THE
VICTORY OVER RAVENSBROOK
“This
darkness is very deep, but our God has gone deeper still. When you have been to
Calvary, even Ravensbrook [Concentration Camp] looks small.”
Corrie Ten Boom
Corrie Ten Boom
Corrie Ten
Boom was a Dutch Christian who helped Jews hide from the German SS. But after
she and her family were turned in by an informant, they were arrested and sent
to a concentration camp. After her father and beloved sister died, she ended up
in a camp called Ravensbrook. That is quite a name for such a place.
After WW
II ended and Corrie was released she was used of God to spread the gospel of
Jesus Christ. And in a stunning display of God’s forgiveness she actually shook
hands with an SS officer and forgave him. Many believers have been able to
forgive others because of her example. But I want to focus in on her profound
statement.
Just
reading that sentence sends chills up my spine. It disarms me from all my
pretentions and my neat and tidy doctrinal assertions. No, it does not change the
foundational truths of God’s Word, but it breaks up the fallow ground that can
so easily harden our theology. I mean how can I present Calvary with dry eyes
and any hint of doctrinal hubris? These keys on my keyboard can pound out these
truths, but where is its heart? Where is its passion? Is there any depth of
feeling? And yes, when I read the words of a wonderful saint who has been so
faithful to her Lord I do not read them like reading a newspaper. They are
sharp and they filet my heart open before Him. And I have written many times on
the cross, and yet again God opens another door of revelation and gently guides
me through it and beckons my heart to speak once again.
Speak, Lord,
you servant listens.
So once
again I approach Calvary, Golgotha. Yes I have seen it many times before and I
have wept at the foot of that cross. It was there where I found life, and it
was there that I was forgiven and set free. I have studied it in Bible college
and I have read about it from many faithful saints. But as I read those words
from Corrie ten Boom my spirit was suddenly drawn to the cross again with a freshness
that illuminates corners I had not seen in all their fullness. It speaks to the
eternal mystery that not only surrounds the cross but is the cross.
Corrie
references the darkness of a Nazi prison camp which by all reports had ovens as
well. The accounts in her book are devastating and reveal the depths of human
depravity. The darkness in that situation must have been palpable and
permeating into the very soul of its victims. The smell of death and evil
itself must have been overwhelming. And all the time while living in death you
keep your faith and your relationship with Christ? After Corrie is released
she recognizes that compared with the cross the agony and darkness in
Ravensbrook is nothing. That she could discern such a thing is astounding!
The cross
is an amazing enigma. Something so wretched, so unjust, and so gruesome could be
the source of life for millions? In fact this barbaric act of human treachery is
the only and exclusive source of life? This is where most people resist it with
human logic and reasoning. This is where most people miss it because it is so
archaic and unsophisticated and so much foolishness that their minds reject it
as either religious nonsense or some symbolic act. You see, the cross is not a
starting point for sinners to turn over a new leaf and recapture their lives.
No, this cross is both the beginning and the end for any sinner who by faith
trusts in the One who hung upon it.
So we have
not the luxury of believing the Scriptural narrative of the crucifixion but
rejecting the words of Christ which define its essence and meaning. To say the
eternal implications of this cross are amazing is to diminish its glory. This
was God in the flesh taking upon Himself the punishment and payment for the
sins of the world. Yes, we are in sacred and unimaginable territory. I mean
what can pay for sins? And if that is possible what can pay for one such sin? A
hundred? A million? And what pays for a small lie and what pays for murder? You
see, like blind men we reach out to touch some familiar walls in order to
steady ourselves and yet when it comes to the cross there are none.
One of the
reasons that the cross is no longer a stumbling block anymore is because it
gets very little “play time” in our preaching, teaching, and among believers.
How could this have happened? I mean that which rescued us with unfathomable
sacrifice and pain and agony and yet we have left our first love for a mess of
temporal pottage? And along the way we have lost it essence, its majesty, its
glory, and even its life. But oh the darkness He suffered for us. Unthinkable.
Unimaginable. Can you imagine all the demons of hell taunting Him? Can you
imagine the weight of all of our sin? Can you imagine the abject and profound loneliness
He experienced even to the point of calling for His Father’s company? So great
a mystery!
And what
if you were the only human alive? What if God had only created you and you
alone had fallen? Think on this: Jesus would have come and died for you alone.
