Chris Wright’s latest Word on the World

Chris Wright, Langham’s Global Ambassador and Ministry Director, seeks a biblical response to the war in Ukraine in his latest ‘Word on the World’ feature for the Spring ’22 edition of Transform.

Soldier holding a Ukrainian flag.
Russia invaded Ukraine on 24 February 2022.

I write this on Day 5 of the Russian invasion of Ukraine. I have no idea what the situation in that country will be by the time you read this in April. But right now where else could one look for a “word on the world” than to the Psalms. Book I of the Psalter contains familiar gems: the wonders of creation (Pss. 8 and 19); the Lord’s shepherding care (Ps. 23); God’s royal ownership and authority over all the earth (Ps. 24 and 29) and more.

But a dominant theme, especially in the first dozen Psalms, is rampant wickedness, violence and injustice, and the desperation of those who suffer such attacks and cry out to the Lord God of justice to act in their defence.  

There are many believers in Ukraine today (along with believers in Russia too who deplore and grieve over the actions of their President) for whom the words of these Psalms speak directly and powerfully. So rather than trying to write an essay myself, let the Psalms speak for themselves, and for our suffering sisters and brothers in the midst of this conflict. 

There is the face of ruthless and arrogant evil, linked with greed and ill-gotten wealth. 

2In his arrogance the wicked man hunts down the weak,
    who are caught in the schemes he devises.
He boasts about the cravings of his heart;
    he blesses the greedy and reviles the Lord.

Damaged apartment block in Kharkiv, Ukraine
A dominant theme in the first dozen Psalms that of rampant wickedness, violence and injustice. [Source: State Emergency Service of Ukraine, CC BY 4.0 via Wikimedia Commons].


His ways are always prosperous;
    your laws are rejected by him;
    he sneers at all his enemies.

His mouth is full of lies and threats;
    trouble and evil are under his tongue.
He lies in wait near the villages;
    from ambush he murders the innocent.
His eyes watch in secret for his victims;
    like a lion in cover he lies in wait.
He lies in wait to catch the helpless;
    he catches the helpless and drags them off in his net.
10 His victims are crushed, they collapse;
    they fall under his strength. (Ps. 10:2-10). 

And, while there are no wholly innocent parties in human affairs, there is the protest of those who are wrongfully and undeservedly attacked, knowing God is the righteous judge. 

3Lord my God, if I have done this
    and there is guilt on my hands—
if I have repaid my ally with evil
    or without cause have robbed my foe—
then let my enemy pursue and overtake me;
    let him trample my life to the ground
    and make me sleep in the dust (Ps. 7:3-5) 

People on a metro station during the Russian invasion.
People sheltering in a metro station in Ukraine. [Source: Kmr.gov.uaCC BY 4.0, via Wikimedia Commons].


For you have upheld my right and my cause,
    sitting enthroned as the righteous judge (Ps. 9:4)

The Lord reigns forever;
    he has established his throne for judgment.
He rules the world in righteousness
    and judges the peoples with equity (Ps. 9:7-8)

And because of that ultimate confidence in the justice of God, the victims of unjust attack can appeal to God, crying out for him to act in line with his known character, in words that we must surely echo and pray with the victims of this latest aggression. 

14But you, God, see the trouble of the afflicted;
    you consider their grief and take it in hand.
The victims commit themselves to you;
    you are the helper of the fatherless (Ps. 10:14)

18God will never forget the needy;
    the hope of the afflicted will never perish.

19 Arise, Lord, do not let mortals triumph;
    let the nations be judged in your presence.
20 Strike them with terror,
 Lord ;
    let the nations know they are only mortal (Ps. 9:18-20)

Hands held in front of a Ukrainian flag

“Let the nations be judged…” The Psalmists have no illusions about the machinations of the nations in general. In the present fog of war and escalation of rhetoric and belated action among western nations, we should not naively overlook the collusion of some governments (especially the UK) in facilitating the laundered criminality underlying the astronomical wealth that protects Putin and his friends. Such whitewashing of blatant but concealed wrongdoing brings its own curse in the international arena. 

Whoever says to the guilty, “You are innocent,”
    will be cursed by peoples and denounced by nations (Prov. 24:24)

 Those who turn a blind eye to evil, even when it is exposed with serious warnings by official commissions and reports, will find themselves ensnared by their own action (or inaction). 


15 
The nations have fallen into the pit they have dug;
    their feet are caught in the net they have hidden.
16 The 
Lord is known by his acts of justice;
    the wicked are ensnared by the work of their hands (Ps. 9:15-16). 

Indeed, there is a bleak logic about evil, that it tends towards its own destruction. The Evil One sometimes overreaches himself and the worst wickedness destroys its perpetrator. Only God the sovereign judge knows how and when. The cross is the ultimate proof, when God took the worst that human and satanic evil could hurl at his Son and turned it to its own defeat, and then raised Jesus in victory from the dead.

The Psalmists had not heard of that yet, but they could thank God for the certainty of his righteousness. Wickedness and evildoers will not have the last word with impunity in God’s moral universe–an assurance of the biblical gospel narrative that the Psalmists can thankfully anticipate as an ultimate reality.

Chris Wright
Chris Wright, Langham’s Global Ambassador and Ministry Director.


14 
Whoever is pregnant with evil
    conceives trouble and gives birth to disillusionment.
15 Whoever digs a hole and scoops it out
    falls into the pit they have made.
16 The trouble they cause recoils on them;
    their violence comes down on their own heads.

17 I will give thanks to the Lord because of his righteousness;
    I will sing the praises of the name of the 
Lord Most High. (Ps. 7:14-17).

5You have rebuked the nations and destroyed the wicked;
    you have blotted out their name for ever and ever.

The Lord reigns forever;
    he has established his throne for judgment (Ps. 9:5, 7).

“The Lord reigns!” And therefore even in the midst of the most evil events, we must look for the signs of the kingdom of God – the God who can bring good out of the most terrible evil (again, remember the cross). When I visited Ukraine in October 2017, there was so much to give thanks for: a growing number of Langham Scholars; expanding impact of evangelical seminaries; favour with the government for higher theological education; significant biblical “salt and light” by Christians in the public arena.  God does not do waste. The mustard seeds of his kingdom will grow, and we will have reasons to be amazed at the work of God’s hands, just as we are now so appalled at the blood-stained hands of fallen humanity. 

There is hope in the midst of the horror.  And so we pray with and for our sisters and brothers that one day they will be able to

Sing the praises of the Lord, enthroned in Zion;
    proclaim among the nations what he has done (Ps. 9:11). 

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