This Saturday it'll be 100 years since
Gavrilo Princip fired the shot that killed at least 8 million and left more than
11 million wounded. He wasn't even a good marksman. Archduke Ferdinand's driver
took a wrong turn, then backed the car right up to the assassin's feet. He
fired his pistol as a staunch anti-colonialist and became a Bosnian hero, until
the Bosnian Civil War of 1992 that is. Croatian troops even destroyed the
Princip family home. History has odd ways of being rewritten as perspectives
change.
Gavrilo's trigger
finger unwittingly launched one of the greatest evils ever to befall the empires
of Europe. World War One opened the door to rampant Communism, collapsed many of
Europe's empires, spawned National Socialism (the Nazis) in Germany, Italy felt
cheated of land promises and so very many young people were gone.
Another of the
unintended consequences was that the wide-spread European belief in the
trustworthiness of church denominations was undermined. By the end of World war
two, trust was gone altogether.
George Bush (2) said that Iran, North Korea and Iraq were the
biggest threats to the USA immediately after 9/11. He chose Iraq for invasion
and unseated the tyrant Saddam Hussein. Mine was just one of many letters, April
20, 2004, sent to him requesting that an early termination of American
occupation was desirable. Instead our Army was tasked with the impossible job of
nation-building.
Peter Galbraith's book, Unintended Consequences, has some odd
theories, but in his list of unexpected consequences of the war he didn't
consider what it did to one of earth's oldest bastions of Christianity. Christ's
disciples became targets for waves of persecution under the wrong perception
that America is a "Christian Country." Many fled from Basra and Baghdad and
those who couldn't resettle in Lebanon or Syria squatted in Mosul and the
Ninevah Plain. As ISIS butchered their way towards the center of Iraq, its
estimated that 150 000 have fled the country. The troubles in Iraq have ended a
Christian presence that dated to the first century.
You and I must also come to terms with the "Law of Unintended Consequences." It is, I am
afraid, a direct offshoot of the God-given privilege of Free Will. Where is God
in all this terrible suffering? Where He has always been: in self-imposed
limitation to human decision making. For example, He has bound Himself with
respect for your next decision to sin against His laws of love and justice. Not
that He cannot stop you from sinning, but that He will not. Your very next
self-centered act of carnality will happen against His will. He will respect you
enough to allow it. The trouble is - there will be consequences. The even worse
trouble is - there will also be unintended consequences. Only time, as with
Princip's shot, will tell how grave those unintended consequences will be.
Oh please, use
that same will to study and love and live by God's directives for holy living.
You may think that a "narrow" way to live, but four decades in this world tell
me the consequences are good.
Sometimes the
consequences are neutral and yet work towards the greater good. If you have
studied economics you will recall a name from the distant past: that of Adam
Smith. His famous metaphor of the "invisible hand" described what happens when
the butcher and the baker ply their trade with zeal for personal gain, yet with
integrity required by business laws. Smith believed that a society filled with
upright, yet hard-working people, though they each seek primarily their own best
interests, nevertheless benefit the whole of that community. It worked well in
small towns and even prospered whole nations until globalization introduced a
whole new playing field.
Charity may well
"begin at home," but yours and mine must not be content to stay there. The twin
New Testament laws of "sowing and reaping" as well as "casting bread upon the
waters" will add to this life many unintended consequences of blessing. This is
the highest form of paying it forward. To refuse to live beyond the
circumference of your home and family is to make the mistake of seeing to find
your life. The unintended consequence is that your well mannered and "prudent"
self-centeredness will result in you failing in opportunities to add joy to many
people unknown to you and, worse still, will end up in you loosing your life as
well.
Give yourself away! Give yourself to Christ. It will be the best
investment you ever make. Oh, and be sure, you have to renew that gift daily,
because there are unintended consequences for trying to rest on past
commitments.
A lot of (soul) food for thought in this article. I would love to hear more about your ideas around sowing/reaping and 'casting bread on the water...' as acts of faith in the very real grind while daily earning of a living.
ReplyDeleteHow do we live 'prudently' and 'giving ourself away' at the same time? Do we pray for our 'daily bread' and then 'cast it on the water'?
And lastly, if God allows us multiple options and choices, even as we seek his will, can we be sure that we are in his will, or could it be a consequence of another decision someone (or ourselves) made.
rgrds
Kyle L
Joburg, RSA