In fact, now hold on to your spiritual seats, I am convinced that God’s love
for us is so intense, so deep, and so strong that even if the Father knew that
no one would accept Christ He STILL would have died. I have no inside
information on that but I just wanted to have you meditate on the power of His
eternal love. And the Spirit makes it clear that very few people would die for
their friends, and no one gives their lives for their enemies…ALL their
enemies.
So if we
stop our minds and submit fully to the Spirit and are drawn to gaze at
that wondrous cross what exactly does your heart see. Not your eyes but your
heart. Look at Him. I don’t mean look at Him just like He has been painted or
portrayed. Really look at Him with your heart. Cast aside for a moment any
church doctrine or any thoughts of limited or unlimited. Just gaze fully with
your heart and in the midst of the lashes and wounds and blood open your heart
and see…you. How often have we seen Jesus in the collective and yes He deserves
all of that. But how often have you fixated your being and allowed your heart to
see His inconceivable love for you. Yes, for you. You know who you are and what
you have done and how far you fall short even this very day.
And with
all your past and present shortcomings and sin fully before you, look at Him
who knows those things much better than you do and yet, and yet, and yet look
at Him. Why oh why? How can this be? And when we stand on the truth of who He
is and what He has done, and then press in further, is our heart not broken
with worship? We cannot help but bow before Him and worship. And although it is
true the Son no longer hangs on that cross, its power and glory will live on forever.
We worship
Him now in temporal jars of clay which are limited by time and attention and
even sin, but His exquisite plan will one day provide for us a new body with
which to worship Him. And what more can we desire? Yes we will enjoy the
absence of sickness and pain and sorrow and sin, but we did not come to heaven just
to bask in an impersonal paradise. We came to and for Him. We may recognize
loved ones and other saints and Biblical figures, but we came for Him. We may
even be granted some time to communicate with others, but we came for Him.
This is no
syrupy sentimentality. This will be our reason for being in all eternity. To be
with Him and to see Him and to worship Him. Oh my. How my heart longs for that
day. And if I desire to trace the road back to where this privilege was purchased
I once again find myself at Golgotha. And please allow me some further imagery
which I hope can further illuminate Him and how we feel about Him.
The cross
is much greater than a necklace or bracelet. It is a reality that no symbol can
even attempt to capture. Oh if we could have been there and known. Can you
imagine watching Him bleed and suffer and die and with the knowledge of who He
was and what was happening? We would have bowed before the scene and all around
us people would think us mad. But we were there. Oh we were not watching at a
distance or standing beside Mary and John. No, we were there in those wounds. The
mystery of all eternity. We were there. And one day when we had walked our own
way and were oblivious to all of it, He drew us to Himself. And we realized the
horror and the glory of it all. We were there.
So go
ahead Auschwitz and Treblinka and Ravensbrook. Go ahead and present your
darkness as some insurmountable evil which can remain some diabolical trophy.
But it wasn’t British or American soldiers who caused your defeat. They may
have been used to set the earthly captives free, but the victory over that kind
of evil was won at Calvary. Yes, the evil fowler has been captured in His own
snare and the prey has been set free forever. And even on this side of eternity
and not yet seeing the Victor, we still are undone in His matchless grace. But
one day, either by death or by His catching away together, we will be set free
and be transported into His presence forever. And why can we be so certain of
this implausible and unmerited destination?
The cross…simply the cross. Selah.
2 comments:
This is the kind of truth that stops me in my tracks. I have no words, only tears and shame but He's even wiped those away. The wondrous cross...I can't even begin to wrap my brain around what it cost Him to die for me and give me newness of life. This is gut wrenching stuff, and I need to meditate on it further and pray. Thank you Brother Rick, may God bless those who read this with a renewed wonder.
Last night, on Hannity, I was watching him interview a father of one of the Benghazi attack victims' father. They were discssing the tragedy and determining how it could have been prevented. The father said that he had "forgiven" those those responsible for the oversight. Hannity said (unless my ears betrayed me) that he could never forgive them.
It's so obvious that the message of the cross is lost. He died for the remission of our sins. He forgave us, and commanded us to forgive those as He would forgive us.
I recall my mother saying that she would 'forgive' but would never forget. Yet she harbored resentments and grudges that, if she had given to the Lord, would have given her peace and joy. We have no excuse to hang on to being victims and harboring hatred against others if we take the cross very seriously. No grudge can stand being in the presence of the Lamb of God. Anon. J.
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