Corrie ten Boom was a Dutch woman who loved Jesus. During the Nazi occupation of Holland, her family provided a refuge for Jews.
Her family was betrayed and she and her sister were deported by the Nazis. She was in Ravensbrück concentration camp in Mecklenburg-Western Pomerania. A very hard fate.
She began to encourage the other prisoners with her biblical faith. She held fast to St Paul's admonition to be thankful for everything.
In everything give thanks; for this is God’s will for you in Christ Jesus. 1 Th 5:18 NASB95
What, really? For the disgusting food? For the cold?
She began to speak aloud an unthinkable thanksgiving. ‘Thank you for the bedbugs.’
But after saying this nonsensical prayer, she had a revelation.
Because of the bedbugs, they were not bothered by the cruel guards in their unsavoury dormitory. The guards wanted to avoid these disgusting vermin at all costs.
She also had to pass another tough test.
She had to overcome her hatred. Jesus taught that we must love and bless our enemies.
Her beloved sister became seriously ill and died in the concentration camp.
Then Corrie was allowed to leave the concentration camp. That was a miracle. Someone in an office in Germany had made a mistake, and she was released from the concentration camp early because of it. That was a miracle from God.
But she had suffered terribly and lost her family.
After the war, Corrie became a travelling preacher.
God also sent her to minister in Germany, which was also a hard test for her.
After a sermon in Germany, a guard from the concentration camp approached her and asked for forgiveness.
Corrie was frozen with shock. Traumatised.
But she forced herself to shake hands.
Bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. Lk 6:28 NIV
Corrie was a victim of the Nazis, but she refused to take upon herself the identity of a victim.
Are you perhaps a target for cruel attacks in your family or at work?
God forbid, but it may also be happening in your church. In the Bible, the Pharisees were not nice people, but not all Pharisees are Jews. Unfortunately, there are also Christian Pharisees.
You can get used to expecting bullying. You can be despised and then start to disrespect yourself.
That's a false identity. You are not that person, no matter how many times you have failed.
God is your creator and he made you good.
It could be that your family were Nazi criminals, or persecuted Jews. I met a wonderful preacher who had been a gangster and a pimp. I know a lovely Christian woman who was a prostitute.
No matter where you come from, God has made you good. God has a good plan for your life, and He wants to fulfil His plan.
But you must recognise yourself as God's good creation.
Bless those who curse you, pray for those who mistreat you. Lk 6:28 NIV
You know, those who are used to being despised and cursed often learn to despise and curse themselves.
You must learn to bless your tormentors, but also to bless yourself.
Start saying blessings over yourself.
“The LORD bless you and keep you;
the LORD make his face shine on you and be gracious to you;
the LORD turn his face toward you and give you peace.” Num 6:24–26 NIV
Thursday, September 26, 2024
Blessings Break Curses
Tuesday, February 6, 2024
Unlikely Miracles in Hard Places
1941 Paris under Nazi occupation. Jews had to wear a yellow star and were deported and murdered en masse.
A seven-year-old Jewish boy was visiting a Christian friend, but stayed too long. There was a curfew for Jews. After 6 pm, he risked being arrested in the street.
He turned his jacket inside out to hide the yellow star and made his way home.
But then his nightmare got worse. A German officer in a black SS uniform approached him.
It wasn't a dream, but then, as in a dream, the tables were turned.
The officer hugged him lovingly and spoke to him in a friendly way, even though the boy didn't understand German. Then he showed him a photograph of a boy, perhaps his son. And it got even better. He gave the astonished boy some banknotes and sent him home with more kind words.
The boy and his family survived the Nazi era, and they settled in Israel after the war. The boy never forgot the kind SS officer. Fascinated by the contradictions of human nature, he studied psychology.
He became a psychologist in the Israeli army and then went to America to do his doctorate.
He became a world-famous author and Nobel laureate.
Are you perhaps in an inhuman situation like this SS officer? But there is a good God who has good plans for you.
Oskar Schindler was a wealthy businessman and Nazi member. He used his position to save many Jews.
I met a Russian woman. Her father was a communist, but her mother took the children to the church while her father was politically active.
A German concentration camp commandant used his position to save many Jews. He helped the Jews to build hiding places in the camp so that the SS could not find them.
As a young Christian, I was cruelly abused in an authoritarian church. I had a nervous breakdown and needed intensive psychiatric help. I spent a whole year in hospital, but God still had good plans for my life.
When I returned home, I visited other patients and encouraged them to trust in God.
The Apostle Paul was cruelly persecuted, flogged and sometimes imprisoned, but he used his imprisonment to pray for persecuted Christians. He also wrote letters to the churches. These letters are now books of the New Testament.
What is your situation like? Probably not ideal. Perhaps a nightmare.
Jesus wants to rescue you from your predicament, but perhaps not overnight.
Corrie ten Boom was a Dutch woman who ended up in a concentration camp in Germany because her family had been hiding Jews. She suffered terrible ordeals, but even in the concentration camp she served as a missionary.
Her sister was murdered in the camp, but she was released one day because of a clerical error by German officials.
After the war, she became a travelling evangelist, also in Germany.
Is your situation very difficult? If it's possible to escape a brutal marriage, it's probably all the better. Maternal care and the safety of the children outweigh the obligation to stay in the marriage.
If you are being victimised in a legalistic church, you may not be allowed to leave, but such rules do not come from God.
But even if you can't escape your situation, God can help you to be a blessing to others.
The apostle Paul vividly describes his trust in God in the midst of adversity.
We are hard-pressed on every side, but not crushed; perplexed, but not in despair;
persecuted, but not abandoned; struck down, but not destroyed.
We always carry around in our body the death of Jesus, so that the life of Jesus may also be revealed in our body. 2 Co 4:8–10 NIV