has broken my teeth with gravel;
    He has made me cower in the dust.
    17My soul has been rejected from peace;
    I have forgotten happiness.
    18So I say, "My strength has perished,
    And so has my hope from the LORD."
    19Remember my affliction and my wandering, the wormwood and bitterness.
    20Surely my soul remembers
    And is bowed down within me.
    21This I recall to my mind,
    Therefore I have hope.
    22The LORD'S lovingkindnesses indeed never cease,
    For His compassions never fail.
    23They are new every morning;
    Great is Your faithfulness.
    24"The LORD is my portion," says my soul,
    "Therefore I have hope in Him."
    25The LORD is good to those who wait for Him,
    To the person who seeks Him.
    26It is good that he waits silently
    For the salvation of the LORD.
    27It is good for a man that he should bear
    The yoke in his youth.
    28Let him sit alone and be silent
    Since He has laid it on him.
    29Let him put his mouth in the dust,
    Perhaps there is hope.
    30Let him give his cheek to the smiter,
    Let him be filled with reproach.
    31For the Lord will not reject forever,
    32For if He causes grief,
    Then He will have compassion
    According to His abundant lovingkindness.
    33For He does not afflict willingly
    Or grieve the sons of men.
    34To crush under His feet
    All the prisoners of the land,
    35To deprive a man of justice
    In the presence of the Most High,
    36To defraud a man in his lawsuit--
    Of these things the Lord does not approve.
    37Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass,
    Unless the Lord has commanded it?
    38Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
    That both good and ill go forth?
    39Why should any living mortal, or any man,
    Offer complaint in view of his sins?
    40Let us examine and probe our ways,
    And let us return to the LORD.
    41We lift up our heart and hands
    Toward God in heaven;
    42We have transgressed and rebelled,
    You have not pardoned.
    43You have covered Yourself with anger
    And pursued us;
    You have slain and have not spared.
    44You have covered Yourself with a cloud
    So that no prayer can pass through.
    45You have made us mere offscouring and refuse
    In the midst of the peoples.
    46All our enemies have opened their mouths against us.
    47Panic and pitfall have befallen us,
    Devastation and destruction;
    48My eyes run down with streams of water
    Because of the destruction of the daughter of my people.
    49My eyes pour down unceasingly,
    Without stopping,
    50Until the LORD looks down
    And sees from heaven.
    51My eyes bring pain to my soul
    Because of all the daughters of my city.
    52My enemies without cause
    Hunted me down like a bird;
    53They have silenced me in the pit
    And have placed a stone on me.
    54Waters flowed over my head;
    I said, "I am cut off!"
    55I called on Your name, O LORD,
    Out of the lowest pit.
    56You have heard my voice,
    "Do not hide Your ear from my prayer for relief,
    From my cry for help."
    57You drew near when I called on You;
    You said, "Do not fear!"
    58O Lord, You have pleaded my soul's cause;
    You have redeemed my life.
    59O LORD, You have seen my oppression;
    Judge my case.
    60You have seen all their vengeance,
    All their schemes against me.
    61You have heard their reproach, O LORD,
    All their schemes against me.
    62The lips of my assailants and their whispering
    Are against me all day long.
    63Look on their sitting and their rising;
    I am their mocking song.
    64You will recompense them, O LORD,
    According to the work of their hands.
    65You will give them hardness of heart,
    Your curse will be on them.
    66You will pursue them in anger and destroy them
    From under the heavens of the LORD!

    Lamentations 3 again, with interspersed comments

        1 I am the man who has seen affliction
    Because of the rod of His wrath.
    2He has driven me and made me walk
    In darkness and not in light.
    3Surely against me He has turned His hand
    Repeatedly all the day.
    4He has caused my flesh and my skin to waste away,
    He has broken my bones.
    5He has besieged and encompassed me with bitterness and hardship.
    6In dark places He has made me dwell,
    Like those who have long been dead.
    7He has walled me in so that I cannot go out;
    He has made my chain heavy.
    8Even when I cry out and call for help,
    He shuts out my prayer.
    9He has blocked my ways with hewn stone;
    He has made my paths crooked.
    10He is to me like a bear lying in wait,
    Like a lion in secret places.
    11He has turned aside my ways and torn me to pieces;
    He has made me desolate.
    12He bent His bow
    And set me as a target for the arrow.
    13He made the arrows of His quiver
    To enter into my inward parts.
    14I have become a laughingstock to all my people,
    Their mocking song all the day.
    15He has filled me with bitterness,
    He has made me drunk with wormwood.
    16He has broken my teeth with gravel;
    He has made me cower in the dust.
    17My soul has been rejected from peace;
    I have forgotten happiness.
    18So I say, "My strength has perished,
    And so has my hope from the LORD."

