What do you think?
Rate this book


A year 2000 Finalist in the ECPA book competition!
Accounts of injustice from our own communities and from around the world often leave us feeling outraged and helpless. We wonder what we can possibly do in response. And we wonder where is the God of justice?
Jesus, however, said, "Take heart! I have overcome the world." Gary Haugen sees the truth of Jesus' claim vindicated throughout Scripture, which portrays a God who rises up against injustice.
He also sees this truth in the lives of sometimes little-known Christians who through the years have courageously confronted evil when they saw it. Here he tells stories of these witnesses of hope in a hurting world.
The good news about injustice is that God is against it. God is in the business of using the unlikely to perform the holy, Haugen contends. And in this book he not only offers stories of courageous witnesses past and present, he also calls the body of Christ to action. He offers concrete guidance on the ways and means its members can rise up to seek justice throughout the world.
266 pages, Kindle Edition
First published January 1, 1999
“Because only a handful of Christians are cognizant of the crisis of modern-day slavery, little is accomplished.”
“This is the essence of Edmund Burke’s conviction about human history: ‘All that is necessary for the triumph of evil is for good men to do nothing’.”
“The good samaritan was good not because he was able to meet all of the hurting man’s needs but because he had mercy on the man and cared for him, and then referred him to someone else who could help him.”
“The biblical mandate to seek justice and rescue the oppressed is an integral and magnificent theme of the Christian heritage.”
…
“Moreover, we can be restored to the conviction that God is prepared to use us to ‘seek justice, rescue the opressed, defend the orphan, plead for the widow‘ (Isaiah 1:17).”
“If we had to see it and hear it every day like our God does, we would hate it too.”
“Hope displaces hopelessness.”
“God is in the business of using the unlikely to perform the holy.”