James 4_ 1- 3       The Cycle of Violence

Rev. David Holwick  L

First Baptist Church                    

Ledgewood, New Jersey                              

March 28, 2004

James 4:1-3


THE CYCLE OF VIOLENCE



  I. The Passion of the People.

      A. Endless cycle of violence in Palestine.

          1) Israeli assassination of crippled Hamas founder.

          2) Palestinian child bombers (twice).


      B. Cultures of revenge.

          1) 1972 Munich Olympic massacre - each of 11 terrorists were

                hunted down and killed by the Israeli secret police.

          2) Hamas vows revenge for assassination.

              a) Israel will respond to revenge attacks...  (off. policy)


      C. Jesus is different.

          1) "Love your enemies."

          2) "Turn other cheek."

          3) "Father, forgive them..." - even while they crucified him.


      D. Where do you stand?

          1) Christians are often torn between peace and violence.

          2) It is not an international problem - it is a human one.


II. The roots of violence.

      A. Genetic programming?

          1) Violence among apes.  (mostly due to males)


      As early as 1974, researchers in Gombe National Park in Tanzania

         had been startled to observe chimpanzee males launching lethal

            raids into the territory of neighboring chimps.

      These were clearly not food-gathering expeditions.

      The chimps did not stop to eat, and they did not make any of

         their normal calls and shouts.

      Instead, they crept silently into the territory of a neighboring

         group and hid until they saw a lone chimp.

      Screaming with excitement, they would ambush the victim, hold him

         immobile and beat him to death.


      In one well-documented case in Tanzania, a group of male chimps

         used such ambushes to eliminate a whole band of neighbors.

      Further research found that such violence was not limited to

         chimpanzees.

      Male gorillas, for example, were observed ripping infants out of

         their mothers' arms and killing them, which made the male more

            desirable to the mother.

                                                                   #27454


          2) One exception: bonobos.

              a) Groups get along and males are docile.

              b) If they are not, the females beat the snot out of them.


      B. Spiritual deficit.

          1) Cain and Abel.                                Genesis 4:6-10

              a) His heart wasn't right, so he snuffed his brother.

              b) Immediately he feared retribution, so God marks him.

                  1> (Yes, they must have married their siblings.)

          2) Violence is present in every human culture.


             From modern New York City to the primitive Waorani people

                of the Andean foothills.

             The Waorani conduct frequent raids on each other that cause

                a startling violent-death rate of 60 percent, according

                   to anthropologists.                             #27454


      C. It doesn't have to reach murder.

          1) Conflict, even in churches.

          2) Anger and abuse, even in our own families.

          3) The seed of violence is in all of us.


       In 1960, Israeli undercover agents orchestrated the daring

          kidnapping of one of the worst of the Holocaust's masterminds,

             Adolf Eichmann.

       After capturing him in his South American hideout, they

          transported him to Israel to stand trial.

       There, prosecutors called a string of former concentration camp

          prisoners as witnesses.

       One was a small man named Yehiel Dinur, who had miraculously

          escaped death in Auschwitz.


       On his day to testify, Dinur entered the courtroom and stared at

          the man in the bulletproof glass booth.

       This was the man who had murdered Dinur's friends, personally

          executed a number of Jews, and presided over the slaughter of

             millions more.


       As the eyes of the two men met - victim and murderous tyrant -

          the courtroom fell silent, filled with the tension of the

             confrontation.

       But no one was prepared for what happened next.

          Yehiel Dinur began to shout and sob, collapsing to the floor.

             Was he overcome by hatred?

             By the horrifying memories?

             By the evil incarnate in Eichmann's face?

       No.


       As he later explained in a riveting 60 Minutes interview, it was

          because Eichmann was not the demon that Dinur had expected.

       Rather, he was an ordinary man, just like anyone else.

       And in that one instant, Dinur came to a stunning realization

          that sin and evil are the human condition.

       "I was afraid about myself," Dinur said.

          "I saw that I am capable to do this ... exactly like he."


       Dinur's remarkable statements caused Mike Wallace to turn to the

          camera and ask the audience the most painful of all questions:

       "How was it possible for a man to act as Eichmann acted?

          Was he a monster?

          A madman?

          Or was he perhaps something even more terrifying?

             Was he normal?"

       Yehiel Dinur's shocking conclusion?

          "Eichmann is in all of us."                             #27271


      D. Violence starts within.

          1) Jesus - it originates in your heart.

              a) This is why external laws (ie, gun control) cannot

                    halt violence in our country.

          2) James - unmet desires lead to violence.

              a) We want the wrong things, and never get them anyway.

              b) Our motives must be correct, or we face frustration.

              c) Coveting leads to killing.

                  1> Probably exaggerated - his readers probably weren't

                        actually murderers.

                  2> Other places in Bible tie murder with inner anger.


III. Breaking the cycle of violence.     (Discipleship Journal #87, p. 62)

      A. Experience inner peace.

          1) Give your heart to Jesus.

              a) Peace with God affects the rest of us.

              b) Correct priorities lead to contentment, and diffuses

                    anger and violent tendencies.

          2) Keep a heavenly perspective.


      B. Learn to live peaceably.

          1) Start with the teachings of Jesus.

              a) Challenge yourself to follow even the hard ones.

              b) Turn other cheek - means we don't follow the world's

                    principle of getting even, but we respond with love.

              c) Our commitment to love others does not depend on their

                    behavior.

          2) Have a peaceable attitude.

              a) Be aware of your own tendencies.

                  1> Psalm 4:4  "In your anger do not sin; when you are

                        on your beds, search your hearts and be silent."

                  2> Note your weak areas when dealing with anger.

              b) If certain circumstances make you lose control,

                    manage them before situation arises.


      C. Make peace in your own relationships.

          1) Listen, rather than attacking, defending or escaping.

              a) James 1:19-20  "Be quick to listen...slow to anger."

              b) When confronted with anger, seek understanding.

          2) De-escalate anger.

              a) Proverbs 15:1  "A gentle answer turns away wrath,

                    but a harsh word stirs up anger."

                 Proverbs 25:15  "A gentle tongue can break a bone."

              b) Agree with at least part of what an angry person is

                   saying.

          3) Seek creative outlets for aggression.


IV. God hates violence.  Do you?                            Malachi 2:16

      A. Be a peacemaker.

      B. Forgive and love.



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SOURCES FOR ILLUSTRATIONS USED IN THIS SERMON:


#27271  "Eichmann Is In All of Us," Rev. Keith Manry, in sermon

           "Uncovering The Lie: Face To Face With The Enemy Within," at

           www.SermonCentral.com.  It is sermon #18371 in the database.


#27454  "Warfare Is Not Uniquely Human," Tom Pelton, Harvard Magazine,

            http://www.harvard-magazine.com/issues/jf97/right.chimp.html


These and 25,000 others are part of a database that can be downloaded,

absolutely free, at http://www.holwick.com/database.html

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