Friday, January 15, 2016

Why the Church Has a Bad Rap for Being Judgmental



As a church-goer, I was hardly aware of this stigma that follows Christians. I assumed this accusation against Christians of "being judgmental" was the natural response of guilty sinners--they just look at righteousness and feel guilty. They merely perceive judgment without there being any actual exchange. It was their own guilt that condemned them. It had nothing to do with me! I perceived myself as innocent and "unlike" my neighbors who chose to to bad things... and therein lies the irony: I did have a superiority complex which was making me come across as judgmental. And yet I considered myself to be the least judgmental person I knew!

Oh, come on, we all do it: look at others who are not doing or saying the right things, and feel disdain for them. This post is for Christians like myself, who are in the same boat as I was: subconsciously prideful and judgmental, but blind to it. Why? How is this possible? I believe this judgmental pride is the natural result of a sin-focused life. Let me explain how this works.

We go to church and time and again we hear the pastors tell us how bad we are. We hear them tell us what not to do. We hear them tell us the consequences of bad behavior. We hear them shame us for sins we've committed. We hear condemnation from the pulpit, and exhortation to do better, be better. Can we blame the pastors? After all, we are the ones doing the wrong, all they are doing it pointing it out!  We hear them give us the four ways to live a holy life, the three keys to revival, and the twelve principles of spiritual discipline--all of which tend to conclude that the only ways to get these good things lies in fixing our behavior. And so, we often feel a sense of responsibility to set things right. Then the pastor tells us that if we need to set things right, we should come down to the altar and ask God for help. We go down to the altar because we know we don't measure up and we know we need God's help because we know we're not perfect--and those people who don't go down, who do they think they are?! Are they perfect? Do they think they're better than us? Well, they should be more humble, like us! Do you see the feedback loop of judgment beginning to form?

We go home with a new sense of determination to do better and be better! We pray hard and try hard! We focus on our progress. We go to our accountability partners and talk about how bad or good we've been doing. We ask God to search our hearts so see if there is any wickedness in us. We search ourselves and try our best to flush out what bad we see. We make an effort to be constantly aware of our shortcomings lest we become blind to our sins and prideful! Lest we allow our sins to make us trip up! We try to live by a higher and higher standard than before. We try to be radical disciples. We try to go to church as often as we can to make sure we are doing right. We try, try, try...

We become self-focused and selfish. We're so focused on our problems that even our attempts to "love others" end up being attempts to improve ourselves. And when we see other people, we project our own feelings about ourselves onto them; all we see is their problems. We no longer see our neighbors as people with hearts and souls and feelings; we see them as projects. And so we treat them the way we treat ourselves: we focus on how to solve their problems. We become one-dimensional in our interaction with others and we lose our ability to truly connect. A person's value to us is then based on their ability to meet our standards. We have become judgment machines, doling out judgment all the time. We judge others subconsciously just so that we can stop feeling so terrible about our own constant failure to measure up! No wonder outsiders can't stand being around us! We can't even face our own selves!

When the subject of judgment is brought up in church, we tell each other that we are supposed to judge our fellow believers--it is our duty, in fact. The passages in scripture people love to throw around are 1 Corinthians 6:1-5 about how we must judge disputes among ourselves, Galatians 6:1, which says, "Brothers and sisters, if someone is caught in a sin, you who live by the Spirit should restore that person gently. But watch yourselves, or you also may be tempted," and James 5:19-20,
My brothers and sisters, if one of you should wander from the truth and someone should bring that person back, remember this: Whoever turns a sinner from the error of their way will save them from death and cover over a multitude of sins.
And then there's 1 Corinthians 5, which contains the key: it literally tells us to judge those inside the church. Phrases like, "love the sinner, hate the sin." are tossed around. "It's their own guilty conscience projecting judgment onto us," we say (which could be true). Everyone feels justified to continue acting the way they have been, and then the discussion is over. We avoid it altogether.

But... what about the other verses about judgment, like the 10+ scriptures about how we are not to judge our brothers and sisters? Even Jesus says, "I pass judgment to no one." (John 8:15), and again says, "If anyone hears my words but does not keep them, I do not judge that person. For I did not come to judge the world, but to save the world." (John 12:47). Are we better than Jesus? If Jesus doesn't even judge people, who are we to judge? In Matthew 7:1, Jesus says, "For in the same way you judge others, you will be judged, and with the measure you use, it will be measured to you." 

