What fellowship has light with darkness?

I didn’t realize it until a friend and colleague texted me this morning, but the assassination of Charlie Kirk yesterday gave me a similar feeling to what I experienced twenty-four years ago on 9/11/01 while I was attending Bible College.

I first heard of the terrorist attacks during our choir period. The director came into the room very distraught and told us there had been an explosion at the World Trade Center. That’s all we knew at that point, so we prayed and went on with practice. I foolishly dismissed the director’s concern, figuring he was merely being overdramatic.

On the way to my next class, I saw a television that revealed the carnage and destruction. I spent the rest of that day in a fog.

That evening, I sat outside a coffee shop with a few friends as we watched cars line up at the gas station. We discussed the evil and darkness of this world and felt totally inadequate to do anything about it. That conversation was a stark reminder that so many things in this world are completely outside our control. Praise God, that they are not outside of His.

God only gives each of us a certain sphere of influence, and we must be faithful in that. Over the years, I’ve come to realize that Scripture teaches that faithfulness is the only true rubric of success and only God’s determination of faithfulness matters (1 Cor. 4:2-5).

Yesterday, Charlie Kirk, a godly man who was faithful over his large, God-given sphere of influence, was assassinated – another reminder of the evil and darkness that vainly seeks to fill this world.

My fellow saints, what are we to do? Here’s where I suggest we start:

  1. Remember. “This world is very evil.” A hymn was written in the 12th century with that title. It was true then; it remains true today and every day. Read and/or sing that hymn. It’ll give you a proper, Scriptural perspective on facing the evil of this world. You can find it here.
  2. Be faithful. God hasn’t given many a sphere of influence as large as Charlie’s, but the size of our spheres doesn’t matter – only faithfulness does. Do what God puts in front of you to do with diligence, determination, strength, and zeal. Then go to your bed in peace (Ps. 4:8).
  3. Fight. Fight knowing that this fight is not against flesh and blood but against the spiritual forces of evil in the heavenly places (Eph. 6:12). No, this fight will not be won with any weapon that can do bodily harm. The war has already been won by Christ’s death and resurrection. Battles still rage, but the victory is secure. Fight the battle with the words of Truth and speak.
  4. Speak. Charlie did this with excellence and eloquence. He spoke into the darkness in ways that few of us can. But his example taught us one simple lesson: THE TRUTH ALWAYS WINS. Speak knowing you are not alone. Even though most of us (myself included) don’t have the logic and rhetoric of Charlie, it is a skill that can be nurtured and strengthened. Strengthen yours. Then, go. Drive back the evil with words of Truth. Ultimately, it doesn’t matter if you win people over. That’s not your job anyway; that task belongs to the Holy Spirit who alone can change hearts. What matters that you are faithful to the Truth.
  5. Pray. Take up the armor of God that shields you from the assaults of the enemy and place the battle squarely in the divine hands that were pierced for you. Jesus is still the Lord of hosts who rules and reigns over all things in His resurrected Body. Christ still governs all things on earth for the sake of His Church (Eph. 1:22-23).

We do not need to mourn for Charlie, and he wouldn’t want us to anyway. He has more peace and joy now than he ever had in this life, and he had plenty of both. We do mourn for his widow and children, but we do so knowing that Christ has them. We mourn for ourselves and for this world that no longer has Charlie’s light. And we mourn knowing and trusting that God determines when each individual’s race has been won (2 Tim. 4:7).

Finally (to paraphrase another person), our Christian faith requires us to love our enemies and pray for those who curse and persecute us. It does not require us to stand idly by in the midst of chaos, evil, savagery, and violence. Spread the name and light of Jesus every opportunity you have and everywhere you go.

As you do that, remember that light has no fellowship with darkness (2 Co. 6:14). Yes, absolutely, strive to rescue others from the darkness. But, if they love the darkness rather than the light, shake the dust from your feet.

Go. Live even now in the Light that will never know dusk.

Leave a comment