Ravi Zacharias Speaks To 40,000

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thanks guys and what an inspiration all the music here fabulous and some of them have teamed up with in other parts of the world it's just amazing to be part of a group like this yes Louie is right I do have the privilege of speaking in many parts of the globe but I don't know if I've ever gotten anything like this this is this is fearsome fearsome thing last night I was having dinner with my family and I was telling them you know what 40,000 is just too big for me I said anything beyond 5a is daunting and my daughter says dad five I said I mean five thousand she said oh I was getting worried for a moment out there but truly what an incredible opportunity just to be part of this I want to thank Louie for inviting me I want to thank all of the organizers if I could tell you the number of countries from where I've received email messages this morning you'd be amazed people from all over the globe right from the time i wakened up saying they're praying praying for this conference so thank you for coming thank you for taking these days to be part of this because we are living in pretty dark and dismal times I've been an itinerant for over four decades covered over 70 countries and scores of campuses I have never sensed a time as uncertain as the times in which we live in fact one of the earliest messages I received this morning was from my son Nathan who lives in the city here and he said dad I just want you to know as a young father he's got a two-year-old daughter he said I'm so nervous about the future he's thinking of all of the political rhetoric and all of the quick and on which we are building our structures and wondering what sort of a world his little one will grow up to be in and the only reason I have hope the only reason I have hope apart from the fact that we serve a sovereign and an awesome God is because of young people like you whose lives he will transform and make you a light in this very dark world I really wondered what I was going to say because Louie has already spoken to you on the death and the resurrection of Jesus Christ those two pillars which our faiths really stand then John Piper from eternity past to Eternity to come and the cross in the middle there's nothing left to say I might give you a few Indian recipes because that's what we'll be eating up there at the marriage supper of the land so he may as well get ready for that and I'm a Christian apologist apologetics comes from the Greek word apologia it is used quite often by the scripture writers when Peter says always be prepared to give an apologia a reason an answer for the hope that is within you and years ago I remember watching a commercial and it would flash a simple question on the screen how old is this universe and then it would go on to different more complex questions and suddenly it would change to ordinary questions like do you like pizza and then the screen would go black and a silhouetted figure of a motorbike would emerge on the screen and in a very somber voice you'd hear these words Yamaha it may not be the answer but at least it's not another question which took me back to a few years back when I was flying in from I think it is Bangkok to Newark New Jersey it's a long flight you look like your passport picture after you land and as I was finding my way to the gate I arrived at the gate but the Marquis said a different flight so there's a lady sitting at the end I said excuse me ma'am is this flight going to Atlanta or where it says on the marquee she said I was going to Atlanta I said good so I turned around to go and get myself a cup of coffee and I heard the patter of feet behind me I'm not making up the story that's exactly what happened so I'm walking to get a cup of coffee the patter of feet behind me and a tap on my shoulder and she said excuse me are you Ravi Zacharias I said I'm afraid so she said that's amazing absolutely amazing I never thought you had questions as well when you're flying you have a lot of questions in fact my journey to Christ began with a series of questions I was only a teenager in the 1960s growing up in India living in the city of New Delhi and one night over coming from radio salon with the words from the Ames brothers it was actually Edie Ames and he said this from the canyons of the mind we wander on and stumble blind wade through the often tangled maze of starless nights and sunless days hoping for some kind of clue a road to lead us to the truth but who will answer a side-by-side two people stand together vowing hand in hand that loves embedded in their hearts but soon an empty feeling starts to overwhelm their hollow lives and if they ask the hows and whys who will answer as far upon a distant Hill a young man's lying very still his arms will never hold his child because a bullet running wild has struck him down and now he cries my god oh hi oh hi and Whoville answer has hi upon a lonely ledge a figure teachers near the edge while during crowds collect below to egg him on with go man go and none will ask what led him to his private day of doom and who Whoville answer as Neath the spreading mushroom tree the world revolves with apathy while overhead a row of specks roars on drowned out by disc effects and if the secret buttons press because one man has been our guest who will answer is our hope in walnut shells one round the neck would temple