Becoming the Enemy

Becoming the Enemy
"This is the paradox and challenge of the enemy: To acknowledge the rightful place of anger in the cry for deliverance and simultaneously to move toward God's sacrificial, unending love. In the end, the journey of reconciliation inevitably takes us toward the enemy, and it seeks the face of God."

The phone rang one evening in our house in San Jose, Costa Rica. I was lying in bed reading a book to Angie, who was at that time three years old. At the other end of the line was the familiar voice of a key Miskito leader in the armed resistance that had been fighting against the Nicaraguan government, a person who had become a close friend in the previous year.

“John Paul,” he said. “I have some difficult news. I have been informed by a very good source that there is a plan to kidnap your daughter. They want you out of the country.”

Even now, I can still feel the shiver, the blood draining from my face, and the pounding of my heart.

“What are you talking about?” I responded, my drying mouth struggling to stammer intelligent words…

Lederach, John Paul. “Becoming the Enemy.” Christianity Today, September 1, 1997.

This article originally appeared in the September 1, 1997, issue of Christianity Today and is reprinted with permission. View the original article here.

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