What Christians Can Learn from the Ministry of Officer Ramos

Eric Metaxas

On the Saturday after Christmas, more than 20,000 people gathered at Christ Tabernacle Church in Queens to honor officer Rafael Ramos who, along with his partner Wenjian Liu, was killed in an ambush a week earlier.

 

The impact of Ramos’ murder could be seen in who attended the funeral: in addition to police officers from across the country, mourners included the mayor of New York, the governor of New York, and Vice-President Biden.

 

The New York Yankees have volunteered to pay for the college educations of Ramos’s sons, and Met’s third baseman David Wright, whose father served for 32 years on the Norfolk, Virginia, police force, reached out to the Ramos family and invited the boys to attend spring training with him.

 

Clearly, Rafael Ramos’ death has touched and moved New Yorkers. It certainly touched me--I was born in New York, and my cousin Marian was a New York cop for 20 years. But what should also move us is the life that Ramos lived: By every measure, his was the kind of life every Christian should aspire to live.

 

A glimpse into this kind of life was offered by his thirteen-year-old son, Jaden, on the occasion of Rafael Ramos’ fortieth birthday—just 11 days before the murder. On his Facebook page, Jaden wrote “Happy birthday to the best dad in the world, you are always there for me even when it's almost impossible.”

 

Ramos’ impact wasn’t limited to his family. Marcos Miranda, the president of the New York State Chaplain Task Force, said that Ramos was “just hours away from becoming a lay chaplain and graduating from a community-crisis chaplaincy program” when he was murdered.

 

Miranda said Officer Ramos “told me that [in] his job even with the New York Police Department, he felt he was doing God’s work. He felt he was protecting and serving the community and that was sort of a ministry for him.”

 

As CNN put it, “Rafael Ramos was an unusual cop.”

 

If Ramos was “unusual,” he also belonged to an unusual church. Christ Tabernacle Church in my home borough of Queens has a close working relationship with Prison Fellowship. Prison Fellowship has worked with Christ Tabernacle to provide in-prison, prison culture and mentor training for the church’s prison ministry personnel.

 

Prison Fellowship has also trained the director of the ministry so that he could train PF volunteers both at Christ Tabernacle and at other churches. Two members of the prison ministry teach in our Honor Program at New York City’s jail, Rikers Island. And, we're engaged in discussion with the church about creating some additional opportunities for them to serve in Rikers and other prisons.

 

As the life and ministry of Rafael Ramos demonstrated, there’s nothing typical about the church on Myrtle Avenue that was at the center of his life. Still, it should be. Ramos saw the streets of New York as his ministry.  It was where God had placed him to do good and, with God’s help, serve as an agent of transformation.

 

That’s what all Christians are called to do. Our faith, and the comfort and strength we draw from it, is not solely intended for our personal benefit. It’s intended to be shared with others. It’s intended to build the Kingdom person by person, block by block, and community by community.

 

It is right to mourn Ramos’ death.  It was an outrage and a tragedy. But it is even more important that we celebrate his life. And that we go and do likewise.

 

BreakPoint is a Christian worldview ministry that seeks to build and resource a movement of Christians committed to living and defending Christian worldview in all areas of life. Begun by Chuck Colson in 1991 as a daily radio broadcast, BreakPoint provides a Christian perspective on today’s news and trends via radio, interactive media, and print. Today BreakPoint commentaries, co-hosted by Eric Metaxas and John Stonestreet, air daily on more than 1,200 outlets with an estimated weekly listening audience of eight million people. Feel free to contact us at BreakPoint.org where you can read and search answers to common questions.

Eric Metaxas is a co-host of BreakPoint Radio and a best-selling author whose biographies, children's books, and popular apologetics have been translated into more than a dozen languages.

Publication date: January 13, 2015

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