bells or deep within some ploy stirred walls where hooded figures spray and shores or high upon some dusty shelves or in the Stars or in ourselves who will answer if the soul is darkened by a ferret cannot name if the mind is baffled when the rules don't fit the game who will answer who will answer who will answer that program used to come on every evening at 6:30 and I would listen to that same song again and again pink played and I take my pen and write down the words though two things that amazed me about it it was an American singing that song and I always thought living in India if I'd moved to the west and had a more comfortable livelihood maybe I wouldn't be haunted by all the questions I had and number two it was the way it was worded it is not what is the answer but who will answer and at the age of seventeen lying on a bed of suicide in Delhi when I had no answers and wanted to end it all and a Bible was brought to my bedside and I'd never opened one in my life never I don't even have I owned one and as the words were read to me Jesus said because I live you also shall live I began my journey into truth at that time and I said in that bed Jesus of you're who you claim to be take me out of this hospital bed and I will leave no stone unturned in my pursuit of truth my life was changed young people truth is the most valuable thing in the world Winston Churchill said it is the most valuable thing in the world it is so valuable that often guard oftentimes are just protected by a bodyguard of lies truth is the most valuable thing in the world so valuable that often it is protected by a bodyguard of lies and so my one challenge to you today is does the truth matter to you does the truth matter he doesn't seem to matter in the political arena it doesn't seem to matter in the cultural arena it doesn't seem to matter in so many other pursuits if it's the most valuable thing in the world then we need to put one more link to it it's what Matt and Sharansky the former justice minister of Israel who was incarcerated on the Soviet regime in isolation for a long period of time when he was finally released and went back to his homeland asked if he could return to the prison way had been held for that long and he went with his wife to see that prison in Russia and as he was about to enter he put his arm out and told his wife please let me do this alone because this is where my life was changed pondering what the truth is he went in there alone and wept over all the hours and days that he had spent in there when he came out he asked for a bouquet of flowers that he could lay at the grave of Andrei Sakharov the physicist who gave the former Soviets the atomic bomb and as he laid the flowers on the grave of Sakharov a battery of microphones was waiting in front of him and he was asked why he said this he said mister Sakharov who gave you the atomic bomb made this comment before he died he said I always thought that the most powerful weapon in the world was the bomb he said I've changed my mind the most powerful weapon in the world is not the bomb the most powerful weapon in the world is the truth and so here you have it it's the most valuable thing in the world is the most powerful weapon in the world and when Jesus says I'm the way the truth and the life no one comes unto the Father except through me and when you look at the story of Jesus and encounter with Pilate in John 18 Pilate asks him the most important question he could have ever first he said what is truth and walked away imagine that imagine that standing in front of him who claimed to be the way the truth and the life and Jesus had said to him they they're on the side of truth listen to me and so to you this afternoon I want to present a message within the time that I have allocated here and the message is why do I believe Jesus Christ to be the way the truth and the life I have written a lot on the subject I've written a book on this called Jesus among other gods I've written one called why Jesus none of that material am i bringing to you here today I'm just taking some existentially relevant ideas that I hope will form the impetus within your life to carry this message everywhere you go you see truth is generally measured tell us the Philosopher's in three ways logical consistency empirical adequacy and experiencial relevance is what you are saying logically consistent is it empirically verifiable is it experientially relevant so there's consistency verifiability and relevance may I just take the third of these on the relevance of the message of Jesus and talk to you a little bit a little bit about it number one is his description of the human condition no one no one describes your heart and my heart more accurately than the person of Jesus Christ you know it's yesterday I was talking to a young woman who comes from a completely different faith from a different part of this world and as she was talking to me she said to me I never believed in God because of my faith in the icon that I believed in before she said now all of a sudden in following Jesus Christ I have seen my heart in a way I have never seen it before it was in the 1980s during the Cold War that I had been invited to Warsaw Poland it was grim just cloudy it was cold the Soviet presents already there very much so in the early eighties and I was taken to the to another city where I was speaking to the Polish gathering and one day a man but a medical