There is a time and a place to address sin. I am not talking about legitimate interventions. I'm talking about a sin-focused life which produces a superiority complex in us and motivates us to judge others.

We tell ourselves, "but when I point out their sins, I'm not judging them, I'm saving them! Like Jesus!" But we repel everyone we talk to because we have that motive to fix their sins, and they can sense it! We call it, "tough love," and, "the hard truth," and we say things like, "No one wants to hear the hard truth! But everyone needs to hear it!" because how can people know they need a savior unless they first realize they are sinners? We have to save them from hell! We have to show them their sin! Except, actually, no, we don't. In fact, one of Satan's nicknames is the accuser. If we're constantly calling each other out, we do Satan's job for him. And it's the kindness of Christ that leads people to repentance (Rom. 2:4).

When we have this mindset and we try to influence (or minister to) other people, they can sense it. We cannot avoid coming across as condescending, or manipulative, no matter what our motive is. No one likes or trusts manipulation! 

Most of the time we think we are loving people; we think we are being kind by showing them "the truth," but most of the time, when we point out peoples' sin, we only push them further into it. And usually our real goal is to change them into something we find acceptable. That is rejection; we are telling them without words that they are not acceptable the way they are. When we do that, we fail to exemplify God's unconditional love. We are focused on their sin because we are focused on our sins. We are obsessed with sin! We think this is how God wants us to be, but I assure you, it's not.

Our purpose is to live a life in relationship with God, focused on Him. We do this by spending time with Him in prayer, study, meditation, and living in community with others.

My question to you then is this: do you know that God's acceptance of you is not based on your behavior? Do you know that God's love for you is unconditional? Do you know that God is not obsessed with your sin? Do you know that God values you as a person? Do you know he only hates sin because of what it does to you and the people around you? Do you believe God values you because He made you, not because you have done all the right things? Do you understand that he accepted you before you knew all the right things? In the kingdom of God, your value is not based on what you do or what you know, but on who you are. And who are you? You are loved and accepted, adopted into the family as a child of God, and there's nothing you can do to earn that. It simply is. God loves you, and nothing you do will ever change that.

Until you can accept this love for yourself, you will be unable to truly show that love to others.

I believe the church that spends more time teaching its congregation about God--who He is and who we are in Him--than it does moralizing and exhorting its congregation to be better, is the church that will actually break the judgment cycle. And I guarantee you those churches do exist.

Friday, October 9, 2015

Misconceptions in Genesis Pt. 1

I recently realized I some misconceptions about the creation story in Genesis from various teachings I've heard throughout the years (I've been so focused on the New Testament these days). Here's a couple things I've learned recently:

1. Why were Adam and Eve next to the forbidden tree in the first place? The tree of the knowledge of good and evil was right next to the tree of life in the middle of the garden. So, when teachers say things like, "of all the places Adam and Eve could be in the garden, they had to be right next to the forbidden tree!" As if to say that they were already naughty by being near it... Well, they might have been eating some fruit from the tree of life! They were most likely innocent of having sinful curiosity.

2. Who is more guilty, Adam or Eve?
People have said things like, "it's Eve's fault for giving Adam the fruit." Or that she is the evil one because she convinced Adam to do it. So Eve is at fault? Or people will favor Adam, saying "it's Adam's fault for not stopping Eve." Or, "Adam loved Eve so much that he joined her in her sin so that he could be with her." Or, "Eve was the decieved one, but Adam was not decieved and ate knowingly." So Eve is still lesser than Adam in this portrayal because Adam was strong and couldn't be convinced, unlike Eve, who was weaker in her resolve, thus Adam was motivated by love... As if to say that Eve is just stupid and Adam knew better, so he was more at fault in a somehow nobler way.

One should note that when the serpent is addressing Eve, the Hebrew pronoun is plural. This means he was talking to both Adam and Eve. So, Adam wasn't some innocent bystander, nor was he out of the conversation. He was there, and the Serpent was directing his statements to both. Eve handing the apple to Adam could very well have been only because she was closer to the tree. This changes the way we look at the story, and makes it easier to see that both were equally at fault (and avoid female-degradation, as is often the case).

