|
June 2008 Issue
Protecting
Our Children
Reaping the Fruit of "Life Devalued"
Child Abuse and Neglect
by Richard Land
Are human beings simply specks
of cosmic dust blown on the winds of fate? Is there no meaning
or purpose to existence? Or, has each human being been created
with a purpose and plan for his or her life? Do we possess any
more inherent value than anything else God created? Are we just
another species within the animal kingdom, or are we made in the
image of God?
David, the shepherd-king of Israel, gives the answer in a lyrical
and beautiful description of our place in the universe in Psalm
8: "Lord, our Lord, how magnificent is Your name throughout
the earth! You have covered the heavens with Your majesty,"
he marvels. "When I observe Your heavens, the work
of Your fingers, the moon and the stars, which You set in place,
what is man that You remember him, the son of man that You look
after him?" he asks, marveling that the Creator of such
a vast universe would stoop to lavish His attention on frail human
beings.
"You made him little less than God and crowned him
with glory and honor. You made him lord over the works of Your
hands; You put everything under his feet: all the sheep and oxen,
as well as animals in the wild, birds of the sky, and fish of
the sea passing through the currents of the seas" (Psalm
8:1, 3-8).
Man is the special creation of God, made in His own image.
Each person is a unique creation of God, of incalculable value
to Him, and ultimately accountable to Him (Psalm 139). Each of
us has a God-given destiny to fulfill, not only for today but
also for all eternity. What difference does it make when a society
believes that some lives are more valuable than others? Moral
chaos supplants God's perfect order, and the smallest and most
defenseless among us are in mortal danger.
The assault upon innocent children, unborn and born, reflects
our culture's moral confusion and is revealed in crimes of violence
physical, emotional, and sexual against children.
In a culture engulfed and submerged in moral relativism, children
are particularly vulnerable to the depraved sexual appetites of
adults. Loving parents who bond with their children will stop
at nothing to keep them out of harm's way, protect them from imminent
danger, and rescue them from crisis. Yet the evidence of how America
raises her children looks like anything but such loving care.
Child abuse is at epidemic proportions in the United States,
at all socioeconomic levels. It is an issue for which everyone
must take responsibility, both in terms of reporting and adequate
supervision of children. And we all need to examine the societal
reasons that have turned this country from the child-nurturing
society that it once was to the child-neglecting and child-abusing
society that it is now in the first part of the twenty-first century.
Children who have been victimized bear emotional scars and
are tormented by the fear they will be targeted again. Too often,
their psyches damaged, they pass along the ugly legacy of violence
against children.
Years ago, Carl F. H. Henry observed that twentieth-century
philosophies have succumbed to man-centered rather than God-centered
focus and orientation. Man rather than God defines truth and goodness
in most contemporary universities: "The greatest overturn
of ideas and ideals in the history of human thought ... [that]
assumes the comprehensive contingency of everything, including
God; the total temporality of all things; the radical relativity
of all human thought and life; and the absolute autonomy of man."
Obviously, Christianity has become marginalized.
In words that should haunt every thinking Christian, Henry
wrote of "a multitude of seething and tormented minds"
that "speak now and then of right and wrong, but never of
absolutes. They live in a world no longer sure of definitions.
Some occasionally churn up the vocabulary of values, but their
values take on the sense of mere wants and desires."
This recalls the account in Romans 1:21-28: For though they
knew God, they did not glorify Him as God or show gratitude. Instead,
their thinking became nonsense, and their senseless minds were
darkened. Claiming to be wise, they became fools and exchanged
the glory of the immortal God for images resembling mortal man....
Therefore God delivered them over in the cravings of their hearts....
God delivered them over to degrading passions. ...God delivered
them over to a worthless mind to do what is morally wrong.
The noted Evangelical philosopher G.K. Chesterton observed
that: "The nineteenth century decided to have no religious
authority. The twentieth century seems disposed to have any religious
authority" [Illustrated London News, April 26, 1924,
emphasis supplied]. To expand upon his insightful line of thought,
we might say the twenty-first century appears to have forgotten
there ever was such a thing as religious authority or moral absolutes
of any kind.
It is paramount that the body of Christ do all it can to protect
these little ones, from insuring that the church and all her ministries
are a place of comfort and safety to reaching out to new moms
and dads who are more often that not suddenly overwhelmed
by the challenges of parenthood. A church that allows any child
to be harmed through negligence or neglect soils its witness in
the community and brings public disrepute to God. We must be ever
vigilant in protecting the children within our midst.
Yet the greatest contribution the church can offer to remedy
this scourge of abuse and neglect upon innocent children is to
reassert boldly the Truth that all human life is precious and
should be protected.
In his foreword to the Ethics & Religious Liberty Commission
publication, Our Southern Baptist Heritage of Life, my
friend Timothy George, dean of Beeson Divinity School, warns of
the "correlation between the decline in Bible-based faith
and morality and the successful assault on the sanctity of human
life." The trends offer a chilling parallel with the infamous
genocides of Hitler. Once the German people rejected the premise
that all human life is created by God and is sacred to Him, then
it became possible to do virtually anything to at least some human
beings. The first victims of the Third Reich's diminishing of
human life were not German Jews, but mentally challenged German
boys and girls who were decreed to have lebensunwertes Leben
lives unworthy of life.
America is practicing child sacrifice. We are victimizing our
unborn babies through abortion and our young children through
abuse and neglect because we have forgotten God and worshiped
and served the creature more than the Creator. The wholesale abortion
of approximately one third of our children for more than three
decades has brutalized and desensitized our society and has caused
the collective societal devaluation of human life itself.
No child deserves to be assaulted, abandoned, or maltreated.
The rotten fruit of a culture that allows human life to be devalued
renders a vile stench that should sting our nostrils. It is for
those of us who know God, having surveyed the tragic landscape
of our culture and with our hearts broken over the shattered lives
of so many of our nation's children, to resolve before God that
we will do everything within our power to revalue each and every
human life and to extend to every child born and unborn
the protection they deserve and that is their "unalienable
right" as a human being.
Richard Land is a member of Clearview Baptist
Church in Nashville, Tennessee, and president of The Ethics &
Religious Liberty Commission of the Southern Baptist Convention.

|