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November 22, 2008
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Home > 2008 > AugustChristianity Today, August, 2008  |   |  
SERIOUSLY DISTURBED
Joining the Resistance
It took seeing seven-year-old prostitutes to jolt me out of my apathy.



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The person who invented the TV remote control deserves some kind of award. From my comfy recliner, I can cruise through a hundred channels in seconds.

See something unpleasant? Click. Change the channel. See a disturbing image on a newscast? Click. Change the channel. Avoiding any contact with suffering is as easy as touching a button. For a long time, I lived my life the way I watch TV: I ignored upsetting images by changing the channel. I rationalized my trigger finger on the remote control, thinking, It's just too painful to look at. But a shocking encounter with suffering jerked me out of my apathy, so that changing the channel was no longer an option.

Some friends and I were traveling in Cambodia and were told that we needed to visit a tiny area outside the city limits of Phnom Penh called Svey Pak. It's famous: all the cab and motorbike drivers know exactly how to get there. Without hesitation, they turn their vehicles toward "the Street of the Little Flowers." A street with such a sweet name surely held gardens, genteel folks sipping elegant libations, and children playing silly games while the adults smile indulgently.

Unfortunately, the lovely street name belied the wickedness that occurs there all day, 365 days a year. The dirt road was narrow, and only scraggly weeds and a few trees managed to survive the heat. We saw middle-aged Western men wearing sandals, oversized sunglasses, and ball caps sitting in the shade of small bars as they swilled beer after beer. Children were present, but they were locked behind large iron gates padlocked shut. The adults were smiling indulgently, but it was the self-indulgent smile of a predator waiting patiently for its prey.

This was a street where child prostitutes as young as seven or eight were peddled and sold in the thriving illegal sex trade. This was a place where depravity reigned. It took every bit of courage I had not to turn and run away. I wanted nothing more than to change the channel.

Long before televisions and remote controls, people responded to evil by turning a blind eye. Leviticus 20 tells of a bleak period in Israel's history, when they substituted worship of the true God for worship of the Ammonite fire god, Molech. Part of the pagan ritual was to kill and burn children as sacrifices to appease Molech. God's severe warnings to Israel were dire. He held those who knew of the evil and did nothing as responsible as those who actually practiced child sacrifice. Leviticus 20:4–5 says, "If the people of the land look the other way as if nothing had happened when that man gives his child to the god Molech and fail to kill him, I will resolutely reject that man and his family, and him and all who join him in prostituting themselves in the rituals of the god Molech I will cut off from their people" (The Message).

I came away from Svey Pak wounded by the pain of these young girls forced to act like grown women. Changing the channel could no longer be my response to evil in the world. My newfound knowledge made me ready to face it, hate it, and resist it. I didn't realize it at the time, but that was the moment when I joined the resistance.

History tells us that the fiercest fighters in any war are those in the resistance—those brave souls willing to pay the ultimate price so that evil doesn't win. Most of us don't see ourselves as "freedom fighters" or part of "the resistance." We're just ordinary people—grocery-store managers, accountants, teachers, pastors, and moms juggling strollers and sippy cups. Not exactly warrior material. But that's precisely what God has called us to be. Strapping on the spiritual armor he provides, we are to push back the encroaching darkness, raising our voices on behalf of those whom brutal evil has silenced.





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[Reader Reviews]
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Displaying 1 - 3 of 29 comments.See all comments
Carolyn   Posted: August 13, 2008 5:33 PM
STOP IT! STOP IT! I'm sick and tired of guilt-inducing articles and books that tell me I SHOULD be doing something but give me no practical plan. Yes, I care about these kids -- a lot -- I have daughters of my own. I WANT to do something . . . but what? With limited funds because of our own economy and limited energy because of work demands . . . what???? Give me a plan and stop telling me I SHOULD DO something!

Malissa   Posted: August 13, 2008 4:16 PM
I agree with Chris. Where's the plan, Kay? Are you calling for putting up the money to buy these children back and save them from the depravity? What can ordinary people who don't have the funds to fly or "march boldly" to SE Asia personally do to help? What's the strategy? What's the plan? Where's the website with the nuts-and-bolts of your call to action? I really don't want to be uncharitable, but I'm a middleclass mom struggling to raise my own family in a downturned economy working 50 plus hours a week. What can I do to help these children besides praying for them and reading articles that raise my awareness about the problem?

Claire Jones   Posted: August 15, 2008 1:29 AM
This story totally breaks my "mother's heart". I cannot understand how any man could do such things to a child. Heaven help them, in that day, when it would be better to have a millstone around their necks. These young ones soul and spirit will be damaged for life, because of these things. How evil can the world get? There seems no end or depth to what you hear of next. Thank the Lord on the other end of the scale there is no end to His beauty, purity and Holiness that he is desirous of blessing us with, when we obey Him. Some may be apathetic, others just wink and walk away, but I admire this women for being so appalled that she picked up pen and wrote, for those of us who may be ignorant. The more that hear of it, the better chance of action and change. Many can do what one finds impossible..

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