    Jeremiah is here "brutally honest" with his feelings about God in his suffering.  Few places in the Bible are as explicit as this, and even fewer writings of modern American evangelicalism.

    Jeremiah emphasizes that it is GOD who has deliberately brought this hardship into his life.  It is GOD who "set me as a target for the arrow".   It didn't just happen.

    God, furthermore, "shuts out my prayer".  When Jeremiah asked God for national relief, none came.  Cf. vs 44, 55-56...?  When people asked God to relent on the national calamity, He shut out their prayer.  When Jeremiah asked God for physical deliverance when he was about to die, God answered him.  Yet God doesn't answer all such prayers.  Why the variability?  What principle can be drawn?  Maybe just that God answers some prayers and not others... ?

    Why would God allow His own special prophet, the godly man, to suffer in this way?  ...to be mocked by the vulgar people, to experience no peace in his heart, etc?   Why do really bad things happen to God's own people, when they are walking closely with Him in righteousness?
        19Remember my affliction and my wandering, the wormwood and bitterness.
    20Surely my soul remembers
    And is bowed down within me.
    21This I recall to my mind,
    Therefore I have hope.
    22The LORD'S lovingkindnesses indeed never cease,
    For His compassions never fail.
    23They are new every morning;
    Great is Your faithfulness.
    24"The LORD is my portion," says my soul,
    "Therefore I have hope in Him."
    25The LORD is good to those who wait for Him,
    To the person who seeks Him.

    What was Jeremiah's consolation in the midst of his grief?  Apparently, the belief that EVENTUALLY, God would turn around and bring peace and honor and joy to his life.  The whole Bible echos this theme repeatedly.   However, for most people this reversal is not promised in this life.

    On v. 25, cf. Isaiah 40:31/context.

        25The LORD is good to those who wait for Him,
    To the person who seeks Him.
    26It is good that he waits silently
    For the salvation of the LORD.
    27It is good for a man that he should bear
    The yoke in his youth.
    28Let him sit alone and be silent
    Since He has laid it on him.

    "It is good that he waits silently....  what does this mean?  "Let him sit alone and be silent."  Is it better to sit alone, when suffering grief, rather than seek the company of friends?

    Cf. Jeremiah 15 -

        15You who know, O LORD,
    Remember me, take notice of me,
    And take vengeance for me on my persecutors
    Do not, in view of Your patience, take me away;
    Know that for Your sake I endure reproach.
    16Your words were found and I ate them,
    And Your words became for me a joy and the delight of my heart;
    For I have been called by Your name,
    O LORD God of hosts.
    17I did not sit in the circle of merrymakers,
    Nor did I exult
    Because of Your hand upon me I sat alone,
    For You filled me with indignation.
    18Why has my pain been perpetual
    And my wound incurable, refusing to be healed?
    Will You indeed be to me like a deceptive stream
    With water that is unreliable?

    There may well be a place for silent isolated endurance of grief.  But perhaps Jeremiah is talking more about the loneliness that occurs when one is concerned about the things of God, and one's neighbors and acquaintances and even family and church friends don't care about God and His Kingdom purposes.  Why God, says Jeremiah, are you pouring out your fury upon me, when I was the one concerned about following You and about righteousness and about my nation while my acquaintances didn't care and just partied?   They all criticized and mocked me, even though "I was called by Your name" and I deeply loved Your Word.  Why me?
        29Let him put his mouth in the dust,
    Perhaps there is hope.
    30Let him give his cheek to the smiter,
    Let him be filled with reproach.

    This seems to be talking about "humbling oneself"... even extremely/excessively...  not clamoring for justice for himself, but 'waiting' for God's vindication...

