We have just enough religion to make us hate one another but not enough to make us love one another. – Jonathan Swift
This isn’t a post where I’ll shame the church I met Jesus in. And it won’t be a post where I call out the imperfections of a single church in comparison to another. It will be a post where I admit my part in watching churches go sour. I wish it weren’t true but I’ve watched the church go south.
I’ve watched leadership manipulate members for selfish purposes. I’ve watched leadership bend the truth. I wonder now about the role I played in that. Because I was as an enabler. By saying nothing, going along with the program to keep the peace, I sanctioned the mistreatment of congregants. Under the guise of respect for authority I gave my nod of agreement, a non-verbal acquiescence to misconduct.
All of this went on for years…until it changed me.
Small churches are notorious for big time family drama. Familiarity breeds contempt. And our close family like relationships bred all the “crazy uncle drama” you can imagine. When family members were turned against each other or people were shunned for not going along with the program… I still watched from the sidelines. I even took part in shaming when I felt obligated to disclose someone else’s sin. I was never so free with sharing my own.
That’s when I knew something was wrong…my behavior had begun to change. I’d become a judgmental Jesus freak.













I went over to read your post, and this phrase touched my heart so much: “It’s not easy to live the Bible with people.” Amen to that! I can rock it sitting in my chair reading my Bible. But when I close the Good Book and have my first frustrating interaction with one of God’s daughters, that’s when it gets real. Lucky for me, God is patient. He’s seen me mess up over and over, but He just keeps giving me more chances. Thanks for your thoughts on this, Lisha.
Jenni DeWitt recently posted…You Don’t Know What You are Asking
It’s funny how you wake up in the morning thinking…thinking about grace and how without it our world crumble in on itself. The truth about the hunger games is they’re hungry for grace, mercy and the living bread. The answer is in our church – are we silent?
Chris Malkemes recently posted…Who is This God You Pray To?
Hey Chris! You’re right about these hunger games we play. It’s our job to be distribution centers for grace, mercy, and the living bread the church so desperately needs.
I’m learning to cover everything in grace. Especially relationships. Yes…relationships can get real. Thanks for reading and commenting Jenni! so nice to meet you.
Lisha, this is such a powerful piece of truth. I have been in such a place(s) as you describe and never saw the log in my own eye. I kept quiet so did not even try to take the sliver from anyone else’s eye either. Your insights into loving without the judgment, watching yet being willing to see beyond the human tendency for error. As you say, “I developed a profound sense for what was right. And I learned to love, the pitfalls and mess ups, the breakthroughs and break ups. The miracles. I learned to love, perhaps the greatest lesson of all.” All, so true. Your words have hit a chord in me.
Caring through Christ, ~ linda
~ linda recently posted…Memory’s Music – SDG Connections: Caregiving Series