|


Saddamned
By: Reed R.
Heustis, Jr., Esq.
Christian Constitutionalist
January 8, AD 2007
Printer Friendly
When
I first heard FOX News report that former Iraqi
dictator, Saddam Hussein, would be hanged "within
hours," I began to pray.
According to the Word
of God, eternal salvation only comes by God's Grace
alone through Faith in Jesus Christ. Without God's
Grace, sinners must eternally pay for their own sins
apart from Christ. In the Acts of the Apostles, Luke
writes of Christ, "Neither
is there salvation in any other: for there is none other
name under heaven given among men, whereby we must be
saved."
At the time of the
FOX News report, I already knew that Saddam had long
rejected Christ as his savior, and so I realized that
"within hours" Saddam not only would be executed, but
his soul would be damned; unless - of course - he
repented of his sins and embraced King Jesus entirely.
This was my prayer:
that Saddam would be saved.
"How can you possibly pray for the Butcher of Baghdad?"
people will scream, many of them self-proclaimed
Christians, most of whom Bush-bot Republicans.
Don't get me wrong.
There is no question in my mind that Saddam was a
brutal, evil dictator who deserved execution for each
one of the countless slayings and fatal tortures he
ordered while reigning as Iraq's supreme tyrant. Who
really knows how many murders Saddam was criminally
liable for during his reign of terror? Believe me, you
won't get an argument from me that Saddam received a raw
deal.
This article is not
about whether the evil Saddam "deserved" the death
penalty. (I believe that he did.) This article is not
about whether the United States was "right or wrong" in
invading Iraq. (I believe that it was wrong.) Moreover,
this article is not about whether Saddam received a fair
trial. (I don't know what to believe.) This article is
not about whether the tribunal was legitimate. This
article is not about whether the United States played a
legal role in putting Saddam to death. It is not about
future U.S. foreign policy in Iraq. In fact, it is not
even about Iraq! It is not about the United Nations; it
is not about Republicans and Democrats. It is not about
President Bush. It is not about interventionism. It is
not about isolationism. It is not about politics. It is
not about oil.
My comments are simple and to the point: Based upon
Saddam's own confession and the authority of the Word of
God, Saddam Hussein is now in hell.
Some people indubitably
will muse, "Well duh!" Saddam deserves hell because he
committed atrocities, they will moralize.
They all will be wrong.
No different than any other sinner, Saddam deserved hell
because he is a sinner. From the moment he was
conceived in his mother's womb, Saddam was a sinner, and
all sinners deserve hell.
The only difference
with Saddam and other sinners is that Saddam actually
committed crimes that necessitate punishment by civil
authority. His actions invoked the powers of civil
government. However, regardless of the penalty that must
be paid at the hands of civil magistrates, every
sinner's soul is able to be saved by Christ's precious
blood if the Lord so willed it. Even the "Chief of
Sinners," Saul of Tarsus, a murderer and persecutor of
Christians, was saved! (1
Timothy 1:15)
A major difference exists between the relationship
between (1) sinners and civil government; and that of
(2) sinners and God.
First, the relationship between sinners and civil
government depends upon a body of criminal law rooted in
the biblically based common law. A defendant can only be
convicted of a felony if he committed "actus reas" with
"mens rea." The Latin term, "actus reas," means the
"guilty act;" and "mens rea" means "guilty mind." Both
are required together in order to convict of a felony.
Thus, if a defendant committed a "guilty act" without a
"guilty mind," or had a "guilty mind" without a "guilty
act," no guilt would lie. It is therefore possible for a
sinner to possess a "guilty mind" without actually
committing a civil crime. Thus he would be safe from the
sword wielded by civil government.
Second, in contrast,
the relationship between sinners and God is an entirely
different scenario, and one that should concern all
sinners. Every person, except Christ Himself, is guilty
of sin without regard to whether there exists an actus
reas. The penalty of sin is death and eternity in hell.
Even those who are innocent of civil crimes, are guilty
of sin against God.
Jesus said, "...[W]hosoever looketh on a woman to lust
after her hath committed adultery with her already in
his heart." (Matthew
5:28) One does not actually have to commit the
civil crime of adultery in order to be guilty of the sin
of adultery. A mere lustful heart will do.
Jesus also said,
"Whosoever hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know
that no murderer hath eternal life abiding in him. " (1
John 3:15) One does not actually have to commit the
crime of murder in order to be guilty of the sin of
murder. A mere hateful heart will do.
Lest people think they are so righteous, people must
realize that the natural man, from the moment of
conception, rebels against God's law. Every person is
born guilty of breaking God's
10 Commandments, and so every person deserves
eternal hell fire.
Not every sinner
deserves capital punishment, but every sinner certainly
deserves hell. You don't have to be a Saddam to be
damned.
Thankfully, by His own
execution by crucifixion at Calvary, Jesus Christ paid
the price for all His redeemed, elect believing people,
setting them free from the penalty of hell. Those who
belong to Him will eventually come to a saving faith in
Christ, which leads to repentance and eternal salvation.
Those who don't belong to Him will reject him and
salvation.
The London Baptist
Confession of Faith of 1689 states it clearly: "It
pleased God, in His eternal purpose, to choose and
ordain the Lord Jesus, His only begotten Son, according
to the covenant made between them both, to be the
mediator between God and man; the prophet, priest, and
king; head and savior of the church, the heir of all
things, and judge of the world; unto whom He did from
all eternity give a people to be His seed and to be by
Him in time redeemed, called, justified, sanctified, and
glorified."
Those who legitimately repent of their sins and confess
Jesus as Lord are redeemed.
After my prayer for
Saddam, it became evident that God's saving grace would
not be upon him. Last week, after a captive Saddam was
led into the execution chamber, escorted up the steps of
the scaffold, and noosed by a hangman's rope, Saddam
chanted the shahada: "Allah is great and Muhammad
is His prophet." As he repeated the phrase, the floor
opened, his body plummeted from the gallows, his neck
snapping just after he uttered his final word,
"Muhammad." Sadly, he cried for a God other than
Christ.
The execution of Saddam
means different things to different people. It might
mean sic semper tyrannis, Latin for "Thus always
to tyrants." It could mean the advance of globalism or
American empire. It could mean justice, or even the lack
thereof. Whatever the meaning might be, people must
realize that eternity is a heartbeat away. They must
beware that "it is appointed unto men once to die, but
after this the judgment...." (Hebrews
9:27)
Christians must preach the Gospel of Jesus Christ in
love to all nations so that salvation will abound for
sinners everywhere and Christ's Name will be glorified
to the ends of the earth.
© AD 2007 Christian Constitutionalist, accessible on the web
at
www.ChristianConstitutionalist.com . All Rights
Reserved.
|