THE STRANGE WAYS OF DEATH
#284 THE STRANGE WAYS OF DEATH
Scripture Exodus 20:13, Matthew 5:21-22, NIV Orig. 7/3/1966 (2/1976)
Rewr. 7/13/1999
Passage:
Exodus 20:13
13 “You shall not murder.”
Matthew 5:21-22
21 “You have heard that it was said to the people long ago, ‘You shall not murder,[a] and anyone who murders will be subject to judgment.’ 22 But I tell you that anyone who is angry with a brother or sister[b][c] will be subject to judgment. Again, anyone who says to a brother or sister, ‘Raca,’[d] is answerable to the court. And anyone who says, ‘You fool!’ will be in danger of the fire of hell.”
Purpose: Continuing a series from the Ten Commandments, here calling attention to the involvements of causal death.
Keywords: Death Murder Series: Ten Commandments Suicide
Timeline/Series: Sequential
Introduction
The strange ways of death affect each of us. To the one it lends itself in quest of eternal values, of God Himself. To the other it causes the bristling of the hairs of doubt and dread.
I struggled for years with the husband of a church member who would close any conversation in reference to his lack of faith with a heated charge. He could not, would not believe in a God who would allow such perpetration of evil as that heaped upon the German Jews of the Second World War.
But many have been propelled to faith by some disquieting visit from the death angel. My good friend, and fellow New Orleans pastor, came to seminary after such a visit in a Kerr-McGee pumping station in Oklahoma. He was an active Christian. In fact, it was his relationship to his church that was directly related to the death Ralph Blevins arranged for a Wednesday night off to participate in an important church business meeting. And on that night, one of the proverbial plains tornadoes roared into his home town and vented its fury precisely on that pumping station, killing the substitute attendant. It was that death that turned my friend toward the pursuit of a seminary education and a commitment to the pastorate.
After graduation he became pastor of a struggling congregation on the lower side of the Crescent City, and never found reason to leave. Retired now, “death’s strange ways” touched his life in New Orleans as well. His older daughter’s husband was killed, electrocuted, while flying a wire-controlled model airplane. His younger daughter, twenty-one at the time, [died] of heart failure.
Some of “death’s strange ways” may be listed as “acts of God.” Death is much easier to deal with if it is so defined. Others cannot be! Must not be! How does one make peace with such loss when it results from the machinations of other human beings. God’s Word is adamant. “Thou shalt not kill.” But a lot of people are being killed, and artful devices in the hands of other people are clearly at fault.
I. Our First Consideration is of Death by Malice. James 4:1, “What causes fights and quarrels among you? Don’t they come from your desires that battle within you? . . . You kill and covet.”
1. The heat of anger.
a. Our law differentiates between premeditated and unpremeditated. A man was dead from a gun in another man’s hand, but in defending himself he was ruled to have caused the discharge. Justice? Unless he was our friend.
b. The scripture concludes a difference. Numbers 35:11, “. . . cities of refuge. . . , that the slayer may flee thither, which killeth any person at unawares.”
1-A type of mercy.
2-Personal responsibility was taught.
3-Presumptuous wrong, high-handed sin, offered no recourse. Numbers 15:30f
c. So, man assumes the responsibility, regardless of terms, when he takes another’s life. Shakespeare Othello: “Put out the light, and then put out the light: If I quench thee, thou flaming minister, I can again thy flaming light restore. But once put out thy light, . . . I know not where is that Promethean heat that can thy light relume.”
2. Beyond the heat of anger looms the stress of war. A 4th grader asked how WWII started. The mother told of the Japanese attack on Pearl Harbor. The father, in another room, came quickly to point out all the other factors involved. A heated argument ensued. “Never mind, I think I get the picture.”
a. A Norwegian statistician fed information about wars into a computer It revealed the following:
1-5,575 years of recorded history
2-14,530 wars (2-1/2 times as many)
3- Of 190 generations, 10 without war
4-WWI mobilized 65 million with 8-1/2 million deaths and 37-1/2 million casualties
5-WWII mobilized 100 million with 22 million deaths and 34 million casualties
b. Hosea knew what God’s attitude was. Hosea 2:18, “Bow and sword and battle I will abolish from the land so that all may lie down in safety.” Amos 9:14, “They will rebuild the ruined cities and live in them.”
c. When you find God’s people with a sword in their hand or a dagger at their throats, you remember, it is man’s device, not God’s.
II. We Must Not Overlook Death Without Malice. The “city of refuge” is for the one killing “any person at unawares.” (Numbers 15:11)
1. Scripture says little other than implantation of these cities of refuge.
a. A clear difference between killing and murder.
b. But to have accidentally caused the death of another defines guilt.
c. Such refugees taught personal responsibility.
2. Accidental death take a different hue in this 20th Century.
a. Daggers didn’t go off accidentally.
b. People were rarely run down by camels.
c. The only people with wheels were potters.
3. Our day is beset by the woes of the avoidable accident.
a. Every family in this room has been visited by accidental death, many caused.
b. I have had to preach these funerals.
c. I passed recently within two blocks of a railroad crossing where family of six killed on their way to church.
4. I pray to reach a safe haven. I pray that I may not be guilty of another’s death. The single best thing you can do is to teach by example: alcohol does not belong behind the wheel, and seat belts should always be used.
5. There is also a liability beyond immediate cause.
a. Employees are to take seriously the safety of all employees.
b. Landlords should be held accountable for hazardous dwellings.
c. There are those who are culturally dead barely existing in a society that has passed them by. Was it suicide or murder?
III. Consider this Death by Suicide.
1. The statistics are appalling.
a. Every 2-1/2 minutes someone attempts.
b. 25,000 a year (in U.S.) succeed.
c. So many have occurred on the West Coast that some researchers have called it the West Coast sickness.
d. They’re mostly white, Protestant. They’ve run as far as they can run.
2. On the world scene it is frightening.
a. W.H.O. researcher Anthony May
b. May be as many as 1000/day—10X as many attempts.
IV. There are Biblical Examples of Proxy Deaths. David had Uriah put in the line of fire to ensure his death.
1. There is the guilt of the alcohol-sated driver who causes other deaths. A Kentucky man last year who hit a church bus. Is “may he rot in jail” unkind?
2. Drugs (even prescribed) cause people to do things unacceptable by decent standards.
a. Baby found wandering on freeway in New Orleans.
b. At the controls of an 18-wheeler, speeding freight, 200,000-barrel tanker. Drug tests are no longer a deprivation of freedom, they are essential to order.
V. If Christ were Standing Here Before Us, There are Some Things I Imagine He Would Say.
1. No one knows better than He that all must be finally visited by dusky death.
2. To be responsible for the death of any human being under any conditions as a grievous sin (with or without malice, avoidable or not, premeditated or not)
3. To take up arms to do bodily harm must be perceived as against the will of God, and is therefore sin.
4. Even when war is an inescapable alternative, we are to remember our accountability.
5. Our city of refuge: Proverbs 18:10, “The name of the Lord is a strong tower; the righteous run into it and are safe.”