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Then the blow fell: Jerzy’s body had been found floating in the Vistula River. He’d been brutally tortured, his eyes and tongue cut out, his bones smashed. Yet the gentle pastor had taught his people well. After his funeral, hundreds of thousands of Polish people marched through the streets of Warsaw /right past the secret police headquarters /carrying banners that read, “We forgive.”
* 분사구 floating in the Vistula
River 는 형용사 수식어이지만 능동문에서 목보라는 필수요소임
They had found [Jerzy’s body] [floating in the Vistula River].
They were assaulting evil with good. And under the impact, the Communist regime soon crumbled.
In 1993, I traveled to Poland for the chartering of Prison Fellowship Poland, a ceremony held outside the very church //where Jerzy had preached. His grave is in the courtyard, and as I laid a wreath of flowers on the grave, I looked up at the balcony //where the martyred pastor once preached his most powerful message: “Overcome evil with good.”
Suddenly, I felt a stab of conviction /as though the Holy Spirit were saying to me, “Pick up the baton. Make that your message, too.” In that instant it was clear to me that [the message () Jerzy preached] has always been God’s strategy for overcoming evil. The supreme example is the Incarnation itself, which we celebrate today–-the event //when God Himself entered human history /to overcome the evil of the world.
America is not in the grip of a Communist regime /as Poland was, yet Christians are battling a hostile secular culture. And we often wonder how we can fight more effectively. The answer is that God’s people are to fight evil /using God’s strategy and God’s weapons.
When God wanted to defeat sin, His ultimate weapon was the sacrifice of His own Son. On Christmas Day two thousand years ago, the birth of a tiny baby in an obscure village in the Middle East was God’s supreme triumph of good over evil.
(This commentary originally aired December 24, 1997.)