Scripture Reading: Ezekiel 16:49-50
"Now this was the sin of your sister Sodom: She and her daughters were arrogant, overfed and unconcerned; they did not help the poor and needy. They were haughty and did all these things detestable to me."
Beloved,
We live in a world that is obsessed with legality. We measure our morality by our statutes, our codes, and our policies. We convince ourselves that if we have a law for it, if it has been debated in a chamber, signed by a pen, and printed in a ledger, then it is "right."
But there is a terrifying chasm between being legal and being righteous. There is a haunting distance between a state that strictly follows its own laws and a state that is recognized by the world—and by God—as a pariah.
A pariah is more than just an enemy. A pariah is an outcast, a social leper, a nation that has so hardened its heart that it has become an island of cold isolation. How can a state be a nation of laws and yet find itself in the wilderness of isolation?
1. The Trap of Legalistic Arrogance
The Bible tells us that Sodom was not necessarily a place of anarchy. It was a place of arrogance. It had its own social order. It had its own way of doing things. The men of the city didn’t think they were "lawless"—they thought they were the masters of their own domain.
When a state becomes so convinced of its own supremacy that it closes its gates to the "stranger, the fatherless, and the widow," it may be obeying its own laws, but it is violating the foundational Law of Humanity. When a state decides that its borders are not for the protection of the vulnerable, but for the hoarding of comfort and the exclusion of the "other," it creates a society that is technically orderly but spiritually bankrupt.
You can pass a law that denies mercy. You can codify the exclusion of the poor. You can write statutes that justify the oppression of the outsider. But the world—and history—has a way of looking at such a nation and realizing that it has lost its soul.
2. The Verdict of the "Other"
Why does the world look at certain nations as pariahs? It is because, deep down, the human conscience recognizes when a law has been used as a shield for cruelty.
When the Prophet Ezekiel speaks of Sodom, he does not mention a lack of police. He mentions a lack of concern. A nation becomes a pariah when it becomes "unconcerned." When a state’s laws are designed to insulate the comfortable from the cries of the suffering, it signals to the rest of the world that this nation has stopped seeing other human beings as images of God.
We see this today: Nations that are technically stable, economically thriving, and legally rigorous, yet they are shunned. Why? Because the world recognizes that they have replaced the law of love with the law of the fortress. They have treated the stranger not as a guest, but as a threat. And when you treat the vulnerable as a threat, you invite the judgement of history.
3. The Call to Higher Statutes
As Christians, we are citizens of two realms. We live under the laws of our land, and we are called to be good citizens. But we also live under the Law of the Kingdom—a law that demands we love our neighbor as ourselves.
If our state’s laws contradict the Law of God—if they demand that we turn our backs on the hungry, the foreigner, or the oppressed—then we find ourselves at a crossroads. A state that is a pariah to the world is often a state that has forgotten the most basic biblical mandate: We were all foreigners in the land of Egypt.
The danger of becoming a pariah is that it breeds a false sense of victimhood. A nation that is shunned by the world often tells itself, "They hate us because we are right." But Scripture warns us that often, they hate us because we have become "haughty." We have become so full of ourselves that we have no room for God’s children.