doctor said to me Ravi have you ever been to a schvitz I said to him yes I've been to some concentration camps booked involved and Dachau he said no no no this is a death camp have you ever been to a death camp I said I don't think so he said let me take you there so we drove emotionally I was totally unprepared for what I was going to say totally unprepared because book involve Dachau and all as much as they show you something didn't show you what Ash wits does and as I walked in there from room to room the only response the only response is spin drop silence you see the pictures of young boys that have been castrated by Mengele standing there as twins photographed like this with skeletons and their skin tight taut around them vacant empty eyes and you look at what the most educated generation then did to humanity in one room there was 14,000 pounds of women's hair stashed behind glass when the women were taken into the gas ovens they were stripped of their hair which was then put into sacks and sold in the marketplace to make money out of all of this 14,000 pounds of that hair still remained behind glass they were being exterminated in Auschwitz at the rate of 12,000 every day they'd be stripped naked and taken into the gas oven gas rooms which they were told were actually their showers and they'd be so tightly packed against each other flesh to flesh already just skin and bones and they would not know what was coming they were told they were gonna get their first shower and all this while shaven bald standing shoulder to shoulder and the spigots would be turned on and the gas would start to descend and somebody would scream gasps another 12,000 shoveled out of there and I remember walking out of there thinking to myself this is what we are capable of even listening to the best music under the world and going to the highest educational systems but I missed something in that you see ladies and gentlemen the problem of evil is not so much that it's so pervasive and so strong out there but the fact that it is deep inside your heart and mind to Viktor Frankl who served twice in Auschwitz as a prisoner says this if we present man with a concept of man which is not true we may well corrupt him when we present him as a automaton of human reflexes as a mind machine as a bundle of instincts as a pawns of drives and reactions as a mere product of heredity and environment we will feed the nihilism to do to which he is already prone I became acquainted with the last stage of corruption in my second concentration camp Auschwitz the gas chambers of Auschwitz so not the out were the ultimate consequence of the theory that man is nothing but the product of heredity and environment or as the Nazis like to say of blood and soil listen to the statement now I'm absolutely convinced absolutely convinced that the gas chambers of outrage Treblinka and my Dannic were ultimately prepared not in some ministry or other in but rather at the desks and lecture halls of nihilistic scientists and philosophers not behind the Ministry of Defense in Berlin but at the desks and the lecture halls of nihilistic scientists and philosophers the theory of relativism today is being presented in the highest Institutes of our learning producing a whole generation of young men and women who no longer believe that there are absolutes that's where it's happening the early stages of corruption may be behind lecterns the end stages is the devaluation the dehumanization the denigration and ultimately the desensitizing sensitization of your conscience and mine one of my great heroes was a man called Malcolm Muggeridge in the early days of my conversion I started to read Muggeridge because he was a brilliant user of language in a way I had never read anybody else muggeragem self was a late comer to Jesus Christ possibly the greatest British journalist of the twentieth century a toss-up between him and GK Chesterton both of them who ended up becoming moralist philosophers I had the privilege of being with Margaret Justin nine months before he died at his home in England and spending one of the finest afternoons I'd ever spent in my life as he talked of his younger days and his own wanderings and we talked about the incident I'm now going to mention to you when he was a young professor of journalism in India he loved the Indian people he stepped out of his quarters one morning and went into the river to swim and as he was swimming at dawn way out in the distance he saw the silhouetted figure of a woman getting into the river far away from him and he was a lustful type of individual he decided he would make a go for her started to swim in his dress in her direction and he said in his heart there was a voice telling him no don't no don't but he said I smothered that voice and swam as hard as I could in her direction and as I came closer and closer the woman herself of course probably by this point stunned that someone was invading her privacy especially as she saw a white man emerge from the waters and has he shipped the water off his space all he could see was a woman covering herself like that and he said I was shocked that I was looking into the face and the body of a woman with leprosy her fingers were gone her nostrils were gone her lips were gone her eyes looked almost like a gargoyle paring out of a wall somewhere and Muggeridge said I was on the verge of saying what a horrible ugly woman till he said I paused