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                    		| "If we confess our sins, he is faithful   and just and will forgive us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness." - 1 John 1:9 |  
                    		|  |  |  COMMENTARYSaving a Serial Killer By Belinda Elliott CBN.com Daily Life Producer
 
 CBN.com  Most people know of Jeffrey Dahmer, a notorious serial  killer, pedophile, and cannibal. When word of his crimes spread through our  nation after he was arrested in 1991 no one could believe the horrendous acts  that he had committed. When it was reported that Jeffrey had become a born-again  Christian and been baptized, it was equally hard for some people to believe.   Could God really forgive someone like him? Wisconsin  pastor Roy Ratcliff says yes. Roy  is the pastor who baptized Jeffrey and met with him once a week until Jeffrey  was murdered in prison. During those visits Roy came to know Jeffrey very well and says  the prisoner was truly a changed man after his conversion. Roy has written a book, Dark Journey, Deep Grace, about Jeffrey’s journey of faith. After he became a Christian, not everyone was convinced that  the prisoner’s faith was sincere. Jeffrey’s conversion even angered some  people. One member of Roy’s  congregation  remarked, “If Jeffrey Dahmer is going to heaven, then I don’t  want to be there.” That sentiment troubled Roy.  In his book he writes, How can a Christian hold that viewpoint? I  don’t understand it. Does it come from a misunderstanding of the forgiveness of  sin? Is forgiveness limited to those who are not very bad after all? Is there  no joy in knowing that a sinner has turned to God? In reading recent reviews of Roy’s book, I’ve seen similar reactions. Many  people seem surprised by the thought that Jeffrey has been forgiven for what he  did.  But isn't Christ's blood enough to make even the vilest  offender clean and acceptable to the Father? I once did an exercise with my Sunday School class where we  were asked to rank various people according to how well we think they would be  accepted at our church. Topping the list of the most unacceptable people were  ex-cons.  Maybe one reason for this is fear. We know of their troubled  past, and we fear that they have not really changed. The apostle Paul faced the  same kind of fears. When he chose to follow God and gave up his persecution of  Christians, many still feared him and were skeptical that he had really  changed.  Yet, through Scripture, we see what a difference God made in  Paul’s life. Once he met the Living God he was never the same. Why can we not  accept that same miracle of God’s grace for someone like Jeffrey Dahmer? After  all, Moses and David were also both murders, but we see what great works God  did in their lives.
 Perhaps our apprehension stems from the fact that we have  allowed ourselves to categorize sin. We classify some sins as small and almost  inconsequential. Others are big and really, really bad. Murder, for example, is much worse than gossip or even adultery.
 But I don’t believe that is how God sees sin. Jesus taught that if a man even looked at a woman lustfully,  then he had committed adultery. It seems like to God sin is sin, regardless of  how “bad” we think it is on our sliding scale of human judgment.  Does that mean  that harboring bitterness and unforgiveness in our heart toward our enemies is  just as bad to God as if we acted on those feelings and physically attacked  that person?  It is something to think about. Perhaps what disturbs people most about Jeffrey’s life is  that he was found to be sane when he committed his horrific crimes. If that is  the case, then what prompted him to do it? Where does such evil come from? Roy  believes that without God, such evil can come from any one of us.  He writes, Jeff was a sinner. His life proves there is no limit to our  capacity to sin or be cruel to other people. We are all candidates for murder  and mayhem. It doesn’t take crazy people to do such things. … I believe any of  us are capable of everything Jeff did, if we leave God out of our lives. That’s a scary thought that may be hard for us to swallow.  Perhaps without God we wouldn’t become murders, but who knows what our sinful  natures are capable of. Praise God that He redeems us from a life of sin and  working only to please our sinful nature!  I, for one, am thankful to know that God’s grace covers any  and every sin, whether we humans believe it should or not. Even Jeffrey had trouble believing that God’s grace extended  to someone who had done the things he had.  I had to explain the  meaning of grace and how it was applied many times before he was able to relax  this concern, Roy  writes. Once he could see that being a  Christian made him right in God’s sight, no matter what, he was able to lay  aside many of his fears. Isn’t that what grace is all about?  The  “good news” of the gospel is that Jesus has already paid the price for all of  our sins. He does expect us to turn away from them and walk in obedience to Him  from that point on, but our past sins are no longer an issue. To a sinner like  me, that truly is good news. While many of us look at Jeffrey’s past and find ourselves  unable to comprehend that God’s grace runs that deep, Roy feels that Jeffrey’s story demonstrates  what the gospel is all about.  Jeff simply  illustrates what Jesus can do with sinful men, Roy writes. I would like to meet Pastor Roy one day. I would like to  thank him for the unconditional love and grace he extended to Jeffrey.  It is  the same type of love and grace that God extends to each of us.    Dark Journey, Deep  Grace is available in bookstores and online. Have you found peace with God? Learn more about He forgives your sins. 
 Comments? Email me  More articles by Belinda on CBN.com    
 
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