So… Today I went to
the mall intending to eat at Chick-fil-a.
I didn’t because I was not willing to stand in line for an hour plus to
get my food. So we’re going to approach
the rest of this post with the mindset that my intent was to eat there
I’m not sure whether to be proud of my decision to eat at
Chick-fil-a today, or whether I should be terribly ashamed of it. I may be wrong, but I suspect there is no
middle ground on this. It either is a
great a display of my faith, or it is a despicable act of polarizing
non-love. And unfortunately I’m leaning
towards the latter. Don’t get me wrong,
I agree with Chick-fil-a and their belief of “a traditional family” and I feel very strongly about that. I was saddened that people were “shocked” by
this belief of a Christian based business and boycotted them. But, while I sat there eating my Pizza Da
Roma, I wondered to myself; how many people are here to help make up for the
boycotting and how many people are here to persecute homosexuals? And if it is the latter, how does that fit in
with Jesus’ example of loving everyone.
In an unrelated incident, I recently confronted someone who used to be a buddy of mine
on something that they were doing that was, in my estimation, outside of the
Word of God. I did this with no
solicitation on their part, I took it upon myself to write a letter and tell them
that they were wrong. I feel like I did
this as lovingly as possible considering, but…
Despite trying to be as caring and loving as possible in this letter,
you can imagine how the unsolicited criticism was taken. Things that were already stressed between us
went down hill. I wonder how much damage
was caused when a concerned Christian, who honestly cared, judged someone
else. Now I tell you, I still feel no
different that their actions are still wrong according to Gods word, but how
did me criticizing them do any good?
We’re called to love everyone. I’m not sure what that looks like, especially
to those who are clearly living in a manner against God’s will. I am pretty confident though, that being
polarizing and taking an us versus them mindset is the wrong way to do it.
I’ve been getting beaten up pretty badly on this subject
lately. My hope is that in the future, I
tend to show Jesus’ love first and not judge.
I read this blog the other day and it really hit home with me: http://lucallen.wordpress.com/2012/07/30/an-open-letter-to-well-everyone/ I just read it again, and it resonates with me
even stronger today than it did yesterday.
Let’s love, people.
As Lucas said, “It doesn’t
matter who hit first- stop hitting each other!”
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