and realized no I've got this wrong it wasn't a horrible ugly woman it was this horrible ugly heart with which I was living take the whole issue of pornography today making its billions with supposedly the most beautiful human beings on the face of the earth stirring up within you the ugliest passions you can ever have passions that no human being can ever fulfill no human being can ever fulfill because it takes away the possibility of the impact of a person and puts in its place a feeling a desire as a supreme pursuit to which you go which no person can ultimately satisfy that's what the Bible talks lust of the flesh lust of the eyes pride of life Jesus describes your heart and mind perfectly when he says the heart is sinful and desperately wicked above all things do you know when the philosopher Nietzsche in 1900 before he died at the age of 54 said God is dead in the 19th century and then he went on to say a universal madness will break out in the 20th century and the 20th century will become the bloodiest century in history he made the pronouncement both of which took place he took the first step in the last 13 years of his life he spent insane and in the 20th century we killed more people on the battlefield than the previous nineteen put together and the weapons of warfare are piling up take a look at your heart you know why on the day you see your heart is desperately wicked in need of a savior you could become an answer rather than just another question description of my condition the provision for my malady this is the only answer in the world that offers you a savior the only answer of the world that offers you a savior some years ago I had the privilege of speaking at the United Nations prayer breakfast they asked me to speak on the search for absolutes in a relativistic culture now that's a tough subject for anywhere and especially in the early hours of the morning at just about before breakfast to speak to people from so many countries and walk very cautiously it was a toughy you can't come in your face you have to take about 16 minutes or so 15 minutes to talk in terms of general understanding and the last two to three minutes bring an answer from the Christian perspective so I said to this to them I said there are four areas in which you look for absolutes evil justice love and forgiveness evil justice love and forgiveness I said you talk about evil empires when you get together here what do you mean by that you look for just society what do you mean by justice you leave your loved ones back home and you are here and you miss them you know what love is all about especially when you miss your loved one so much and then you are gonna some of you're gonna blow it you'll make mistakes and you'll want to be forgiven evil justice love and forgiveness they were listening at the edge of their seats I said I have just two three minutes left I want to ask you this question where in the world did these four converge at a moment in history where did evil justice love and forgiveness converge at a moment in history I said can I take you to a hill called Calvary and show you the person of Jesus Christ who shows you the evil in your heart and mine who was just and the justifier who loved us so greatly to give himself for us and I said Father forgive them for they don't know what they're doing the person of Jesus Christ you know what when I finished that talk as the ambassadors lined up one of the ambassadors came to me and he said mr. Zacharias I come from an atheistic country I don't want to be here my president commanded that I come here and every day I wake up and I wonder what am I doing here why am I here he said today I have found my answer I came here to find God and to find Jesus Christ in my life one more one more simple illustration years ago I had the privilege of being at a gathering in Ramallah Jerusalem talking to one of the four founders of Hamas I was taken by some friends and he was agitated he'd served years in prison solidly built guy he'd lost several of his children and at the end of it one of the leader the leader of our group asked if each one of us five had a question for him because it was a private and private meeting I won't tell you what my question was and nor will I tell you his answer but when he finished answering I looked at him and I said Sheikh I don't like your answer I really don't like your answer I said but let me tell you something and you and I may never see each other again not far from where you and I are sitting is a hill three thousand years ago a man by the name of Abraham took his son up that hill please let's not debate right now which son it was and he just looked at me I said we know he took his son up that hill to offer him as a sacrifice of his faith in God and just as the ax is about to come down God says stop stop I myself will provide I said do you remember that story he said yes I said we are sitting very close to another Hill two thousand years ago God took his own son up there and provided what he promised he would shake my comment to you is this until you and I receive the son that God has provided we will be offering our own sons and daughters on the battlefields of this world for position for power and for land and for prestige he just looked at me and the archbishop who was leading the delegation figured it was time to go so I was walking away about to go down the stairs and the archbishop put his arm