Way of Life Village

A promise for gangsters

September 7, 2007 5:00 am | Written by Phil

Is God’s hope really for the hopeless cases or just for those who haven’t totally gone off the deep end?  I’ve been thinking a lot about Christians and gangs lately because I keep meeting gangsters and families affected by gangs.  Although our mission here is not a “gang ministry” per say, it seems that every family in our community has been impacted in some way by this aspect of life in the city.  Two nights ago I was standing outside at 10pm with a mom who was nervously smoking a cigarette, anxiously waiting for her son (who joined a gang and just bought a gun) to come home.  How many moms know her pain and the years she is losing from worry and lack of sleep?  Years ago we temporarily housed a single mom and her two boys whose apartment was burned up by a local gang for saying the wrong thing.  I’ve met a killer was nearly killed in a driveby and now regrets his past and wants to change his life.  I feel for victims of gang brutality, for all the moms and dads, and for the kids in gangs.  I think most Christians are in agreement that it’s a struggle to break free from gang life.  The endless supply of gangsta movies have taught us that.  But when I hear Christians talk about it, it’s as if they’ve resigned to give movies, news reporters, jaded police gang units, and even gangsters themselves, the final say.  Yes, it’s a complex and many-faceted problem, long in the making.  But people don’t get the final say.  God does!  If God says anything is possible with Him, then anything is possible (Matthew 19:26).  Anyone can be saved from the hell they are living in (and have helped to create for themselves).  The promise is for gangsters, too!  Church, please don’t forget His promise is good for everyone! Please!

2 Responses to “A promise for gangsters”

soulster wrote a comment on September 8, 2007

Amen, bro. I was confronted by something I was reading this morning as to why there seems to be a lack of “courageous obedience” to God’s vision of how things should be:

“the tendency of Christians to intellectualize ethical issues is in direct proportion to the extent they have become part of the power establishment.”

It’s time for me to come to terms with my dismissal of gangs as dangerous and beyond help. It lies in an intellectualism that coolly analyzes the problem and pronounces it hopeless — except perhaps for the crushing response of law enforcement. Sounds like the kind of cowardly excuses that explain why the King can’t go and reign where he wants to just so the soldier (me) can remain comfortable and safe in his decadent bed.

By the way. The quote is from “Jesus and the Nonviolent Revolution,” a free e-book written by a French pastor who hid Jewish refugees during the Nazi takeover and provided by a Christian neomonastic community.

Phil wrote a comment on September 8, 2007

Soulster,

Hi, bro! Thanks for these thoughts and the quote! I have saved a pdf copy of the e-book for my library.

I’m still learning to dump years of conditioning (to be afraid and self-preserve), and live the dangerous life of love with Jesus. His love, power and promise are for everyone!

Blessings,

Phil

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