The Danger of Growing Numb to Human Suffering

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

I saw a video of someone dying the other day. Scrolling my phone, Instagram’s algorithm positioned it between a video of Cesar Millan training a pit bull and one about prepping meals for the week.

Witnessing global news while it’s being made is easier than ever. Ironically, for that same reason, it’s harder than ever to care. At home and far away, we watch—often in gruesome detail—war, conflict, disaster, crises, and other injustices unfold in almost real time just inches from our noses. Only to then set our phones down and pretend all of this is normal.

I’ve spent the last two decades—most of my career—documenting humanitarian crises, disasters, socio-economic crises, and injustice, often involving children. I’ve seen and reported on my fair share of traumatic things. These are things I carry in an invisible backpack that seems to weigh a hundred pounds.

I’m guilty of feeding the algorithm, too, and I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about my own role in reporting terrible, gut-wrenching things.

But today we are all positively drenched in this environment, saturated in constant media coverage. Understandably, many of you are suffering from compassion fatigue. It seems like every week there’s a new crisis that shreds our hearts. Many of us are suffering from compassion fatigue.

But as Christians, we cannot surrender our fight. Two of the cardinal exhortations we find in the Bible – both straight from Jesus Himself – call us to something radical. Jesus asks us to hold the whole of the world in our hearts.

More than ever, caring for the least of these seems political. It’s not. It’s biblical.

Recall the Great Commandment

“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:36-40).

Jesus doesn’t stop at asking us to love God. He commands us to love our neighbor “as ourselves.”

We’ve lost just how radical this is for our lives. In the parable of the Good Samaritan, we see a profound challenge of who we are called to love. The traveler the Samaritan encountered wasn’t just a stranger. He was a sworn enemy.

Anyone listening to the story back then would have understood the story’s implications. Jesus calls us to a radical, global, no limits, big-hearted love that doesn’t flinch in the face of suffering.

When I first started working for Compassion International, I was overwhelmed, even paralyzed, in the face of extreme poverty. Some of my very first trips for Compassion were to West Africa, places where children and families were experiencing unimaginable suffering.

But we’re not called to solve it all. The simplicity of Jesus’ message is to meet the needs we see and can meet, to love others as we would hope to be loved, and to act purposefully without the weight and heaviness that accompanies our inability to erase all suffering perfectly.

Recall the Great Commission

We read in Matthew 28:18-20 NIV that Jesus told his disciples, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

The Great Commission is central to our faith. Not accidental. The fullness of what God has called us to do includes this mission. Looking out over the Sea of Galilee, Jesus asked us to take the good news forward, outward, to all people.

I wish I could bring you with me. I wish you could stand at the mouth of the Simón Bolívar Bridge in Colombia and see women cut off their hair for a few dollars. I wish you could meet the children who survived the Rwandan Genocide, coloring their trauma with crayons. I wish I could take you to Malawi so you could see the impact of drought ripple through communities that have no food to eat. I wish you could go to Thailand and meet the children and families along the border who are stuck in limbo, caught between conflict and being stateless.

This suffering is almost impossible to watch. But we must not cower, because the Great Commandment and the Great Commission are very much our concern.

Engage intentionally, and always with your calling—and your legacy—in mind

This is daunting. I know. Don’t be overwhelmed. Carefully reflect on what you’re capable of doing and how you can do it. Awareness is not meaningful engagement. You have to care, and then you have to act.

Sit down and take inventory of what God has given you, in terms of your giftings, personality, resources, and skills. There are no accidents in how God made you. If you’re strong, He’s made you strong to defend the weak. If you’re brave, He’s made you brave for those who are afraid. Think about the causes and issues God has embedded in your heart. Hold those carefully, and let them shape how and where you serve.

Carry God’s word close. Keep your heart soft. Look to the horizon. And then, move.

Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/Paul Hanaoka

Ryan Johnson is Global Story Director for Compassion International. For the past 16 years, he has used the power of story to stir people’s hearts toward action, documenting humanitarian crises, disasters, and issues affecting children living in extreme poverty.

