Horror story? Part 1 of 3

I have listened to some Christian testimonies and even remember the way I told my own when I first recognized God and wanted Him in my life. The testimonies are often like a horror movie given in vicious detail, complete with gore, all the way up to the closing credits, ending with the statement “and the monster died.” Like many witnesses, I was preoccupied, even glorified, what a horrible and miserable person I was. I was spending more time looking over my shoulder at what was than I was at the person who was rescuing me during the entire time and the future that was now before me.

Some of the greatest miracles in my life happened before I ever called myself a Christian. I look back and think about the choreography of people who were placed in my life, giving me insights that led to my recognizing what needed to happen if I wanted to survive. I think about all the people who put the virtues of heaven on display and showed that what I was doing was really awful, and what was possible to be truly desirable. I think about the close calls that made me realize there might be another hand in life beyond my own or the people around me.

There were many little and big things that proved, eventually, that life was more than a natural phenomenon. I’m not sure how some changes happened. I looked upon other’s kindness as something to use selfishly until the day I began to feel really cruel and ugly when I did it. I might’ve felt cruel and ugly the entire time while lying to myself that it didn’t bother me, but I did become aware of the selfish cruelty. That single change may have been one of the most important miracles. I became aware that I was accountable for being bad, instead of blaming everything and everyone else. There was an entire host of related mini revelations that made repentance a relatable choice instead of an anger inducing insult.

Deceit

My youngest son believed his older brother to be a great hero. We came upon our youngest right after he broke something. He immediately proclaimed that his brother did it. We reminded him that his brother wasn’t home. It didn’t matter to our young son. He didn’t want to be caught or punished, so he blamed his brother. Humans tend to tell others what they want them to believe or what it is believed the other wants to hear.

Wanting justification and/or forgiveness without consequences shows prominently in every form of media we experience. The media also shows that those avoiding honesty are willing to see others being punished because they are not of the same mind, thought, and/or priorities in life. Some of the most brutal people on the planet seem to be those crying out for acceptance without equal willingness to show it in return.

Accountability is tough. It is facing your responsibilities regardless of what anyone else faces. It is standing in the face of your own right and wrong honestly, without hiding, without avoiding, and accepting what comes from the actions or behaviors.

Like my son, confusion comes when we deceive ourselves that mistakes can be covered up or will go unseen. Lies always tell on themselves. It may take a while, but they will be revealed. It is easier to face earlier than later.

My son got in trouble twice, once for breaking something and another for lying. We have seen politicians create more crimes in their cover up than the original issue, all while being run to the ground by reporters.

There is a place in each of us where we want truth to be as we want it rather than as it is. I recognize this in me. I have become more sophisticated as I aged, but sometimes my behavior is little different from my son: cover up, blame others, act as though it didn’t happen. No one wants to be punished, even when it is amply deserved.

The church was created to focus on God and to create a loving environment where people can have the courage to face themselves honestly. God meets us where we are and is not confused by where we tell Him we are. Honesty with Him is a basic requirement. It is the best and safest path.