Warrior

The second fingerprint/blueprint I see equally unmistakable in Scripture is The Warrior. Our God is the Warrior of BOTH testaments. Gentle Jesus, meek and mild? Hardly. In Revelation 19:11, He closes the chapter of human history on a white warhorse, in a blood-spattered robe, with a sword in His mouth and an iron rod in His hand. Not to mention an unknown tattoo on his thigh!  The Book ends with a roar…not a whimper. Within the epistles, the mature believer is often described in militant terms—a warrior equipped to battle mighty enemies and shatter satanic strongholds. (IMO,and in  Jesus ministry of establishing His Kingdom was, in fact, an act of war on the Satan's kingdom of the earth…I've already written about it here and here). 

The heart of the warrior is a protective heart. The warrior shields, defends, stands between, and guards. Not someone who loves war or draws sadistic pleasure from fighting or bloodshed (that's a brute, not a warrior.) A warrior is a protector…whether he’s stepping on intruding bugs or checking on things that go bump in the night. Whether he’s confronting a habitually abusive PAYSL coach, changing the oil in Mom’s car, or helping women and children into the last life boat of the Titanic. As men, we stand tallest when we are protecting and defending.

When Darien (now 6) was about a year-and-a-half old, we were sitting at the breakfast table (imagine that). He was eating a piece of toast. Little by little, his tiny mouth was mashing away at it when suddenly he stopped and took it out of his mouth and pointed the gun-shaped wheat toast at me and shouted "poom-poom!" (His toddler equivalent of 'bang-bang'). I laughed. Heather teared up. Our sweet little boy had tapped into his prewired tendency of being an apprentice soldier. Our breakfast had given birth to a toddler-warrior. 

But that's not the end. The warrior is one who has high moral standards and principles. He is willing to live by them, stand for them, spend himself on them, and if necessary, die for them. No warrior ever made that more obvious than Jesus. He was the Ultimate PeaceMaker (Prince of Shalom). Obviously, there are differences between a peacemaker and a peacekeeper…   

But a tender heart can be pretty effectively hidden under plates of armor. When you’re made to be a protector and soldier, it can be hard to display that tender side. Tomorrow we'll look at the other side of the coin and where the Scripture points us…