Casper ten Boom |
Corrie ten Boom (1892-1983) was devout Dutch Christian who worked to rescue Jews during the Nazi
occupation of the Netherlands. She recounts an attempt to recruit a pastor to
assist in offering refuge to those trying to escape the Holocaust:
Back in the dining room I pulled the coverlet
from the baby’s face. There was a long silence. The man leaned forward, his
hand in spite of himself reaching for the tiny fist curled around the blanket.
For a moment I saw compassion and fear struggle in his face. The he straightened.
“Definitely not. We could lose our lives for this Jewish child!” Unseen by
either of us, Father had appeared in the doorway. “Give the child to me,
Corrie,” he said. Father held the baby, his white beard brushing the little
face. . . . At last he looked up at the pastor. “You say we could lose our
lives for this child. I would consider that the highest honor that could come
to my family.”
As
it happened, Corrie’s father, Caspar ten Boom and other members of her family
died in Nazi prison camps thereby receiving the honor of lying down their lives
for the sake of the lives of others.
The
ten Booms delighted in God and all other human beings, including those in whom it was inconvenient or even dangerous to delight, and thus they were prepared
to extend mercy to those whose lives were threatened – even at the risk of their
own safety and security. This is what it means to be a people of God’s mercy
and delight. I pray that I and other Christians might more and more become such a
people. I wonder how we might better form such a people.