You’re Okay, I’m Okay
I follow a blogger who tells people not to eat pork (because
it is commanded in Deut 14:8) and that they must celebrate the Feast of
Tabernacles (because it is commanded Deut 16:13) and must not celebrate
Halloween, Christmas and Easter (because they are Pagan Deut 12:29-32). He
challenges me to study and think and pray. He irritates me. He encourages me. I
enjoy following him! (He is also not going to change my personal relationship
with God.)
I believe each person has a relationship with God that is
personal and unique and no one else can understand it. My relationship with my
mom is different than with my dad. My relationship with my brother is different
than with my sister-in-law. Each of us has a different relationship with God
that is solely ours and it looks different from anyone else’s.
Our fault is when we try to make other’s relationship with
God look like ours. I think we do this everyday! We judge others tattoos, their
clothes, how they drive, their posts on FB and their actions or lack of.
Everyday, we say (in our minds, of course), “What are they doing?”, “I would
never…”, “They should…”. We judge others according to OUR intimate relationship with God.
So, am I saying this blogger should eat pork? No. Am I
saying he is wrong for celebrating the Feast of Tabernacles and not Halloween,
Christmas and Easter? No. But I do think he is wrong for telling others they
SHOULD act in the same manner he does because he is right and we are wrong and
we have interpreted the Scriptures wrong. I do not agree that God leads
everyone to have the exact same cookie-cutter relationship with Him as everyone
else.
To go one step more personal, I am a writer. I have to be
very careful I do not interject my personal relationship into my writing that
makes people feel like I think my way is the only way. (I’m not speaking of
Jesus. He IS the ONLY way.) I’m speaking of all the disputable matters we find
ourselves squabbling over like denominations, music, women, service, building etc.
Some issues are obvious like don’t murder and don’t steal
etc. However, I pray I never interject my personal, unique connection and
dependence on God into a package that I try and make you adhere to also. A
relationship with God does not work that way. Each of us is at a different mile
marker than our neighbor. Some of us have passed Forgiveness and some of us
have Forgiveness as the next rest stop. Some of us rest quickly and keep moving.
Some of us pitch a tent and stay for days, weeks or years until we finally give
God the wheel. Sometimes we zoom fast. Sometimes we get flat tires and have to
make repairs before we can move forward. Sometimes we even take U-turns as God
beckons us to keep moving forward. We know we have the Roadside Assistance (Bible)
to help us with our flat tires, our dead batteries and our towing needs, but
sadly, we don't use it.
So, evaluate yourself and your motives for judging others
(even subconsciously). Have you lost friends because they don’t fit into YOUR
neatly wrapped box or they are not on the same road as you are? Do you come off
as rigid and unwelcoming when you encounter someone who does not meet YOUR
‘spiritual’ guidelines? These are good questions to ponder keeping in mind your
personal relationship with God...and theirs.
2 comments:
Excellent post Erin.
Each day I'm discovering changes in my attitude toward others.
Such a relief...to realize that I am no longer so judgmental. I just continue reminding myself that I will be judged likewise.
After all, we are not from a cookie cutter...so different and isn't that a relief. We need open hearts...like His.
Great thoughts, Erin. Goes well with the teaching of Paul in Colossians 2:16-17 ..let no one judge you in regard to food or drink or in respect to a festival or a new moon or a Sabbath Day--things which are mere shadow of what is to come; but the substance belongs to Christ.
-Michael
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