In the
Brothers Grimm tale The Pied Piper of Hamelin, a small German town
overrun with rats calls upon the services of “a tall thin man dressed in
brightly colored clothes, with a long feather in his hat, waving a gold
pipe at them.” The townspeople offer to pay the piper to remove all of
the rats from their town.
The next
morning the piper plays an irresistible tune on his pipe, leading the
rats down to the river where they are drowned and swept away. The moral
of the Brothers Grimm story is not realized in the Piper’s feat, but in
the broken promise of the townspeople who fail to make their payment to
the piper. At dawn he teaches them a painful lesson when he leads all of
their children away and into a mountain never to be seen again.
Though the
moral of keeping your promises is a needed one
(Jas. 5:12),
one can’t help but reflect on the strange tune the piper played that
irresistibly led the rats and children out of the town.
Does not
Satan have a way of playing just the right irresistible tune to lead us
to our destruction?
Sometimes
the song Satan plays hits the chords of the “various lusts” that dwell
in our hearts
(2 Tim. 3:6).
Some abandon the Lord’s ways, however clearly expressed, for things as
simple as preference of music type or things as destructive as adultery
and fornication. Satan knows the song that resonates in your heart and
he will not fail to play it.
Likewise,
Peter speaks of those who “fail from their own steadfastness, being led
away with the error of the wicked”
(2 Pet. 3:17).
When we become discontent with the truth, Satan plays the songs of error
that will lead us away. As Satan has contrived every flavor of error
under the sun for our partaking, he has exactly the right tune to lead
each of us away should the love of the truth not resonate on our heart
(2 Tim. 2:9-12).
The
redeemed sing a new song
(Rev. 14:3).
This song resonates so strongly in their hearts that none will ever
separate them from the love of God
(Rom. 8:35-39).
Other
Articles by Jonathan Perz
Catechismal Christianity
Spiritual
Pushovers and Terminal Hardheadedness
An Open Letter to Christians
Slow to Wrath
God Help Me To Be A Better
Listener
The Reluctant Disciple
Light or Darkness
"Confused" by Truth
Dressing Our Daughters Like Prostitutes
Is the New Testament a Law?
Coming to the Defense of Sin and Error
Fellowship With God is Conditional
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