This
weekend I watched the movie Rise of the
Guardians with my oldest daughter.
It’s an animated romp in which Santa Claus, the Easter Bunny, the Tooth
Fairy, the Sand Man, and Jack Frost join forces against the Boogey Man to win
back the imaginations of the world’s children.
In true Hollywood fashion, the movie reduces the two most important
events of the Christian year (Christmas and Easter) to their thin secular and pagan facsimiles. But if you can look past that, Rise of the Guardians actually has a
timely and relevant message. In his
first scene, the villain of the story (a ghoulish character named Pitch)
begins replacing kids’ dreams with nightmares. Pitch then systematically stymies the efforts
of the Tooth Fairy, the Easter Bunny, and Santa, so that children worldwide
stop believing in the existence of these supernatural forces of good. This in turn saps their hope, and leaves them
susceptible to Pitch’s only real weapon: fear.
Their only defense against this onslaught of evil is the message: don’t be afraid.
Whenever
the God of the Bible shows up, his first statement is, “Do not fear.” When God
appears at Mt. Sinai to give his people the Ten Commandments, his message is, “Don’t
be afraid” (Exodus 20:20). When the
angel of the LORD appears to Mary, and Joseph, to tell them of the impending birth
of the Savior, he says, “Don’t be afraid” (Luke 1:30; Matt. 1:20). When the angel appears to Jesus’ friends at
the empty tomb, he says, “Don’t be afraid” (Matt. 28:10). The phrase, “Do not be afraid” appears fully 70
times throughout the Bible. This is God’s
message to people living in the darkness of a broken world.
Why
this message, more than any other?
Because fear is the fuel of evil.
Fear causes us to see threats where there are none. Fear causes us to see anyone – even friends
and relatives – as enemies. Fear causes
us to take what we need without regard for those from whom we’re taking
it. Fear causes us to take up arms and
strike pre-emptively – when there was no danger to begin with. Fear saps us of our creativity and our
compassion and reduces us to creatures of instinct; creatures of darkness.
But isn’t
this a world full of real and present danger?
Here we get to the reason God makes the statement again and again. “Do not fear” is the command of a God who
eliminates any reason for fear. He is
the God who provides everything needed to sustain us. He is the God who protects us from the forces
of evil, and even co-opts pain and loss to serve his good purposes. He is the God who guarantees that not a hair
can fall from our heads without his will.
He is the God who defeated death, and promises us new life beyond the grave.
Random
acts of violence serve the purposes of evil in our world perfectly. They lead us to believe the lie that we are
all victims – that something like this could happen to any of us at any time,
and no one can stop it. Don’t give
in. Fight the fear. Fight it not with the mistaken belief that
you can protect yourself with bigger walls or better weapons. Fight it with faith in the
“the almighty and ever present power of God by which he upholds, as
with his hand, heaven and earth and all creatures, and so rules them that leaf and blade, rain
and drought, fruitful and lean
years, food and drink, health
and sickness, prosperity and
poverty – all things, in fact, come to us not by chance but from his fatherly
hand.” (Heidelberg Catechism Q&A 27). Don't be afraid.
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