The More They Stay the Same

How long, O Lord, will I call for help, and You will not hear? I cry out to You, “Violence!” Yet You do not save. Habakkuk 1:2 ANSB

Violence! – You know the aphorism. “The more things change, the more they stay the same.” It seems that two thousand seven hundred years haven’t made much difference to the cry of the righteous. “How long, O Lord,” was the cry of Habakkuk and it is our cry today. “How long, O Lord, will we call for help against the ungodly, the wicked, the violent, and You do not answer?” If there is one single question that challenges faith in an omnipotent compassionate God, this seems to be it.

Violence! The Hebrew is ḥāmās. It has become so prevalent that we even have a political party with the name, “Violence!” Imagine that! Unthinkable! In the Bible, hamas is always about sinful violence, not natural disasters. It is a man-made entity. Unfortunately, its human construction often results in non-human disasters. In the Bible, more than brutality is included in ḥāmās. Living without Torah (lawlessness) is also a form of ḥāmās (violence). It isn’t necessary to use a gun. You can also simply ignore the Sabbath. How’s that for impact!

Perhaps, as Rollo May suggests, we just don’t understand the true nature of violence. “Violence is the expression of impotence.”[1] “Violence, or acts close to it, gives one a sense of counting, or mattering, or power . . . This in turn gives the individual a sense of significance. No human being can exist for long without some sense of his own significance.”[2] This explains the psychology of a terrorist. Without violence, he doesn’t matter! His act of violence gives him meaning in life. In fact, in a world where men do not find meaning for their lives in the God of life, where men have desacralized the world, where they must rise up against the machine, violence is an expression of hope for worthiness. That is why violence has always been, and will always be, a part of the world empty of God.

But the problem isn’t understanding ḥāmās. The problem is that God doesn’t seem to care. When we look at the ubiquity of violence, especially when we see that rejection of Torah is an act of violence, we are struck by the fact that God does not pour out His wrath! Violence is an ever-present reality in this broken world, yet God does not act to erase it. Why? Why doesn’t He answer our prayers for peace, our pleas to end the rebellion? The problem with violence is compassion! We could understand wrath. We can imagine justice. We would laud restitution. But where is it? When will it arrive?

Today, for that is the only day we have, we must be the answer to our call for help. Today we must stand for law and order, for righteousness, for justice. Today we must overcome ḥāmās  with raḥûm (“compassion” – Exodus 34:6).

Topical Index: violence, ḥāmās, lawlessness, raḥûm, compassion, Habakkuk 1:2, Exodus 34:6

[1] Rollo May, Power and Innocence, citing Hannah Arendt, p. 23.

[2] Ibid., pp. 36-37.

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Terry

Brilliant piece Skip – insights to violence that I never could have imagined.

Monica

Never thought that living without Torah, and ignoring the Shabbat is a form of Hamas, thank you Skip for this eye opener

laurita hayes

You know, Monica, just being around someone who is not rested and cannot rest can raise your own stress levels. Anything that decreases the peace around us acts like a slap in the face. We have a need to adjust to others, but I have found there is a big difference between adjusting to restlessness or anxiety and relaxing in the presence of peace.

I like to think of Shabbat as a continual peace reset point that was given to us so that, among other things, it is possible for us to be a reminder to the world of what it could be like. Peace, that is. A Sabbathkeeper who has learned what the Sabbath was intended for, and has learned how to keep it successfully should be someone who is relaxed and never in too much of a hurry to attend to the needs for love around them. Every week we meet up with the Prince of Peace and get set back to the starting point again. We are never more than a few days away from complete rest. I have found that countdown to the Sabbath is a good way to be able to endure the pressures of the week. As bad as it can get, I know that it is going to be broken off soon and reset again. I can hold my breath that long. Shalom is now only two and a half days away!

David Williams

The ultimate “fall-back” position in church world seems to be the expression, “yes, but God is in control”, to which the obvious reply would be, “well, He sure has made a mess of it” or “it sure doesn’t look like God is in control.” And of course to that you will always hear, “well, God’s ways are not our ways.” A person new to the faith would be left scratching his or her head. And so the problem of evil and all its’ manifestations (violence being only one of them) continues to be in my opinion, the elephant in the room, stinking up God’s good creation and generating all those lame rhetorical responses to the smell. The good news is that the Messiah has launched God’s Kingdom (God’s rule and reign on Earth as in Heaven) as the first fruits of the new creation. Our task is to assist in that to the best of our abilities, knowing that our work will not be in vain. And in that work, the breath of the Spirit will work through us and with us, to freshen up the stench of the elephant, until the renewed and restored Creation is complete. And so I live with that elephant and I try to the extent that I can to “evict” that creature, but I recognize that the eviction will only be complete when God’s will is done on Earth as in Heaven. May I work towards that end every day.

John Adam

David – I am reading N.T. Wright’s “The Hope of Heaven” and what you wrote is a superb précis of this book (at least, as I have found to this point).

David Williams

I haven’t read that one, but Wright’s “Surprised by Hope” should be read by all believers in Yeshua.

Michael C

I can’t find a “The Hope of Heaven” by N.T. Wright. It that a new one?

Amadeus

Skip, You asked this question: Violence is an ever-present reality in this broken world, yet God does not act to erase it. Why? You did not answer the question. It is not a rhetorical question, in my opinion. There are answers to that question.

Amadeus

Well said, Skip. It is tremendously critical for me personally to know and understand and respond to the Biblical answers. God is not responsible for the woes of mankind. He allows the many atrocities to take place and, unfortunately, is too often blamed for same, but the problem lies with His arch-enemy, Satan, who started the rebellion with his questioning God’s way of ruling and right to rule. God should never, ever be blamed for the ills of mankind but so often He is and I find that sad and disheartening for mankind. I do very much enjoy your daily commentary. It keeps me thinking. Thank you, Skip.

Seeker

John 14: 23 Jesus answered and said unto him, If a man love me, he will keep my words: and my Father will love him, and we will come unto him, and make our abode with him. (For me – Salvation in perspective)

John 17: These words spake Jesus, and lifted up his eyes to heaven, and said, Father, the hour is come; glorify thy Son, that thy Son also may glorify thee: 2As thou hast given him power over all flesh, that he
should give eternal life to as many as thou hast given him. 3And this is life eternal, that they might know thee the only true God, and Jesus Christ, whom thou hast sent. (For me – Life after death in perspective)

Genesis 32: 28And he said, Thy name shall be called no more Jacob, but Israel: for as a prince hast thou power with God and with men, and hast prevailed. (For me – The Israel the bible is referring to)

When I am confronted with these questions I ask myself. Is the Israel the Bible refers to the North African worldly inhabitants as all the biblical geographic names are found there? Or is Israel those that prevail…

I then acknowledge anew that it is only in prevailing in faith that we can be saved from our worldly views, concerns and temptations… (The tree of knowledge of good and evil)

Then again the privilege is not ours to claim we are saved but God’s to present to us in a calling, as Jesus said it is not given to Him to say who will sit where but it is for God to give as God calls… And yes the bible also states that Israel is the only beneficiary of God’s eternal promise…

The question for me is not the land Israel but the called that prevailed the Israel God named… How can we work on prevailing? Here Paul said we must study to show ourselves approved as vessels of righteousness.

Study what? The Old Testament as that was the only records of the time. So relying on the works and books of other believers may be our downfall. Appreciating their assistance in finding the truth concerning the biblical records is a blessing. For me Christ is always our only teacher and master…