    Cf. Jesus -- "while being reviled, He did not revile in return; while suffering, He uttered no threats, but kept entrusting Himself to Him who judges righteously..."  2 Peter 2:23

    and Peter's conclusion: "Therefore humble yourselves under the mighty hand of God, that He may exalt you at the proper time..."  1 Peter 5:6

     

    Another powerful example of this is David, when fleeing from Absalom.  Here's the story from 2 Samuel 16-

    5When King David came to Bahurim, behold, there came out from there a man of the family of the house of Saul whose name was Shimei, the son of Gera; he came out cursing continually as he came.
    6He threw stones at David and at all the servants of King David; and all the people and all the mighty men were at his right hand and at his left.
    7Thus Shimei said when he cursed, "Get out, get out, you man of bloodshed, and worthless fellow!
    8"The LORD has returned upon you all the bloodshed of the house of Saul, in whose place you have reigned; and the LORD has given the kingdom into the hand of your son Absalom. And behold, you are taken in your own evil, for you are a man of bloodshed!"
    9Then Abishai the son of Zeruiah said to the king, "Why should this dead dog curse my lord the king? Let me go over now and cut off his head."
    10But the king said, "What have I to do with you, O sons of Zeruiah? If he curses, and if the LORD has told him, 'Curse David,' then who shall say, 'Why have you done so?'"
    11Then David said to Abishai and to all his servants, "Behold, my son who came out from me seeks my life; how much more now this Benjamite? Let him alone and let him curse, for the LORD has told him.
    12"Perhaps the LORD will look on my affliction and return good to me instead of his cursing this day."
    13So David and his men went on the way; and Shimei went along on the hillside parallel with him and as he went he cursed and cast stones and threw dust at him.

     

    False accusations.....   how extremely extremely painful they can be.   I have experienced them myself, and several of my friends have also.

    Was David "a man of bloodshed" as Shimei said?  Was God punishing David because of his treatment of Saul's family, or because David was somehow 'in cahoots' with violent deeds of his predecessor Saul?  Was David a usurper of Saul's crown, and now God was booting him out because of his past?

    There are so many ways David could have responded.  He could have spoken about his extreme respect for his father-in-law Saul, and how he refrained from killing him many times when all his friends were urging him to kill him, and when Saul's death would have made life a lot safer and more pleasant for David.  He could have quoted one of his own psalms about how he habitually walked in integrity and righteousness and honesty before God (confessing and forsaking sins as soon as possible).  He could have quoted the story of Job to illustrate that personal calamity does NOT necessarily mean that the person is being judged for some particular sin.  He could have reminded Shimei that Samuel had personally annointed David king in Saul's place, so that David was indeed God's approved/rightful king.

    But David responded instead in complete humility.   "If he curses, and if the LORD has told him, 'Curse David,' then who shall say, 'Why have you done so?'" ...Let him alone and let him curse, for the LORD has told him."

    What is going on here?  What is David cognizant of that Abishai was overlooking?

    His own sin.    The sins he really DID commit.

    That is to say ---  every time someone accuses you falsely of something, you have a choice:  You can either get defensive and upset and try to vindicate yourself, or you take the accusation quietly and use it as an opportunity to personally repent of OTHER sins in your life.  Every false accusation people make against you is an opportunity for you to walk more closely with God!   Wow.

    Specifically, in David's case, although he was innocent in Saul's case, he was spectacularly guilty in the case of Bathsheba.  He really could legitimately be labeled "a man of bloodshed", after having slept with Bathsheba and then having killed Uriah by proxy so that he could marry Bathsheba.   After the debacle, Nathan had said the following to him from God:  'Now therefore, the sword shall never depart from your house, because you have despised Me and have taken the wife of Uriah the Hittite to be your wife.'  This had indeed come true - his son Amnon had raped his half sister Tamar, then his other son Absalom had killed Amnon in revenge, and now Absalom had just staged a revolution and deposed him from being king.   David was mindful of his own sin, and so he responded in humility to the criticism.....    essentially, "Yes, I am indeed a very wicked person.  Probably far more wicked than you're even aware of.  Although the specific thing you're accusing me of is incorrect, I have so much other evil in my past and present that it's not worth trying to defend myself here.  The One I am putting all my hope in is God.  He is the One who has forgiven all of my sin through the coming Lamb-of-God-who-takes-away-the-sins-of-the-world (Psalm 32, 51), and He is the One who will vindicate me in this matter you're falsely accusing me of."

