1 post tagged “facebook conversation”
Every time a celebrity falls from grace, either by the whims of the populace or by stupid actions on their part, there is someone waiting to condemn them in no uncertain terms. More often than not this condemning person is a believer. No where has this been more evident than in the recent and sudden death of Michael Jackson.
Granted, this isn’t an easy issue to face. At best the man was troubled, had a horrid childhood, numerous oddities, and lived an uncomfortable life in the spotlight. What were worse were the pedophilic allegations, and his fixation with remaining young. The question becomes how do we, as disciples of Jesus, navigate the waters of opinion surrounding this mysterious and yet gifted man?
Now I’m as opinionated as the next person, o.k. probably more so, but that only means that I have to really watch my motives, actions, and words, especially as it pertains to people I see. As a Christian (really hesitate to use this word as it means so many things to as many people) I have to walk a very fine line between having good judgment of situations, and standing in judgment. The former helps me be wise about the situations I face and how to handle them, and the later, well…we’ve all got examples of this, and mostly from the lips of other Christians. This is ironic, and sadly, sin.
I ran into an example of this today that angered me, and more importantly, made me sad, as it means somewhere along the way, we who claim to follow Jesus have not taught each other Jesus’ words and ways.
Here’s the conversation I witnessed between three believers:
Host: Who will Michael Jackson be remembered: Pedophile Legend or Pedophile Wacko? Let your voice be heard? VOTE HERE!
Girl 1: I think he could have been a disciple of Jesus
Host: Even Judas was a disciple
Boy 1: If God had wanted him to be a disciple, he’d have been there. nuff [sic] said.
The less gracious, more judgmental side of me wants to just yell “Well two out of the three of you are demonstrating that God doesn’t want you for disciples either!” but that would be me falling into the same snare that plagues so many of us. We forget that, literally, there but for the grace of God go us! The Apostle Paul gave the church in Corinth a good talking to on the same subject. He reviewed the mistakes made by the early Israelites. God miraculously led them out of Egypt, and saved them many times, yet how quickly they forgot and turned away from him, while still on the journey away from Egypt. His admonition to the church was just this: What happened to them are examples to us. We’re no better, even though we have a fuller revelation of God’s heart through his son Jesus, so if you think you’re standing firm, pay attention, you’re just as capable of falling as they were.
We all are capable of failure. We all are capable of screwing things up royally. We all have the capacity to deeply hurt and wound others. And yet we all have the capacity to become like Christ and infect our world with the Grace and Truth of Jesus. It’s said in scripture that God desires that none should perish, but all come to salvation and partnership with him and his kingdom. The thing of it is, it comes down to us. We get the choice. We can choose to follow Christ, and partner with him, or we can choose to go our own way. The reason the exchange I shared bothers me so much is because it makes it seem like if Michael Jackson had been a better man (oh say like us-please read in an extremely sarcastic tone) then God would have sought him out, and there would have been no way he could have not been God’s disciple. This makes it seem like we, who are Christians, are better people then those who are not. And this is judgment. And this is sin.
Paul, in a letter to the early Roman church says the following: ”For by the grace given me I say to every one of you: Do not think of yourself more highly than you ought, but rather think of yourself with sober judgment, in accordance with the measure of faith God has given you.”. We should pay attention to this. Being Christian makes us no better or no worse than anyone else. Our actions for the sake of Christ should reflect him, and not the belief that we’re superior in any way. As my good friend Josh reminded me today “there's such a strong desire in Christians to declare who's in, who's out, who's wrong and who's right, rather than being willing to just be involved in people's lives and to realize we all have a long way to go toward being Christlike”
This does not negate the damage that Jackson may have done with his life. It is only right for us to acknowledge that his behavior was often shady, and even wrong, in the way he related to children. However, our response shouldn’t stop there. Like the ancient prophet Isaiah said, all of us have sinned and fallen short of the Glory of God. All of us. So while we should stand up and stop things that hurt others (i.e. child abuse) we should also remember that we are capable of evil too.
Oh, and that God demonstrated his love for all of us like this: “While we were still sinners, Christ died for us.”