around me he said Ravi I thought oh here it comes he said that was of God I said I sure hope so and we walked out and since the archbishop was the guest of honor the Sheikh was bidding goodbye to him but suddenly I saw him running towards me and he turned me around solidly built guy and with two titanium rods in my back I figured I was gonna be his stray he patted me on my face kissed me on both sides of my face and he said to me mr. Zacharias you're a good man I hope I will see you again someday and I saw him wipe that tear away do you know what's going on in the Middle East today a lot can I simplify it to one statement it's three thousand years of history and the logic of unforgiveness three thousand years or more than that five thousand years of history and the logic of a vivan forgiveness and what I want to say to you is this forgiveness is so easily spoken off you ask about this or a Hindu what do you know about forgiveness you know what they'll say to you uh-uh karma karma karma I pay my debt I have to pay you ask a Muslim do you know you're going to enter paradise he'll say no I'm never certain my good deeds will have to outweigh my bad deeds these are not pejorative statements these are doctrinally legitimate statements of what they believe you pay you you pay Christ offers you forgiveness by paying the penalty himself and so the elementary school teacher writes this he came to my desk with a quivering lip the lesson was done have you a new sheet for me dear teacher I've spoiled this one I took his sheet all soiled and blotted gave him a new one all unspotted and into his tired heart I cried do better now my child I went to the throne with a trembling heart the day was done have you a new day for media master I've spoiled this one he took my day all soiled and blotted gave me a new one all unspotted and into my tired heart he cried do better now my child God's forgiveness God's forgiveness is his provision for you and for me thirdly his equipment in suffering his equipment in suffering I wrote a book along with my colleague from Oxford Vince Vitale it's called wise suffering and one of my chapters included how the various are the world views deal with suffering there are no answers there there are no answers there but you turn to the Gospel writers and you turn to the teachings of Jesus who reminds you and me that he took our suffering took our wounds took our transgressions and not only that how he equips us how he empowers us how he indwells us in order to be able to walk through this lonely life and through this journey you may be feeling some pain today I don't know what it is it may be a relationship that is just broken it may be Lions you have crossed it may be physical maladies that you're nurturing it may be financial struggles it may be your home that you're weeping over and struggle to find some positive responses and a time like this suffering is a real bar of life we feel it again and again and again prior to my first back surgery after I injured my back I remember the days I would sit in my car and pull over into a parking spot and put my head on the steering wheel and just cry my heart out with the agony with which I was having to live and traveling wasn't helping me any pain is a terrible thing and you take that pain into your heart it becomes almost unbearable at that point and life is punctuated by suffering but I want to tell you something that no other worldview will give to you this response I want you to listen to me very very carefully this is written by James Stewart of Scotland brilliant thought it is a glorious phrase that our Lord led captivity captive the very triumphs of his foes it means to use for their defeat he compelled their dark achievements to subserve his ends not theirs they nailed him to the tree not knowing that by that very act they were bringing the world to his feet they gave him a cross not guessing that he would make it a throne they flung him outside the gates to die not knowing that at that very moment they were lifting up all the gates of the universe to let the King of glory come in they thought to root out his doctrines not understanding that they were implanting imperishable in the hearts of men the very name they intended to destroy they thought they had God with his back to the wall pinned and helpless and defeated they did not know it was God Himself who had tracked them down to that point he conquered not in spite of the dark mystery of evil he conquered through it he conquered not in spite of the dark mystery of evil he conquered through it through the process of suffering you realize how finite you are and how desperately you need the very presence of God to carry you through the hymn writer Annie Johnston Flint who was orphaned early in life and then later on had rheumatoid arthritis lost control over internal organs became incontinent blind and cancer invaded her body her biography is called the making of the beautiful orphaned incontinent arthritic cancerous blind she wrote many hymns one of them was this he giveth more grace when the burdens were greater he sendeth more strength when the Labor's increase to added affliction he added his mercy to multiply trials has multiplied peace when we have exhausted our store of endurance when our strength has failed our the day's hath done when we reach the end of our hoarded resources our father's full giving has only begun his love has no limit his Grace