If you have ever lived in the tropics, you might be able to picture this. My family went on a hike up to a mountain swim hole. But instead of following a trail cutting through the trees and underbrush, over and around huge rocks, we got to our destination by walking on top of a 2 foot diameter rubberized pipe which carried water to the town below. It would have been a pretty easy, enjoyable hike except for the fact that the pipe was covered with moss and a layer of dew. Of course this was no problem for the nationals and even most of my family members did fine. But not me! The moment I lost my focus, I was falling off one side or the other. (“Look at that cool lizard, Mom,” and down I went again!) Sometimes I even fell off while I was carefully, oh so carefully, placing one foot in front of the other!
The image of me falling off the pipe despite my best efforts to stay balanced, came to my mind recently as I have contemplated the MK abuse, the cover up, the various responses of people involved (victims, their family members, NTM leaders and members), and our own recent conflict with NTM.
To me, walking the “pipe” illustrates a good, godly response to those who have done wrong, but it’s a real trick to pull it off without losing our balance. It requires holding on to both anger and humility and not falling too much to one side or the other.
Anger is not sin. When someone has hurt or wronged us, we feel angry. This is an appropriate response. Wrong has been done and that matters. Anger fuels the courage and tenacity we need to stay motivated enough to confront. When we expose someone’s sin we run the risk of who knows what kind of negative repercussions. Who would bother to do it if the issue they were confronting didn’t matter enough to them to make them mad?
But how easy it is for me to “fall off” on the side of anger! “How could he do that! What a *@&%#!” Sometimes harsh words are needed in order to get someone to realize the seriousness of their actions or attitudes. But when I resort to name calling and sarcasm I have fallen off on this side. I confess....I have enjoyed some of the sarcastic, angry comments on this blog. It feels good to see my opponent as a “dingledorf.” But ultimately if this is the spirit in which we confront others, we are putting ourselves above them. It is extremely unlikely that they will be responsive to this approach, but whether it seems to work or not, it’s wrong. We are being motivated by passion for ourselves. Definitely there is a time and place for expressing extreme anger. But dwelling here is bad for my heart. I start to see myself as superior to my adversary. Pride creeps in and I become blind to my own sin.
In my more rational moments I remember that whoever hurt me is not my real enemy. He is a hostage of my true enemy; not only a hostage, but a victim, a brainwashed pawn doing what Satan wants him to do. On top of that, I realize that it’s just as likely that I could have been the hostage! I am not inherently better than anyone else. I am just as guilty. But that’s when the really good news can hit home. Because when I am able to recognize, to really see, my own guilt, my own helpless condition before the Lord, then I become able to recognize, see and comprehend, God’s grace for me. It’s so awesome, it’s so great, it’s so thrilling! And then something really crazy happens in my heart – I actually want the person who hurt me to really comprehend God’s grace for him too. Whoa! Then I know God has left his “footprint” on my heart. How cool is that?!
But sometimes I am tempted to move too far towards humility and compassion and I think things like, “I am no better than anyone else. Who am I to judge? I am the chief of sinners. ‘Vengeance is mine’ says the Lord. Doesn’t the Bible tell me to forgive my enemies and turn the other cheek?” If we lean too far toward this side, we will not confront others or report their crimes, and evil will rise, and rise, and rise.
For me personally, when I am on this side, I am hiding behind these excuses, because I don’t want to deal with the mess of confronting someone. The rationale may sound godly, but it really is just an excuse to protect myself from trouble. I think NTM fell off on this side when they failed to deal with the child abusers properly. I think abused wives fall off on this side when they hesitate to expose their husband’s behavior. I think we all fall off on this side when we rationalize that we should not air our dirty laundry in public and thereby make God/NTM/the church look bad. So it seems to me that effective confrontation requires holding onto both anger and humility, tenacity and compassion. If we can confront sin/sinners while holding onto the reality that we are really all in the same boat – sinners in need of grace – there is potential for really awesome, redemptive stuff that glorifies God and gets us both parties rooted more deeply in His love.
But while the potential for really great stuff is there, there is no guarantee. (I speak from personal experience. From my perspective, it seems the more we gracious we became in trying to resolve our conflict with our NTM leaders, the more sure they seemed of our sin!) Obviously NTM is not responding to those confronting them with their failure in dealing with MK abuse the way we all hope they would. But we are not responsible for their response. We are only responsible for our own actions. So all we can do is keep trying to walk the “pipe”, keep speaking the truth (confronting) in love, keep receiving God’s grace for our own failures, keep trusting God for the consequences of confronting others, and be at peace knowing that we have been faithful in doing what is right.
Do you agree? Disagree? Please share your thoughts.
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