Last year it was revealed that he had been having an affair with a staff member and his wife had filed domestic abuse charges against him. He resigned from his position at Summit and decided that the affair was more important than his family, and left them. On December 21st he committed suicide and his death was covered nationally because his father is a spiritual adviser to President Obama.
This news was very hard on me - partially due to the great love I have always felt towards Isaac, and partially due to the great pain that suicide has already inflicted on my heart over the last two years. As I think through what integrity means, and the immense pressure those in the public eye must feel, I can't help but think of King David.
I do not care that Isaac Hunter had an affair - that is primarily a sin against God and his wife and family, not against me. People are constantly failing and being forgiven by a gracious God. People will always mess up - but what I want, and what I think God wants, is for people to be quick to make right their wrong. Isaac Hunter chose not to bend, either from pride, blindness, or a small view of God's capacity of forgiveness. Because he did not bend, be broke - and it his is breaking, not his failure that breaks my heart. Breaking is not sinning - breaking is not repenting of the sin.
A man's failures do not negate the great good that God accomplished through them in the lives of others. God is glorified within and often despite my failures. My sadness is not due to someone I respect failing - that will always happen. My sadness is due to a man not seeing the redemption possible after such a failure. God is so much greater than our sin and so much better than our badness.
"..what I think God wants, is for people to be quick to make right their wrong."
ReplyDeleteIf this is a matter of speed and/or timing, what is needed to do so? I´m still thinking...
Love you,
Uncle Juampa
I think admittance that wrong was done, humbly asking for forgiveness, and dedication to making right what was wrong. I think speed is important because it brings restoration quicker and is a sign of humility to admit fault when it's seen.
DeleteI've never experienced depression so deep that suicide was the only option, but I'm guessing that must be how Isaac felt. I heard he was working on restoring his life, which makes this even more confusing. It's hard to imagine any hurt being so deep that someone would abandon his parents, his siblings, and, more importantly, his own children. Many people were blessed by Isaac and many have been hurt by Isaac. Praise God for his grace and mercies which are new every morning for those of us who are still here.
ReplyDeleteNor have I. It hurts to imagine that great level of pain and depression. I have always stuck to the idea that however much pain or evil or darkness there is, that love, goodness, and God are greater and stronger.
DeleteThis is a powerful post Stephen. Thank you for writing it.
ReplyDeleteSo sorry for this loss. You articulated this very well and I agree with you. It's not when my heroes fail that hurts the most, its when they don't see the possibility of redemption or the hope of it. I've known some people very close to me who made awful choices, but repented and were fully and abundantly restored. It breaks my heart. My prayer is that those who were impacted by this man don't negate or dismiss the work God did in their lives through him. God bless you!
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