has no measure his power has no boundaries known unto men for out of His infinite riches in Jesus he giveth and giveth and giveth again as I talked to you there's a gentleman who may be listening right now stunned a few days ago to find out he's got a tumor in his brain that may be inoperable with his young family and I was talking to him on the phone just two days ago and as he wept he said Ravi I'd loved to live a little longer I really would love to live a little longer but as I'm here talking to you I want whoever got one saw me and want him to walk through this valley through this shadow as I walked through these dark days I don't know what you're going through but I want you to know Christ in you is that hope for glory Christ in you that can took turn the darkest disappointments into his appointment to conquer not in spite of it but to conquer through it so here it is he describes your condition provides for your malady provides equipment and suffering fourthly and quickly how he bridges time please listen to me because my final point is on the verge of starting and will be important how he bridges dying the existentialist lives for the moment the traditionalist lives for the past the utopianist lives for the future the existentialist for the present the utopianist for the future the traditionalist for the past and as I look at what Jesus did for you and for me he took bread and when he broke it go back go back for a moment existentialist for the moment traditionalist for the past utopian us for the future he took bread and broke it said as often as you eat of this bread and drink of this cup now you proclaim the Lord's death in the past until he come in the future he gave meaning to all of time you see time is the canvas on which you present your portrait eternity is the keyhole that takes you into the gallery gives you the whole story you may just think it's your story right now one day you will look through the keyhole of eternity and see his entire plan just as the men on a maius road had all of history opened up to them and went with their eyes open when he broke that bread and suddenly all of history was opened up to them young people don't forget the past don't just live for the moment make sure you engage the future all of history is fused with his meaning because history is ultimately his story it's his story and I bring you then to the final and that is the entire truth of the resurrection of Jesus Christ the resurrection of Jesus Christ and I want to take you through three simple thoughts here first the people that it transformed number two what it means for you and me and number three how it applies to history so please give me your undivided attention now I want you to follow me this is critical that we understand that the resurrection is not merely a motif how it defines all of history so the first thing I want to say to you is precisely the transformation of just even three lives forget the others Peter Peter the fluctuating ever impulsive Peter he said you are the Christ the Son of the Living God and Jesus said to him flesh and blood has not revealed this to you but my father who is in heaven but as soon as that was said and Jesus told him about the cross and what lay ahead Peter wanted to have nothing to do with that here he goes again fluctuating fluctuating fluctuating the transformation of Peter so that he was willing alternately to be crucified upside down and take the leadership of the church and carried that message and tell you and me to always be prepared to give a reason for the hope that is within us and remember what he said he had been witness to some great scenes he had seen the Transfiguration of our Lord the whitest white that the I could ever see the brightest light that the I could ever see so that he fell flat on his face when the Transfiguration took place as he is blinded and when he got up he says Lord let's not go down there he didn't want to go back to that darkness anymore and Jesus I know we got work to do and Peter is the one who said but now we have the word of the prophets made most certain he gives us the written word to carry he had seen the resurrected Christ not merely the transfigured secondly Thomas Thomas who said I'm not gonna believe until I reach on the side and feel that side and feel those hands Jesus presented himself to him Thomas went to my homeland my ancestors come from the state of Kerala which is where Thomas set foot on Indian soil to present the gospel to the Indian people after he felt the side and touched the hands he looked at him on his knees and he said how curious mo author or small my Lord and my god Saul of Tarsus who was persecuting and killing the Christians he gets a glimpse of this risen Christ and ended up writing one third of the New Testament all three of them had one thing in common they all saw the risen Christ all three of them had another thing in common they paid with their lives just three lives think of all the thousands here's what I want to leave you with as the second thought in 1971 when I was in my 20s I was asked to come and speak in Vietnam I lived in Canada at that time and there was invited by the chaplains American chaplains and ministered to the American forces and the Korean forces the I was only in my mid-20s I had one tiny sermon book that I put into my pocket had a handful of sermons and preached them again and again and again my interpreter was a 17-year