Henry Dunant grew up a
well-to-do Swiss Calvinist home, where he watched his parents do one
good deed after another, driven by Christian empathy for the needy. His
father labored tirelessly to assist orphans and ex-prisoners, and his
mother had a burden for the sick and poor.
This was a time of spiritual
revival in Switzerland, and Henry grew up feeling compelled to do all he
could to serve Christ. As a teenager, he helped organize young men in
regular Bible studies and in projects for the poor. He helped found a
chapter of the YMCA in Geneva. In college, Dunant was so preoccupied
with his mercy ministries that he neglected to study. At age 21, he was
forced out of school by poor grades. He found a job, worked hard,
established his own business, and prospered.
On June 24, 1859, while traveling in Italy on business,
Henry arrived in the town of Solferino in the aftermath of a battle that
had resulted in 38,000 wounded soldiers. The scene shocked
him—thousands of young men were writhing in pain, and there seemed to be
no one to help them. Henry abandoned all thought of business and went
to work organizing the local people to assist the wounded troops. He
convinced volunteers to aid all soldiers regardless of what side of the
conflict they were on.
Dunant returned to Geneva a changed man. He was haunted
by the fact there was no organized way of caring for wounded soldiers in
times of war. Writing a book of his experiences, he had it
self-published and distributed to political and military leaders. It
included a plan for creating a politically-neutral organization to care
for wounded soldiers regardless of the uniform they wore. Ultimately his
efforts were rewarded. On February 17, 1863, a committee of five men
gathered to establish the “International Committee for Relief to the
Wounded.” Shortly afterward the name was changed to the “International
Committee of the Red Cross.”
Why the Red Cross? This organization was established in
Switzerland, and in trying to think of a protective symbol for hurt
soldiers and medics, it seemed sensible to use the symbol on the Swiss
flag. Switzerland’s flag is red with a white cross. The origin of the
flag dates to the thirteenth century when the emperor carried a banner
bearing the cross as a holy sign, understanding himself to be the
protector of Christianity. Ultimately it points back to the cross of
Christ.
The founders of the Red Cross took the flag, reversed the colors, and
created a red cross on a white background. Thus the Red Cross became a
symbol of empathy and mercy that has brought immeasurable healing and
relief to a world rent by war.
The cross is a symbol of love and an emblem of ministry
to the sick, poor, widowed, hungry, oppressed, abused, endangered, and
illiterate. From the beginning, the cross has represented an empathetic
Savior, One who felt the pain of sinners and sacrificed His life for
their salvation. As believers, we should bare the marks of the cross in
how we live and in how we respond to the hurting.
A Short History of Empathy
Many people don’t realize the brutality of the Roman
world into which Jesus was born. Empathy and compassion didn’t extend
beyond the family circle. Life was cheap, and society was harsh and
heartless. Jesus came with a message of love, and His parable of the
Good Samaritan was like a lightning bolt of love in a blackened sky. In
Luke 10:25-37, Jesus told of a man who’d been waylaid and robbed on the
road between Jerusalem and Jericho. Various passersby saw the man
injured and lying in the ditch. But only one person—a Samaritan—stopped
to help.
But in Luke 9, Jesus was rejected by a village of Samaritans as He
traveled to Jerusalem and His appointment with Calvary. He did not
revile. He was not angry like the disciples, He simply traveled on to
the next village. In Luke 9, the Samaritans disdained Jesus; in Luke 10,
Jesus commended a Samaritan.
Our Lord was (and is) a good forgiver. His spirit was (and is)
impervious to harboring bitterness or resentment. He taught empathy and
compassion, and He told us in this parable: “Go and do likewise” (Luke
10:37). Whatever our role in life, let’s find a way today to carry on
the Christian tradition of extending the love of Jesus to others under
the banner of His cross
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