That's all for now!

Thursday, September 17, 2015

Stop Posting "Friend Tests" on Facebook


Can we all just stop posting these manipulative posts on Facebook? Can we just stop shaming people for "not caring" to read and respond to our Facebook statuses?

I never respond to these. I could write a whole page about why these are socially unacceptable, but I'm probably making a bigger deal than I should. So you might as well unfriend me now if this is your litmus test for who you deem a worthy friend. 

Here, I'll create one that's worded in a way that is not insinuating. That way, you can still have fun reminiscing while not insulting everyone in the process. You can cut and paste this one: "Hey friends! Post one word to describe how we met! [cut and paste this message as your status so I can post a word for you!]"

Facebook culture drives me insane.

Thursday, July 16, 2015

Beach Chronicles: Selfies

















As a lifeguard at the beach, I do a lot of people-watching.

This summer, I've noticed a lot of people taking selfies. I'm not talking about pictures with friends, I'm talking about pictures of the self, taken by the self. Somehow I didn't notice it as much in years past. A couple weeks ago I noticed a gorgeous woman dressed in a white lace sundress, perfect black hair, movie-star sunglasses, and the most adorable beach hat walking around with a selfie stick and a camera phone out in front of her. She walked to the shore, swiveled around to get the best view behind her and posed a few times. And that was it. Once she was done, she was walking back up behind me. Most people go to the beach, well, to enjoy the beach. Others go to... pretend they are enjoying the beach...?

I mean, I suppose that's not so weird; Dustin and I posed for a photographer at the beach one autumn day. We were there for engagement photos, not for beach-going. But a professional, posed photo is far different than a selfie. Everyone knows that those photos don't represent what a person is doing, only how they look. It's the quick, "this is what I'm doing right now" feel of social media that makes selfies seem like they should actually represent what people are doing or seeing in reality. I don't take a lot of selfies, so for someone like me, I forget how much time people spend trying to get that perfect shot... so much time frozen in the oddest tableaux...

Another woman stood on the shore, in a bright aqua bikini with a shawl on, taking selfie after selfie. She kept fluffing her hair and posing in curve-accentuating ways. A few moments later she was back on the beach this time without the shawl, posing for some more selfies. Then when she didn't have her phone, she kept standing there fluffing her hair and posing some more... Maybe there was a photographer behind me? Or was she just showing off?

The other day I glanced to my left to see a frowning, bikini-clad woman smile brightly for a quick selfie, and then return to her frown. Her selfie made it seem like she was enjoying her day... but her body language said the total opposite. I saw a preteen boy in the water with a selfie stick, wading out to the buoy, ignoring his brother who was nearby. Selfies are just weird.

It's not as weird to see selfies on social media as it is to see people take them in public. It's especially weird to see people seemingly go out of character to pose for them. It makes people seem fake; self-absorbed. It makes me think they aren't present; they're off in their own world not very aware of their environment, not enjoying their surroundings. How sad it is to be in a place of beauty and not fully experience it. To be honest, these "selfie-absorbed" people are a minority at the beach: most people really are there to enjoy it.

But let's face it; some people literally do things just for the selfie. They go out and take photos of things they are doing for the sole purpose of having cool photos for their online presence. It's annoying, but I understand it. Growing up in a large family, I have a need to be around people: to share in their experiences and to feel validated by their involvement in mine. Social media is a huge draw for me because even when I'm alone, I know that my experiences can be shared. I feel connected to my family and friends and to the world (while at the same time feeling the upsetting disconnection of an ever-widening gap between myself and friends I've made and "friended" whom I will probably never see in person again... It can create a sense of despair at times).

Oh, but there's also a lot of junk on social media that makes me mad... I'd like to rant about it and make a cynical condescending list--oh it is tempting--of things on social media that ruin my day, but I will refrain. What I will say is that I don't think I was made to have the capacity to read so many peoples' thoughts; to be the reader of so much passive aggression, or the onlooker of so many sexually suggestive photos, or the hearer of so many political opinions--things I would never be aware of in the real world/things people would never say or do when I'm in their presence. there are things I know about people I'd rather not know. There are parts of people I've seen that I'd rather not see...*twitch* *twitch*

But I digress... I'm here to talk about that strange phenomenon as I have observed it at the beach, not all my thoughts on the subject (and I have a lot of them. Facebook and I have a love/hate relationship. I've even removed the app from my phone as a means to reclaim my sanity).

