Glorifying God, Celebrating Liberty
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| by Jeff
Quinn |
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I have been asked on occasion how I can justify carrying a gun
and
being a Christian at the same time. This is always posed by someone who
is trying to trip me up. It can either be a devout Christian asking the
question, or a Hedonistic heathen; it doesn’t matter. There are those
who believe, or choose to believe, that a Christian must be absolutely
passive in all things. I am not just referring to those Christians who
ride a horse and buggy. I have been asked about my views on self
defense by Christians of most every denomination. Some are genuinely
seeking an answer. Others just want to chastise me for not being as
"faithful" as themselves.
Many will accept every modern worldly convenience,
but scoff at the
idea of trying to protect oneself or the life of another. Their
attitude seems to be that "God will protect us". They do have a valid
point. God will protect us from the evils of this world, if he so
chooses. I would rather have God on my side than a battery of
Sidewinder missiles. Indeed, our God can protect us.
However, that
attitude would lead one to believe that he could walk through Harlem
wearing a Ku Klux Klan
outfit campaigning for George Wallace, and that
"God will protect us". God could get you through that, but Jesus said
that we should not tempt God. I tend to agree with his assessment.
In the saddlebag of my motorcycle, I
have a tiny cross
with the
inscription "Faith Moves Mountains", but I also ride in the mountains
of East Tennessee and the western United States, and I make sure that
my brakes are in good working order. I could just trust God to catch
me, but again, that could be construed as tempting God. God gave us
brakes on our motorcycles, and that is sufficient.

God can indeed protect us. He can keep us safe on the
highways, and
he can also keep us safe from those who would intentionally do us harm.
I am not speaking of politicians here, but of the evil that is in the
souls of some human beings. Be certain in this; there is true evil in
this world, and it sometimes manifests itself in the form of a low life
predator. Being a Christian, it is difficult to believe that people,
made of the same composition of flesh, bone, and blood as ourselves,
could be truly evil. We have a Heavenly Father who has filled us with
basic goodness, but Jesus said that there are those "who are of the
synagogue of Satan".
No sane individual would hesitate to defend himself from a
rabid dog
or a poisonous snake, but are the two-legged vipers of this world any
better than an animal? An animal does that which comes naturally to
him. Children of Satan do that which comes naturally to them: that
being evil.
Can God protect us from those who would do us harm?
Absolutely.
However, just as he has given us brakes to save us from the mountain,
he has also given to us the tools necessary to defend ourselves, and
those whom God has given to us. As Christian men, God not only allows
us to protect our families, but he expects us to protect those whom he
has placed in our care. This may seem contrary to the mandate for us to
"turn the other cheek", and I too have pondered over this. It takes
great strength to turn the other cheek as Jesus intended. That is
not
a commandment to be weak. Jesus did not operate from a position of
weakness. In fact, nothing ever happened to him that he did not allow.
God has entrusted us with the care of our brothers,
whether those
"brothers" be the children that he has given to us, or our wives, or
our friends. We could set our children outside in the cold and trust
that God would keep them warm. We could abandon them and trust that God
will keep them fed. We could let them loose on the city streets or send
them off for a week at Neverland, and trust that no sick, evil freak
would abuse them. As Christians, we do not do these things to our
children. God expects us to clothe them, feed them, and protect them
from the evil that is inherent in this world. He gave to us the ability
to buy clothes, grow food, build a fire, and to fight off those who
would do us harm. In the time that Jesus walked the Earth in the form
of man, the short sword was the
state-of-the-art weapon. He told his
followers that the time of living carefree was over, and that the time
had come for those without a sword to "sell his garment and buy one".

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Today, we have better than a sword. We have more modern
weapons at
our disposal, and so does our enemy. Keeping a good rifle to defend
one’s homestead and a reliable handgun to ward off evil that finds you
when you least expect it is not only prudent, but expected. A Christian
man is not mean, hateful, spiteful, or quick to anger. Neither is he
weak. God never told us to let the evil in this world run over us like
a train. He never told us to stand by idly as those whom he trusted to
us are abused or killed. A Christian man who packs a gun does not look
for trouble, and avoids it if at all possible. However, evil can seek
you out.
A well-armed man operates from a position of
strength. He is less
likely to have to fight than an unarmed man. The predators in this
world look for easy prey. God did not put his people on this Earth to
be prey for the sons of Satan. God expects us to stand up for what is
right, and he gives us the tools with which to do so. When you defend
the life of one of God’s children, you are defending good against evil.
Use your good sense and God’s word to avoid trouble. If necessary, use
the gun at your side to stand against it.
Jeff Quinn |
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