Read Exodus 15:4-10
We make our crosses beautiful. We enjoy and celebrate the win, but would rather have the win at no cost. Warfare is surgical: no-troops-on-the-ground wins. We fly drones over enemy territory and turn warfare into a highly-advanced video game.

But here Moses and the people of Israel celebrate a song of victory that recounts the deaths of Pharaoh and his army. He makes a point of not only Israel’s victory but of Egypt and Pharaoh’s utter defeat.
Let’s be clear though. Pharaoh was a fierce enemy! The story of his abuses began with the order to kill all the male babies born of the Hebrew women. It continued with slavery that grew ever more severe under the Egyptian task-masters. He refused 9 times to allow the Hebrew people to go from Egypt to worship God and return to their own land. He had no sooner let the people of Israel go than he changed his mind and went out to kill them as they were escaping.
We don’t want to focus on the dark side of victory because we would rather think that most people are basically good. We want to have everybody get along. But there is evil in the world; real evil. And when evil is destroyed, it is a very good thing.
I can still remember seeing images of Saddam Hussein’s statue being toppled in Iraq, and the sense of relief when he was caught, tried and executed. Perhaps that is yet to come for Muammar Gaddafi.
Our greatest enemy is death. Satan seeks to steal, kill and destroy. When he is defeated we will sing a new song of salvation and praise. We will celebrate his demise, for he is evil, and his destruction is our salvation.
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