    Wow.  What an example...  this is exactly what Jeremiah is talking about, albeit back and forth between 'personal' and 'national' senses, in Lamentations 3 --

        25The LORD is good to those who wait for Him,
    To the person who seeks Him.
    26It is good that he waits silently
    For the salvation of the LORD.
    27It is good for a man that he should bear
    The yoke in his youth.
    28Let him sit alone and be silent
    Since He has laid it on him.
    29Let him put his mouth in the dust,
    Perhaps there is hope.
    30Let him give his cheek to the smiter,
    Let him be filled with reproach.
    ...
    39Why should any living mortal, or any man,
    Offer complaint in view of his sins?

    40Let us examine and probe our ways,
    And let us return to the LORD.
    41We lift up our heart and hands
    Toward God in heaven;
    42We have transgressed and rebelled...

    If it ever happens to you that circumstances shatter your life, and then on top of everything some of your friends start to point fingers at you and say that it happened because of such and such a sin in your life (while you know that their remarks are not accurate), and when the gossip causes you to lose friendships and other things that you consider precious, use that as an opportunity to "examine and probe your ways, and return to the Lord."

    Sure you may be innocent in that matter that they're falsely accusing you of, but you surely have other sins in your life that need to end!   Sure the Lord is not crushing you in punishment for those sins, but He is graciously crushing you in discipline... 

    "He disciplines us for our good, so that we may share His holiness." Hebrews 12:10

    "...when we are judged, we are disciplined by the Lord so that we will not be condemned along with the world." 1 Corinthians 11:32
       31For the Lord will not reject forever,
    32For if He causes grief,
    Then He will have compassion
    According to His abundant lovingkindness. 

    Huge, awesome promise here!   Again, nowhere does it say that this reversal will happen in THIS life, on THIS side of death.    But EVENTUALLY, it will happen........

        33For He does not afflict willingly
    Or grieve the sons of men.
    34To crush under His feet
    All the prisoners of the land,
    35To deprive a man of justice
    In the presence of the Most High,
    36To defraud a man in his lawsuit--
    Of these things the Lord does not approve. 

    Well, why do these things happen then????

    If God is good and kind so that He does not "approve" these things, and if God is big enough and powerful enough to put a stop to them right NOW, then why doesn't He?

    ...the fact that evil exists implies either that God doesn't exist (as the atheists argue), OR... that He has some bigger and better plan, such that although the short term brush strokes are heartbreaking (to Himself as well as to us and others), the complete painting will be so awesomely beautiful as to be worth every single stroke.... such that not a single item of earthly life will be desired to have occurred differently, when seen from the perspective of eternity.... such that we might, in fact, indeed be living in 'the best of all possible worlds'.

    Lamentations 3:33 is an incredibly important verse.  Is this true?  The implications are huge.

    What kind of a Father would send His Son on a mission, knowing that His Son would end up being crucified?

    I highly recommend this article "Are there two wills in God?" by John Piper and the book "God's Greater Glory" by Bruce Ware to investigate this point more fully..... how God "unwillingly wills" evil to occur, in a sovereignly-permissive way (yet with 100% meticulous ordained sovereign control, cf. 2 Chronicles 18:19?!?!?!?!)  while in contrast "willingly wills" good to occur... "   Literally in Lam. 3:33 "from-His-heart", as "He does not afflict from-His-heart".... He reluctantly allows evil acts to be performed, ravaging sicknesses to kill, earthquakes, tornados, car crashes, etc (and perfectly using each 'bad' event for overall good, Genesis 50:20), while joyfully "from-His-heart" "willingly" pours out love upon His adopted children "according to His abundant lovingkindness"........

     

    More: look at the "spectrum texts":

        37Who is there who speaks and it comes to pass,
    Unless the Lord has commanded it?
    38Is it not from the mouth of the Most High
    That both good and ill go forth? 

