I've never been one to bend over
backwards to make people happy. You know a, "people pleaser." As a
matter of fact I've been known to piss a few people off from to time to time.
It seems my lack of willingness to conform to the norm or my refusal to shed
the very core of my being is not well liked. And there is probably no doubt I
may piss some off with this blog.
Sell outs come in all shapes and
sizes, from all walks of life. We've all met them. I almost bet you that we've
all been one to some degree. Could I look you in the eye and tell you I have
never done it? No. I said I've never done it to make others happy. But for me?
That's different. Insecurity. Loneliness. Personal gain. Revenge. Advantage.
Who knows. Our reasons are as many as the number of settings in our walks of
life.
In the darkest time of my life I
reached out to those who I thought would reach back. I expected them to reach
back. I opened up. I poured my heart out. My words flowed only to fall on deaf
ears. My wife had left taking our children. Soon after I fell into alcohol and
was fighting its grip. I turned to my church family and pastor. It was the
church my wife and our children attended at the time. It's a large church made
up of bodies. That's it...bodies. People who are busy doing programs and church
activities. I soon realized my church family did not seem like much of a family.
Mahatma Gandhi once said, "I
like your Christ; I do not like your Christians. Your Christians are so unlike
your Christ."
Something about us turned him off
to us. Just the same, I became turned off to my church family. I never received
a phone call or an inquiry specifically about how I was handling the separation
and divorce and loss of my children. I spoke openly about my struggle with
alcohol. Yet I never received the comfort of knowing someone was praying. I was
never asked to lunch or over to someone's home. My wife had just walked out
taking my kids and my church family didn't react. I never heard the words,
"How are doing?"
The church I attended was a busy
church. A popular church with many programs and activities in the name of
ministry. The pastor was and is very popular with the well known in our town.
I'm not accusing him of being self-promoting.
I kept reaching as time went by.
Not to make others happy, I but needed others. I needed change. I needed God's
grace. Instead I grew to resent the church. The local organized church. It was
weak and self-serving. It was blind and in my town it was simply an organized
social club made up of cliques that knew no more about God's Word than empty
clichés.
I hate clichés. It doesn't matter
what they are about. If you have something to say just say it. And if you
prefer to be cute and vague then tell it to Dr. Seuss. And if you don't know
what to say don't say anything at all. I hate Christian clichés the most. They
are just a way of saying, "Hey I have no idea what to say or I have no
idea what I'm talking about so I'm going to fake it." But each has their
own true meaning.
The worst one I heard, “God is in control.” Used by both Christians
and non-Christians I hate this saying. What it really means: "I only
believe this about overwhelming situations I have no control over. The rest of
the time, I believe things are up to us and I act that way. I don't give Him a
second thought. And I believe this to mean that everything in the end will work
out positively in my favor. But if it doesn't then I will blame God. And I
refuse to believe that sometimes life is just life and I'm not the only person
on this whole planet that has free will to make choices that lead to mistakes.?
Another bad one-liner: "I'll pray for you." It's not that
telling someone you'll pray for them is bad. But when all you say after they
have poured their heart out and you really mean is something like, "This
conversation is over." Or,
"Please tell me that's all you're saying."
It can be as bad as, "What can I pray for you about?" How many times
have you been asked this? "Thanks for asking. You're so kind. My wife is
having an affair, my brother is a drunk, and my dog can't control his sexual
desires." More juicy tidbits of your life to spread through the prayer
gossip grapevine.
I
actually heard this one, "Lord willing..." "Are you serious?"
What they really mean, I feel uber-spiritual when I say this. And honestly I
have no idea what it really means. I'm just saying it in the awkward situation
to make you feel like I care."
And
this one....the one that really pissed me off, "What's God doing in your
life right now?" "Did you just ask what I think you just asked? I
think you just did." Because what you really mean is, "I'm getting
ready to judge you. Because if you were really living for Jesus He would be using
you in some capacity. Your wife left you and took your kids. And if you can't
answer my question then you must either be a heathen or a hypocrite."
Seriously?
I
can't forget, "The Bible says so." It's the foundational belief that
all other Christian clichés are based on. But what does it really mean? "I
have no clue what that big book I'm in love with really says. I just hear what
the preacher says on Sundays. I don't speak ancient Hebrew or Hellenistic
Greek. And I only vaguely remember what I have been told, and I don't care
either, because it's God's Word, and if God said it, it must be true.
"Wow, I appreciate your shallow responses. Which in case are
unacceptable responses, “It also says to kill your children when they talk
back. Have your children ever talked back?” Did you talk back?! It also says,
to stone your wife if she has committed adultery. Jesus says that if we even
look at another person with the wrong intentions its adultery. Are you ready to
stone your wife? Or, “Explain to me the authorship and transmission of the
Bible, and why you think it’s God’s Word.” Or especially, “Jesus said to give
anything to those who ask of you – and not only to give what they ask, but
more. So please give me your wallet and your car.”
Am I anti-church? By no means. Anti
programs? Not at all! Expect us Christians to be perfect? God forbid. We live
in a world that calls failure a weakness, and weakness a flaw. We are taught to
mask the truth because, "it's better if you keep that to yourself."
If I can be honest, as if I
already haven't, I think our world has built itself on a shallow and narrow
foundation, ready to break any second. Let me make it more personal. There have
been times when I have been shallow and built a narrow foundation.
I'm guilty of uttering those fake
words, "God is in control" and "You're in my prayers" only
to walk away and seconds later forget what we were even talking about. Who's
the hypocrite now?
The good news. I believe in a God
of Grace, love and many chances. And if it wasn't for those divine qualities
working together, I wouldn't be standing here today. Oh I've done worse than
speak shallow declarations.
Grace is not something that
should be hoarded or hidden, but rather the very presence of grace in our lives
requires us to show grace to others. Why? Because that grace is there in
response to the cause we first exhibited, a cause we all share.
Grace sees past the faults, the
struggle, the pains and the failures that threaten to define us, and the cuts
to the heart of the individual, their circumstances, and their timing. We've
all needed second chances, whether it's with our career, our family, our
dreams, or our entire lives. And the vision of grace is to see us live it,
apart from color, religion, gender, or even the amount of grace we have for
other. Grace only sees the need and moves towards it.
Have you heard words that left
you feeling like you weren't enough? Have you been in conversations where
you've been run down? Where didn't get out of what you desperately needed?
How often are we the one's quick
to judge? How often do I make assessments about someone before I know the whole
story?
Do I freely give grace and second
chances?
Love never fails.
Making someone feel
guilty...fail.
Making someone feel less than
you...fail.
Love never fails.
There is something going on in
our church culture these days. It's something that really needs to change. It's
something that I was guilty of in the past. It's this.
We have a tendency to throw
people away because they do or say or even write one thing we don't like. Just
one thing. That's all it takes. One moment. Or even something they didn't do
but we think they should have done. I didn't hear what I needed or what I what
I wanted. So I disqualified them.
Gone. That person isn't worth my
time. Really? One thing and the world knows us as a people of hatred. Let's
face it, every single person in the world could and will do something you
aren't going to like at some point in their lives. We are broken people. We
have a natural tendency to hurt and be hurt by people.
Yet we walk around with these
little tests all day. A guy cut me off...I hate him! I don't know him, but I
know I hate him. Yet I've done the same thing in a rush for time.
I still hate clichés. But I hate safe
grace even more. It's not really grace at all.
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