 

Salem News Channel Today

Sponsored Links


September 26 - Phoenix, AZ
Scottsdale Center for the Performing Arts


November 2 - Detroit, MI
Zion Christian Church in Troy


October 6 - Los Angeles, CA
Pasadena Convention Center


November 5 - San Antonio, TX
Norris Centers – The Grand Red Oak Ballroom


October 8 - Sacramento, CA
William Jessup University


November 7 - Tampa, FL
The Palladium at St. Pete College


October 22 - Minneapolis, MN
Crowne Plaza AiRE


November 15 - San Francisco, CA
Fremont Marriott Silicon Valley


October 23 - Philadelphia, PA
Green Valley Country Club


November 16 - Denver, CO
CU South Denver - Formerly Wildlife Experience


November 2 - Chicago, IL
Chicago Westin Northwest in Itasca


November 21 - Cleveland, OH
Holiday Inn Rockside in Independence



Salem Radio Network Speakers

Larry Elder is an American lawyer, writer, and radio and television personality who calls himself the "Sage of South Central" a district of Los Angeles, Larry says his philosophy is to entertain, inform, provoke and to hopefully uplift. His calling card is "we have a country to save" and to him this means returning to the bedrock Constitutional principles of limited government and maximum personal responsibility. Elder's iconoclastic wit and intellectual agility makes him a particularly attractive voice in a nation that seems weary of traditional racial dialogue.” – Los Angeles Times.

Mike Gallagher Mike Gallagher began his broadcasting career in 1978 in Dayton, Ohio. Today, he is one of the most listened-to talk radio show hosts in America, recently having been ranked in the Talkers Magazine “Heavy Hundred” list – the 100 most important talk radio hosts in America. Prior to being launched into national syndication in 1998, Mike hosted the morning show on WABC-AM in New York City. Today, Talkers Magazine reports that his show is heard by over 3.75 million weekly listeners. Besides his radio work, Mike is seen on Fox News Channel as an on-air contributor, frequently appearing on the cable news giant.

Hugh Hewitt is one of the nation’s leading bloggers and a genuine media revolutionary. He brings that expertise, his wit and what The New Yorker magazine calls his “amiable but relentless manner” to his nationally syndicated show each day.

When Dr. Sebastian Gorka was growing up, he listened to talk radio under his pillow with a transistor radio, dreaming that one day he would be behind the microphone. Beginning New Year’s Day 2019, he got his wish. Gorka now hosts America First every weekday afternoon 3 to 6pm ET. Gorka’s unique story works well on the radio. He is national security analyst for the Fox News Channel and author of two books: "Why We Fight" and "Defeating Jihad." His latest book releasing this fall is “War For America’s Soul.” He is uniquely qualified to fight the culture war and stand up for what is great about America, his adopted home country.

Broadcasting from his home station of KRLA in Los Angeles, the Dennis Prager Show is heard across the country. Everything in life – from politics to religion to relationships – is grist for Dennis’ mill. If it’s interesting, if it affects your life, then Dennis will be talking about it – with passion, humor, insight and wisdom.

Sean Hannity is a conservative radio and television host, and one of the original primetime hosts on the Fox News Channel, where he has appeared since 1996. Sean Hannity began his radio career at a college station in California, before moving on to markets in the Southeast and New York. Today, he’s one of the most listened to on-air voices. Hannity’s radio program went into national syndication on September 10, 2001, and airs on more than 500 stations. Talkers Magazine estimates Hannity’s weekly radio audience at 13.5 million. In 1996 he was hired as one of the original hosts on Fox News Channel. As host of several popular Fox programs, Hannity has become the highest-paid news anchor on television.

Michelle Malkin is a mother, wife, blogger, conservative syndicated columnist, longtime cable TV news commentator, and best-selling author of six books. She started her newspaper journalism career at the Los Angeles Daily News in 1992, moved to the Seattle Times in 1995, and has been penning nationally syndicated newspaper columns for Creators Syndicate since 1999. She is founder of conservative Internet start-ups Hot Air and Twitchy.com. Malkin has received numerous awards for her investigative journalism, including the Council on Governmental Ethics Laws (COGEL) national award for outstanding service for the cause of governmental ethics and leadership (1998), the Reed Irvine Accuracy in Media Award for Investigative Journalism (2006), the Heritage Foundation and Franklin Center for Government & Public Integrity's Breitbart Award for Excellence in Journalism (2013), the Center for Immigration Studies' Eugene Katz Award for Excellence in the Coverage of Immigration Award (2016), and the Manhattan Film Festival's Film Heals Award (2018). Married for 26 years and the mother of two teenage children, she lives with her family in Colorado. Follow her at michellemalkin.com. (Photo reprinted with kind permission from Peter Duke Photography.)

Sponsored by:

The Danger of Growing Numb to Human Suffering

Carbonatix Pre-Player Loader

Audio By Carbonatix

I saw a video of someone dying the other day. Scrolling my phone, Instagram’s algorithm positioned it between a video of Cesar Millan training a pit bull and one about prepping meals for the week.

