On the killer’s guns and ammunition
magazines, he had listed a number of conflicts dating back several hundred
years before the crusades between Christian and Muslim societies.
Hundreds of verses of the Koran incite
its followers to violence against those who refuse to acknowledge Islam as the
only one true religion.
Today the majority of terrorist attacks
reported in the Western world are carried out by Muslim extremists.
Consequently Muslims have often been
stereotyped as untrustworthy, vulnerable
to being radicalised and potentially
dangerous.
Let’s read from Matthew 5:39,
Do not resist the one who wrongs
you.
But if anyone who slaps you on the right
cheek, turn to him the other also.
And if anyone would sue you and take your
tunic, let him have your cloak as well.
And if anyone forces you to go one mile,
go with him two miles.
You have heard it said, “You shall love
your neighbour and hate your enemy.’
But I say to you, Love your enemies and
pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be sons of your Father who is
in heaven.
For he makes his sun rise on the evil and
on the good, and sends rain on the just and unjust.
For if you love those who love you, what
reward do you have?
You therefore must be perfect, as your
heavenly father is perfect.
So to summarize:
If the person is an enemy, Jesus said to
love him (Matt. 5:44).
If he persecutes you, you are to pray for
him (v. 44).
If she publicly humiliates you, you are
not to retaliate (v. 39).
If someone takes advantage of you, you
are to give even more than he asks (v. 41).
The world preaches “Assert yourself.”
Jesus taught, “Deny yourself.”
The world warns that you will be
constantly exploited.
Jesus' concern was not that His disciples
be treated fairly but that they show unconditional love to others regardless of
how they were treated.
Can you sense the crisis of belief as you
consider the practicalities of following these commandments?
These words seem absurd even to our ears
today.
Jesus says love those who wrong you.
Brenton Tarrant thought he was exacting
revenge on those who had wronged Christians and Western Civilisation for
centuries.
Remember, few Islamic believers know what
the Koran says because it is written in Arabic, most are unaware of its
incitements to violence and genuinely believe that Islam is a religion of
grace, kindness and compassion.
Men spat upon Jesus and nailed Him to a
cross. His response was our model: “Father, forgive them, for they do not know
what they do” (Luke 23:34).
With that in mind, how then should we
live?
In Matthew 5, Jesus re-affirms the
commandment to love our neighbour without saying who that neighbour is, because
our neighbour is all around us.
The bible is replete with examples of
Jesus crossing lines of prejudice and intolerance to carry out the will of God.
Some prominent examples include the
healing of the Syro-Phoenician
woman, the healing of the centurion’s child, and the conversation with the
Samaritan woman come to mind.
This theme is carried on by God as he
reveals his, to the Jewish mind, radical, plans to bring salvation to us
“dirty” Gentiles.
Though we may be separated by language,
culture, belief, worldview, ethics and history from our neighbours, we are
still called to love as we would love ourselves.
Therefore
what Tarrant has done is not just a crime against a mosque, nor a crime against
the Islamic community, nor just a crime against Christchurch, nor a crime against
the people of New Zealand, nor a crime against humanity but a crime against
God.