Here's hoping that we don't live our lives for the approval and vindication of the masses, that we truly stop to smell the roses. Take those selfies, by all means! Just remember to live first.

Wednesday, July 15, 2015

Beach Chronicles: Bad Ideas That People Think Are Genius

Bad Idea #1: The Fitted Sheet


This seems cool, but is just annoying. It's impossible to keep sand out of this. Furthermore, you have to make sure that none of the objects in the corners touch the ground before somehow putting the sheet on the ground, stretching it out, and placing those objects there (I've seen people attempt this, and it is hilarious). Also, you have to bring a king-size sheet, because anything smaller will give you only room for one person to sit with all the other stuff you have in the corners. You also can't move the things in the corners. You can't lie down half in the sand and half on the blanket. If you move a corner object or pick it up, the sheet flies shut (whereas a regular blanket stays down). And the sheet sides don't stay up. People going to the beach will just have to come to terms with the fact that sand gets everywhere...

Bad Idea #2: Sand Stacking


















Hope that container never tips over!

Bad Idea # 3: Spray Sunscreen, and Anything Over 50 SPF











There's no guarantee this spray will get all of your hard-to-reach places. Plus, it ends up giving you a blotchy tan. And this is terrible for the environment (and for your skin!). Anything that claims to have over 50 SPF is a scam, giving people false confidence. Besides, 30 SPF blocks 97% of the bad rays anyway. You just have to re-apply every 40-80 minutes if you want it to work properly (the same is true for higher SPF's). See this site for some information about sunscreen ploys.

Bad Idea # 4: Baby Powder to Wick Off Sand





















I'm not saying this doesn't work, but it's just as easy to wipe sand off of skin with a towel. Literally. Terry cloth works perfectly. Simplify your life.

Bad Idea # 5: Beach Balls












These are the tumbleweeds of the beach. They're great fun until the wind comes and blows them away. And it's a rare day when there's no wind at my beach. The kids throw them and then swim all the way to the other side of the swim area (almost half a mile at ours) chasing these things down. The next thing you know we've got horrified parents reporting a missing child. Of course, we always find the kids, but the parents get a good scare. These are better for indoor or backyard pools where there's no breeze.

Bad Idea # 6: Inflatable Floaties













These are actually really great for kids, but they can be death traps if they deflate. Once these things pop, your kid is in trouble. If you get these, make sure there's more than one or two inflatable shafts... or save yourself the worry and buy foam ones.


And that's all I've got for now! I will conclude this blog with this hilarious meme:



Monday, June 1, 2015

The World Frays (A Poem)


















What happened?

I'm watching the world fray
people coming apart with age
issues coming out to play
wreaking havoc on today

It's backwards now
throwing wisdom out
the things we allowed
fully played down

Don't like mine?
Go online
like what you find?
easily Beyonce's, Miley's, Kim's, GaGa's, and Nicki's bare behind

Nothing to hide
No secrets to confide
It's all open wide
It's emptiness inside

The quest for greater
bigger, better, fuller
hotter, younger, louder
permeates the culture

even the church suffers
from counting her members
measuring success in numbers
and spitting out burned workers

she looks at outward expression
and understands it as passion

She separates families into factions
and micro-manages their actions

This is no different than the corporate mold
where self-respect can be sold
where power-mongers rule and hold
where youth throws out its old

Old and young can't reconcile
the church, self-preservation style,
embraces youth culture like wild
and neglects its elders all the while

and outside its walls, the chasm widens
relevance has little to do with trends
with traditions or knowledge or arguments
or how much or how little we can keep from sin

Relevance is Christ and Him crucified
It's our souls and His unified
not appearances scrutinized
or behavior modified

It's Christ's death and resurrection
And that's not just the beginner's lesson
it's every single motivation
It's relevance to every circumstance and situation

It's love accepted and love given
It's full trust in the God of Heaven
It's seeing others as equals, even "heathens"
Because salvation's a gift, not an award for perfection

The older we get the more we see
that issues un-dealt-with start ripping the seams
things come undone, joys lose their satiety
So we search for more, for sanity