Witnessing global news while it’s being made is easier than ever. Ironically, for that same reason, it’s harder than ever to care. At home and far away, we watch—often in gruesome detail—war, conflict, disaster, crises, and other injustices unfold in almost real time just inches from our noses. Only to then set our phones down and pretend all of this is normal.

I’ve spent the last two decades—most of my career—documenting humanitarian crises, disasters, socio-economic crises, and injustice, often involving children. I’ve seen and reported on my fair share of traumatic things. These are things I carry in an invisible backpack that seems to weigh a hundred pounds.

I’m guilty of feeding the algorithm, too, and I’ve spent a lot of time thinking about my own role in reporting terrible, gut-wrenching things.

But today we are all positively drenched in this environment, saturated in constant media coverage. Understandably, many of you are suffering from compassion fatigue. It seems like every week there’s a new crisis that shreds our hearts. Many of us are suffering from compassion fatigue.

But as Christians, we cannot surrender our fight. Two of the cardinal exhortations we find in the Bible – both straight from Jesus Himself – call us to something radical. Jesus asks us to hold the whole of the world in our hearts.

More than ever, caring for the least of these seems political. It’s not. It’s biblical.

Recall the Great Commandment

“Love the Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all your mind.’ This is the first and greatest commandment. And the second is like it: ‘Love your neighbor as yourself.” (Matthew 22:36-40).

Jesus doesn’t stop at asking us to love God. He commands us to love our neighbor “as ourselves.”

We’ve lost just how radical this is for our lives. In the parable of the Good Samaritan, we see a profound challenge of who we are called to love. The traveler the Samaritan encountered wasn’t just a stranger. He was a sworn enemy.

Anyone listening to the story back then would have understood the story’s implications. Jesus calls us to a radical, global, no limits, big-hearted love that doesn’t flinch in the face of suffering.

When I first started working for Compassion International, I was overwhelmed, even paralyzed, in the face of extreme poverty. Some of my very first trips for Compassion were to West Africa, places where children and families were experiencing unimaginable suffering.

But we’re not called to solve it all. The simplicity of Jesus’ message is to meet the needs we see and can meet, to love others as we would hope to be loved, and to act purposefully without the weight and heaviness that accompanies our inability to erase all suffering perfectly.

Recall the Great Commission

We read in Matthew 28:18-20 NIV that Jesus told his disciples, “All authority in heaven and on earth has been given to me. Therefore, go and make disciples of all nations, baptizing them in the name of the Father and of the Son and of the Holy Spirit, and teaching them to obey everything I have commanded you. And surely I am with you always, to the very end of the age.”

The Great Commission is central to our faith. Not accidental. The fullness of what God has called us to do includes this mission. Looking out over the Sea of Galilee, Jesus asked us to take the good news forward, outward, to all people.

I wish I could bring you with me. I wish you could stand at the mouth of the Simón Bolívar Bridge in Colombia and see women cut off their hair for a few dollars. I wish you could meet the children who survived the Rwandan Genocide, coloring their trauma with crayons. I wish I could take you to Malawi so you could see the impact of drought ripple through communities that have no food to eat. I wish you could go to Thailand and meet the children and families along the border who are stuck in limbo, caught between conflict and being stateless.

This suffering is almost impossible to watch. But we must not cower, because the Great Commandment and the Great Commission are very much our concern.

Engage intentionally, and always with your calling—and your legacy—in mind

This is daunting. I know. Don’t be overwhelmed. Carefully reflect on what you’re capable of doing and how you can do it. Awareness is not meaningful engagement. You have to care, and then you have to act.

Sit down and take inventory of what God has given you, in terms of your giftings, personality, resources, and skills. There are no accidents in how God made you. If you’re strong, He’s made you strong to defend the weak. If you’re brave, He’s made you brave for those who are afraid. Think about the causes and issues God has embedded in your heart. Hold those carefully, and let them shape how and where you serve.

Carry God’s word close. Keep your heart soft. Look to the horizon. And then, move.

Photo Credit: ©Unsplash/Paul Hanaoka

Ryan Johnson is Global Story Director for Compassion International. For the past 16 years, he has used the power of story to stir people’s hearts toward action, documenting humanitarian crises, disasters, and issues affecting children living in extreme poverty.

 

Salem News Channel Today

Sponsored Links

On Air & Up Next

See the Full Program Guide