Death Is No Escape
Tim Challies
Earlier this morning I finished up Richard J. Evans’ The Third Reich at War,
a very long, very thorough, very interesting tracing of the rise and
fall of German military might from 1939 to 1945. More than just another
account of the Second World War, this book looks to battles, but also
to atrocities and to the German home front. It provides an overall
perspective on the German experience of war, from the men on the front
lines, to the Jews in concentration camps, to the men and women who
lived in the cities and worked in the factories. It goes so far as to
look at German art and music during the war. It is, in a word, thorough.
Whenever I read about Germany in the Second World War, I am amazed
that so many normal people, people not unlike you and me, were involved
in acts of astounding evil. While many Germans disagreed with the
wholesale extermination of Jews and Gypsies and people with mental
disabilities, few had the will or courage to voice their disagreements.
Many were complicit in these crimes, many others were actively
involved, even if they did not fully support the ideology behind them.
We read of otherwise ordinary men who murdered hundreds or thousands or
hundreds of thousands of helpless people. We read of monsters who found
joy in torture and mutilation. We read of doctors, sworn to protect
human life, who instead took the opportunity to carry out barbarous
experiments on young children, torturing them and killing them with no
apparent attack of conscience. Surely Satan had a field day in Germany
in those days.
As I read about these crimes, these atrocities, my heart cries out
for justice. This is a natural cry, I think, and a good one. Yet so
often it seems that these people got away with their crimes. Hitler,
the mastermind of it all, died in 1945, but did so at his own hand. A
bullet to the head hardly seems to satisfy the demands of justice based
on the lives of 6 million Jews and countless millions of other lives
destroyed in the war he began. It almost seems that he got away with
it. Or Josef Mengele who carried out ruthless medical experiments at
Auschwitz and, who after the war, escaped to South America where he
lived in relative peace until he died of a stroke in 1979. Where is the
justice in this? Did he get away with it?
When we read in the Bible that the law of God is written on our
hearts, surely this is some of what we mean?that we have a sense of
justice and that we want this sense of justice to be served, to be
satisfied. We also know from Scripture that justice will be served.
Indeed, it must be served. And we want it to be served.
Justice is “the quality of being just or fair;” it is “judgment
involved in the determination of rights and the assignment of rewards
and punishments.” But it is more. A Christian definition of justice
goes further. Justice is the due reward or punishment for an act. God
must punish evil. We know this. We tremble at this thought. Or we ought
to.
God must punish evil. When we come to know Jesus Christ, we are
shocked at the reality that He willingly paid the penalty for the sins
of all who would believe in Him, even those who have committed
unimaginable sins. When I believed in Him I saw that He suffered for
me. I deserve to be punished for all those things I’ve done to forsake
Him. But Jesus, through His great mercy, accepted this punishment on my
behalf. Justice has been served.
But those who do not turn to Him must be punished for their own sin.
And it is here that we see how justice will be served. The sin of even
a man as blatantly evil as Adolph Eichmann, who relentlessly hunted
down Jews throughout the Reich, differs from mine only in degree. He
and I are both sinners through and through. We are both sinners in
thought, word and deed. But God has seen fit to extend grace to
restrain me from doing all of the evil I’d otherwise so love to do. And
He has accepted Jesus’ work on the cross on my behalf. Justice has
already been served on my behalf. But for those who do not turn to
Christ, justice is still in the future. Justice hovers just over the
horizon.
We do not look forward to the punishment of another person with a
sick glee. We do not rejoice in what they must suffer. But we do look
forward to the fact that justice will finally be served. God will not
and cannot allow sin to be unpunished. And while we are humbled by the
grace that is ours through Christ, we still thank God that there will
be justice. We do not have unlimited license to sin knowing that death
allows us to escape just punishment. Instead we see that death is just
the beginning, just the entrance, to the courtroom where justice will
be served. Death is no escape.