    Contrary to the sunday-schoolish notion of God as a jolly old guy who chuckles when people have good harvests and get married but wrings His hands and disowns responsibility for wars and tsunamis,  the Biblical God is a robust, energetic, majestic Lion of a Personage who roars with laughter when the tiny squeaking voice of the wicked shrills self-exalting words.... the weeping-and-laughing King who BOASTS repeatedly to His dearly loved people of His sovereign omnipotence....

        "I am the LORD, and there is no other;
    Besides Me there is no God
    I will gird you, though you have not known Me;
    That men may know from the rising to the setting of the sun
    That there is no one besides Me.
    I am the LORD, and there is no other,
    The One forming light and creating darkness,
    Causing well-being and creating calamity;
    I am the LORD who does all these."
        (Isaiah 45:5-7)

    One implication of Lam 3:37 is that any human authority that exists has been established by God... Romans 13:1...  As Jesus said to Pilate - "You would have no authority over me unless it had been given to you from above."   This can give us peace if/when the government (or other authorities) abuses its authority.... God sees... He doesn't miss anything...
        39Why should any living mortal, or any man,
    Offer complaint in view of his sins?
    40Let us examine and probe our ways,
    And let us return to the LORD.
    41We lift up our heart and hands
    Toward God in heaven;
    42We have transgressed and rebelled,
    You have not pardoned.
    43You have covered Yourself with anger
    And pursued us;
    You have slain and have not spared.
    44You have covered Yourself with a cloud
    So that no prayer can pass through.
    45You have made us mere offscouring and refuse
    In the midst of the peoples.
    46All our enemies have opened their mouths against us.
    47Panic and pitfall have befallen us,
    Devastation and destruction;
    48My eyes run down with streams of water
    Because of the destruction of the daughter of my people.
    ...
    51My eyes bring pain to my soul
    Because of all the daughters of my city. 

    Jeremiah repents for the sin of his people...  He admits that God's judgment against them was justified... but he still cries over the awfulness of it all...

     

        49My eyes pour down unceasingly,
    Without stopping,
    50Until the LORD looks down
    And sees from heaven.

    What is Jeremiah saying here?  I don't quite understand what he's praying for.   Any thoughts?

     
        52My enemies without cause
    Hunted me down like a bird;
    53They have silenced me in the pit
    And have placed a stone on me.
    54Waters flowed over my head;
    I said, "I am cut off!"
    55I called on Your name, O LORD,
    Out of the lowest pit.
    56You have heard my voice,
    "Do not hide Your ear from my prayer for relief,
    From my cry for help."
    57You drew near when I called on You;
    You said, "Do not fear!"
    58O Lord, You have pleaded my soul's cause;
    You have redeemed my life. 

    His own story, in poetic form... read the prose here...

    God sometimes gives these awesome direct deliverances.    But sometimes He doesn't, I think (Hebrews 11)..... am I right or wrong about this?    Anyway, either way He will be glorified... and in the END, He will certainly 'deliver' all His servants.... just not all of them here in this life.....

     
        59O LORD, You have seen my oppression;
    Judge my case.
    60You have seen all their vengeance,
    All their schemes against me.

     

    Again-- trusting in God for vindication, not in human justice...   God is the one who sees all and will reveal all secrets at the Judgment Day... including the thoughts and motives of every man's heart....

     
        61You have heard their reproach, O LORD,
    All their schemes against me.
    62The lips of my assailants and their whispering
    Are against me all day long.
    63Look on their sitting and their rising;
    I am their mocking song.
    64You will recompense them, O LORD,
    According to the work of their hands.
    65You will give them hardness of heart,
    Your curse will be on them.
    66You will pursue them in anger and destroy them
    From under the heavens of the LORD!

     

    "Give them hardness of heart"....    Wow.... what a terrible curse to ask for someone!!    To what extent is it right/good/proper/correct for us to pray imprecatory curses of this sort upon our enemies ( / "the enemies of the Lord") ?

     

     

    In summary, the verse that could summarize the whole chapter, the whole book and in some sense (for those who have believed in Christ Jesus), the whole Bible:

    "The LORD is my portion," says my soul,
    "Therefore I have hope in Him."

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