At my church, we have a guest speaker once a month from a charity
that we are helping. Today, the guest speaker was from a children’s
mission in Peru. He has spoken to us before. I wrote about the time
that I first heard him speak in my post here.
The story that he told us today sounded like the story that he told us
the two other times that I heard him speak. It’s about a little girl
who was bitter and angry, and the staff learned why: because she saw her
own mother bleed to death, and her father ditched her. She is in
college now and is still angry with her father, but the man who spoke to
us today said that he told her that she can only love if she forgives.
The speaker also made the point that only Christ can heal people’s
emotional wounds. He said that the mission has trained psychologists,
but even they will admit that they themselves do not have the power to
heal anyone emotionally. Only Christ can do that.
The speaker’s remarks were challenging and thought-provoking, just as
they were to me when I heard him speak those other two times. I have a
couple of thoughts:
1. Usually, this man’s remarks make me feel bad because I am not
good at loving bitter people. I remember going through a curriculum,
Henry Blackaby’s Experiencing God, and Blackaby told the story
of how he chose to pour out love on a bunch of anarchists. Blackaby
related that the love that he showed them as he listened to them made
him more loving towards the next person he encountered.
Okay, that’s fine. But what if a bitter person is attacking you and
your friends with her words? What if she is essentially burning your
bridges for you? Are you obligated to stay in a relationship with that
person? “But Jesus would,” many Christians may respond, even though
they themselves turn right around and make their own love of others
conditional. I respect and admire those with the strength and wisdom to
reach out to bitter people. I, however, struggle and fail to do so, at
least unconditionally. I expect bitter people in my life to be polite
and to behave themselves like we are all expected to do in this
society. But that does not always happen. Not all wounded people are
like hurt puppies who get better with a little love. They have their
thoughts, feelings, and talents, such as shredding people with their
words and poking holes in people’s arguments, and some get defensive
when anyone expresses disapproval of what they are doing. I struggle
enough to love people in general, but bitter people? I can’t say I
deserve any merit badges there!
So where do I go from here? I’ll probably keep on doing what I have
been doing. I’ll try to show love, but, if a person gets out of hand,
I’ll leave that person in the hands of those who are more competent to
deal with him or her, while I keep my distance. Christlike? I don’t
know. Jesus did die for us while we were yet sinners and hung around
with the disreputable. But I don’t think that he surrounded himself on a
daily basis with bitter people who were continually tearing him down.
Okay, well, there were the religious leaders, but he wasn’t around them
all the time.
And even if Jesus would stick around with a bitter person, yeah rah,
Jesus, but that doesn’t mean that I have the ability to do so, with my
insecurities.
2. Can only Christ heal? To be honest, I don’t know. I do know
that finding healing is not easy. I struggle with Jesus’ commands
regarding forgiveness, especially his statement that God won’t forgive
us if we don’t forgive others. How can I just forget the pain from the
past? It’s part of who I am. I think that God asks the impossible. I
find that, for me personally, praying helps me to cope with painful
memories. It does not completely take them away, however. I think that
therapists can be helpful in suggesting an alternative way to look at
things, though.
So where do I go from here? Well, I can try to put the past behind
me. Some days I will be more successful than other days. I can also
try to treat everyone with love and respect—-and by that I do not mean
making them a prominent part of my life, necessarily, but rather not
doing harm—-not talking about them in a gossipy fashion behind their
back (talking about them anonymously in a private therapy session is
different), not lashing out at them, etc. I know that I have done
things that need to be forgiven, and I am appreciative of those who
still treat me with kindness. Even if the wounds are still inside of
them, their wounds do not lead them to treat me poorly. I am grateful
when that happens. And I, in turn, am responsible to make sure that I
do not abuse that grace by repeating bad behavior.