old young man thousands came to Christ and it triggered the revival in Vietnam somebody handed me a poem before I left my mom my twenties my interpreter 17 and the Vietnam revival broke out by the preaching of two young men here's what that piece of paper said written by a u.s. Marine Lord God I have never spoken to you but now I want to say how do you do you see God they told me you didn't exist and like a fool I believed all this last night from a shell hole I saw your sky I figured right then they had told me a lie had I taken time to see the things you made I'd have known they weren't calling a spade a spade I wonder God if you'll take my hand somehow I feel that you'll understand funny I had to come to this hellish place before I had time to see your face well I guess there isn't much more to say but I'm sure glad God I met you today I guess zero hour will soon be here but I'm not afraid since I know you're near the signal well god I'll have to go I like you lots I want you to know look now this will be a horrible fight who knows I may come to your house tonight though I wasn't friendly to you before I wonder God if you'd wait at your door look I'm crying I'm shedding tears I'll have to go now God goodbye strange now since I met you I'm not afraid to die it's an amazing little statement and I want to just read it for you but I want to make sure I get it right and after that statement a quote Will Durant there is no greater drama on human record than the sight of a few Christians scorned or oppressed by a succession of emperors barring all trials with a fierce tenacity multiplying quietly building order while the enemies generated chaos fighting the sword with the word brutality with hope and at last defeating the strongest state that history had ever known Caesar and Jesus Christ had met in the arena and Jesus Christ had won Caesar and Christ had met in the arena and Christ had won with a handful of disciples I close with this and I want you to listen to every word because I want you to take it to heart and then bow your head quietly in prayer and make a fresh commitment Malcolm Muggeridge said this one of the most powerful statements I've ever heard it's been years and years since I quoted it I'm doing my best to recover and recall what it said so please follow me now Muggeridge says this we look back upon history and what do we see empires rising and falling revolutions and counter-revolutions wealth accumulated and wealth disbursed Shakespeare has spoken of the rise and fall of great ones which have been flow with the moon I look back upon my own fellow countrymen in England once upon a time dominating a quarter of the world most of them convinced in the words of what is still a popular song that the God who made the mighty shall make them mightier yet I've had heard a crazed cracked Austrian announced to the world the establishment of a Reich that would last a thousand years I've seen an Italian clown saying he was going to stop and restart the calendar with his own ascension to power I've heard murderous Georgian bryggen in the Kremlin acclaimed by the intellectual elite of the world as a wiser than Solomon more humane than Marcus Aurelius more enlightened than Ashoka I have seen America wealthier and in terms of military weaponry more powerful than the rest of the world put together so that had the American people so desired they could have outdone a Caesar or an Alexander in the range and scale of their conquests all in one lifetime all in one lifetime all gone Gone with the Wind England part of a tiny island of the coast of Europe threatened with dismemberment leave in bankruptcy Hitler and Mussolini dead remembered only in infamy Stalin a forbidden name in the regime he helped found and dominate for some three decades America haunted by fears of running out of those precious fluids that keeps her motorways roaring in the smog settling with troubled memories of a disastrous campaign in Vietnam and the mist and the and the shenanigans of the Don Quixote eyes of the media as they charged the windmills of Watergate all in one lifetime all in one lifetime beside the debris of the solemn Superman and self-styled imperial diplomatists stands the gigantic figure of one person because of whom by whom in whom and through whom alone mankind might still have peace the person of Jesus Christ ladies and gentlemen surrender to Him love him follow him serve him live for him and take his message wherever you go because these solemn supermen and imperial diplomatists will someday someday litter some desert terrain or some museum somewhere they can dance all they want on the grave of Jesus he's not there he rose again he describes your heart he provides for your malady he equips you in suffering he puts meaning into every moment history and he conquers death through the resurrection from the grave those are only a handful of thoughts there's a lot more that I could say god bless you
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Channel: BRMinistries
Views: 194,957
Rating: 4.7773333 out of 5
Keywords: Ravi Zacharias, ravizacharias, ravi, ravi zacharias at passion, passion 2016, ravi at passion, ravi at passion 2016, end times, ravi end times, ravi zacharias at passion 2016, ravi speaking to 40000
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Length: 49min 23sec (2963 seconds)
Published: Mon Sep 25 2017
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