Wednesday, June 07, 2006

Rick Warren's Wife- "Christians must do more to combat AIDS, comfort victims"

I thought this article was worth mentioning.

What would Jesus do when confronted by AIDS?

By Kay Warren
Special to CNN

LAKE FOREST, California (CNN) -- Joana crawled toward me on her skeletal elbows and knees, each movement a painful reminder of the fact that she was dying.

When I met her, this emaciated woman was homeless, living under a tree. She had unrelenting diarrhea, little food, no earthly possessions, and only an elderly auntie who had taken pity on her to care for her needs.

Still, she roused herself to offer me, an American visitor to her part of Mozambique, a traditional greeting.

The African pastors who brought me to visit her told me that she had been evicted from her village when it became known that she had AIDS. Now, in this second village, her tiny stick house had mysteriously burned after her status became known. A short time later, Joana died -- rejected, abandoned, persecuted and destitute.

We may think this doesn't happen in the United States. "People who are HIV-positive are treated better than that here," we say. But I'm not so sure.

I live in affluent Orange County, California, yet a disabled man in my area who was HIV positive was not allowed to enter his brother's home.

He and his wife could live in the backyard, but he couldn't come inside. To bathe him, his wife had to attach a nozzle to a hose and shoot him with a hard spray of water that would hopefully dislodge dirt and grime. The family dog was treated better than this man; at least it could go in the house.

Like Joana in Mozambique, this man may also die rejected, abandoned, persecuted and destitute.

As a follower of Christ, I am seriously disturbed by both stories.

Horrific and startling images confront each of us daily through newspapers, televisions, and eyewitness accounts of those suffering from AIDS. You can do what I did for years -- choose to ignore it all because it was too painful -- or you can become disturbed -- seriously, dangerously disturbed -- so disturbed that you are compelled to do something.

Christians are just as guilty as non-Christians of wanting to look the other way when it comes to the problems confronting our world, the topics that make us uncomfortable. But we need to be seriously disturbed about homelessness, child prostitution, rape, poverty, injustice, and HIV/AIDS.

Twenty-five years into the AIDS pandemic, being HIV-positive still carries stigma and shame. But God cares for the sick and so must we.

It's not a sin to be sick. The Bible tells us Jesus was repeatedly "filled with compassion" as he encountered broken bodies and broken minds. While polite society vigorously avoided contact with those they considered diseased outcasts, Jesus responded in a radical way: He cared, he touched, he healed.

I had no medication that could cure Joana, nothing to alleviate her pain, nothing that would restore her to health. But I offered the one thing that all of us can offer: I offered my presence. I put my arms gently around her, prayed for relief from her suffering and whispered, "I love you."

This is a start, but much more is needed. Today, I challenge the worldwide church to take on the global giants of spiritual darkness, lack of servant leaders, poverty, disease, and ignorance. It's past time for those who claim to be Christ's followers to join the struggle against the devastation that the HIV virus brings.

How many more like Joana have to die before you become seriously disturbed?

4 comments:

Anonymous said...

Well, most Christians in this country have been raised to look out for "number one".
Many of us put the wrong emphasis on "you reap what you sowe". We sometimes inaccurately and self righteously apply it to others.

There are Biblical examples of our Lord and Savior Jesus Christ showing compassion to lepers (the AIDs of that day). If you call yourself a Christian, then that means you are Christ-like.

Would Jesus mistreat or shun an AIDS sufferer? The answer is no; therfore, a Christ-like person should not either.

Anonymous said...

i agree bev.
as christians we should standed up for this.
and kneel down to help those who suffer.
it is not only right, but it is our call as Christ followers.

Anonymous said...

What's disturbing to me is the inconsistency in which Rick Warren's wife (heck, even more so Rick Warren!) wants to treat those inflicted with AIDS. She is willing to say Joana is not sinful, but I doubt she would say the same of my uncle who died of the same disease. Christians and non-Christians alike DO need to be seriously disturbed by the many atrocities in society, AIDS being a major one, but I think the problem is much deeper for the church.

What if, at least in North America, the church embraced the homosexual and YELLED "I love you," and was the same presence Rick Warren's wife was for Joana for the homosexual, and abolished it's insistent determination to "cure" whoever had this supposed disease of homosexuality? Rick Warren's wife has no more right to claim that being sick is not a sin than she does that being gay is a sin, nor do I, nor does the church.

"Straight Americans need...an education of the heart and soul. They must understand - to begin with - how it can feel to spend years denying your own deepest truths, to sit silently through classes, meals, and church services while people you love toss off remarks that brutalize your soul." ~Bruce Bawer

Anonymous said...

What's disturbing to me is the inconsistency in which Rick Warren's wife (heck, even more so Rick Warren!) wants to treat those inflicted with AIDS. She is willing to say Joana is not sinful, but I doubt she would say the same of my uncle who died of the same disease. Christians and non-Christians alike DO need to be seriously disturbed by the many atrocities in society, AIDS being a major one, but I think the problem is much deeper for the church.

What if, at least in North America, the church embraced the homosexual and YELLED "I love you," and was the same presence Rick Warren's wife was for Joana for the homosexual, and abolished it's insistent determination to "cure" whoever had this supposed disease of homosexuality? Rick Warren's wife has no more right to claim that being sick is not a sin than she does that being gay is a sin, nor do I, nor does the church.

"Straight Americans need...an education of the heart and soul. They must understand - to begin with - how it can feel to spend years denying your own deepest truths, to sit silently through classes, meals, and church services while people you love toss off remarks that brutalize your soul." ~Bruce Bawer