I wasn't
going to "go" here, because I don't find it to be an easy topic, a
black and white topic, nor one that I can be brief about (clearly). And it's a
topic that people gleefully are wont to leap in to argue the supposed black and
whiteness of.
We are told (in the book that tells us both to, and to not, answer a fool according to his folly) to judge not, lest you be judged, and to judge righteous judgement. You can't really hold status or power or position without judging. It's part of your job. So you have to do it justly. Righteously.
You have to exercise your best judgement. Use discretion.
We are told (in the book that tells us both to, and to not, answer a fool according to his folly) to judge not, lest you be judged, and to judge righteous judgement. You can't really hold status or power or position without judging. It's part of your job. So you have to do it justly. Righteously.
You have to exercise your best judgement. Use discretion.
Some will say
"God judges the heart and motives. Human beings can't." But others
will say that part of growing in the Spirit is growing in discernment, and
spirituality means "tasting" the spirits of others who interact in
our circles. That elders and assemblies by their very definition are supposed
to deal with people's hearts and spirits and attitudes and not just their
actions. Not just to judge, but to help. Even in a two or three-way dispute.
They would say being spiritual means not being able to ignore the inner things
of the heart that are going on in all of it and in all of us.
Clearly I
believe the latter.
We never
really know fully what's going on in people's hearts, yet paying attention and
loving and growing in the Spirit seem to rob us of our carnal ability to just
ignore stuff (good and bad) that's going on in terms of attitude, spirit,
heart, motive, in everyone around us. It makes us see stuff. Good stuff. Bad
stuff. Are we required not to comment upon that stuff? Like, ever? Because it's
inside and we can't *know*?
Starting in a
carnal, fleshly arena, let's look at human courts of law. Nothing spiritual
there, surely. In order to convict someone of a crime, you don't just judge
their actions. In order to judge them guilty of anything, you also have to
establish that they had a motive.
Actus reus is
the physical component of the person physically being capable, and evidence
supporting the idea that they committed the act in question.
The second
component is mens rea. The criminal mind. They have to have been shown by
evidence to have had the motive, awareness and intent to do the act. In court,
they go into what went on in the heart and mind of the killer, the rapist, the
embezzler, the whatever.
Even in
court, and in the realm of, say, insurance, the expression "in good
faith" exists. This is about you being asked to comment upon what was
going on inside you when you did something. Did you do it with a bad,
malicious, fraudulent motive? You can be punished in human courts of law and
insurance offices for doing things with a bad heart. Because people do stuff
with a bad heart all the time. Even Christians. Even Christians who hold power
over other Christians.
But we're
being told, even if people are carrying on hurting others, that we are not to
act upon what we discern their hearts to be. Not even if their actions seem to
lay out a very clear motivation and characteristic agenda.
My Background On the Subject
And as is my wont,
here's my own experience, which is all I have to draw on as to experience, and
which motivates me to pay attention to things like these My Background On the Subject
(People who have pretty much never had experience of legalism, neo-Phariseeism
and abuses of power in Christian circles should not, I would argue, take that
lack of experience as something which qualifies them to therefore, dismiss the
experiences of the myriad Christians who have, any more than someone who's
never seen someone raped shouldn't probably take that as evidence that annual
rape stats are incorrect):
I grew up
with a number of Pharisees. Mostly they were who made sure they ran things. I
was raised to be one. I was one. I still struggle not to act like one. The main
thing that identifies a Pharisee is not just that, but what he judges.
Pharisees judge how actions look. Jesus and the people in the bible judged
motives. All the time. Reported them as facts, in fact. But we were only
supposed to judge appearances.
And the thing
is? We Pharisees whitewash our sepulchres carefully. We make sure the
dirtiest-minded Christian person can't imagine we're doing anything untoward.
And, what was always said in our circles was "the assembly judges a man's
actions, and not [does not deal with] his heart."
You can well
imagine how that all went down. We judged and judged and judged. And we judged
appearances. We looked at actions (like wardrobe choices) and how they might be
misconstrued. No one judged hearts. Whether or not a pure intent functioned as
a defence depended on whether you had power or not. And whether you had power
or not defended on How Things Looked. No wonder, given how we judged, that the
Kingdom is "upside down" by comparison. Our "first"? Last
in that Kingdom. And many of our lasts are first in it.
But we were
upside down compared to the Kingdom. So bullies who took pains not to LOOK like
bullies, or who had a pure motive to claim, for actions that might SEEM like
bullying, got to bully all they wanted. Got more and more power. Made more and
more decisions. So long as they did pious-seeming actions too.
Because the
thing about saying you can't comment upon or respond to people's hearts? It
means YOU HAVE TO TAKE EVERYTHING THEY SAY AND PRETEND AT FACE VALUE UNTIL YOU
HAVE ACTION-BASED EVIDENCE TO THE CONTRARY. And careful bullies don't provide
that. Every bullying word in your ear is supposedly out of love. Even kicking
you out for the rest of your life is out of love. Love for the Lord, Love for
His people. To keep His Table clean.
Harmless as
doves, only in theory. And only the bullies were getting away with being subtle
as serpents, because we weren't allowed to comment on what were clearly
personal vendettas, agendas, culls, purges and one-up-man-ship, all presented
as "normal Christian stuff" and pious concern for the Things of the
Lord and so on. Because the "not judging motives" thing only worked
for the bullies. They judged our motives all the time. Or pretended to. If
they'd actually been more clued in to our actual hearts and motives and
motives, they'd have been better leaders.
But we
regular folk are different. We're not supposed to speculate on why hurting
people hurt others, and if they will continue to do so. We're supposed to
blithely accept claimed motives and hearts to justify, but never to be warned
about, or confront, the hearts and motives of people who seem to be doing
something unhelpful.
This means,
if someone with power has a dark, spiteful heart, so long as their claims are
pious, we're told to not judge that heart, in our dealings with that person.
We're told that if they say sorry a thousand times and keep right on hurting
people, we're not only to (as the scripture tells us) forgive that person, but
we are also to feel free to let them retain their position of power, and we're
certainly not to warn or seek to protect others from that dark heart. And if we
look to confront them or have a frank talk with them, we are sure to be told
that we can't judge people's hearts.
And so people
whom the dog, the cat, and everyone's five year old child steer clear of,
because they're picking something dangerous up about that person's heart, those
very people either get given more importance and responsibility than before,
just because they want it (and they always seem to want it, don't they?) or are
allowed to hold whatever power, oversight and status they already have.
The letter
putting me out of fellowship clearly addresses my intentions, motives and
attitude. So though I believe godly, discreet Christians do and should look
upon what God looks upon, people's hearts, I also know how that can be misused.
You can claim a person has bad motives, not because you see them, but because
you need to "bump" them in terms of status.
And it
doesn't work both ways, certainly not here on the Internet. As soon as I comment on:
-the flimsiness of the reason for "putting me away" as a young adult and the similarly flimsy reasons for "putting away" so many others of all ages,
-the refusal of these guys to meet with me (or others) afterward after one token visit to more fully dismiss me (couched as "shepherding")
-and then I cite everything that has happened (and not happened) since 1998,
...though I address their actions, I get accused of possibly, maybe, potentially, kinda judging their motives. Their hearts.
-the flimsiness of the reason for "putting me away" as a young adult and the similarly flimsy reasons for "putting away" so many others of all ages,
-the refusal of these guys to meet with me (or others) afterward after one token visit to more fully dismiss me (couched as "shepherding")
-and then I cite everything that has happened (and not happened) since 1998,
...though I address their actions, I get accused of possibly, maybe, potentially, kinda judging their motives. Their hearts.
I get told
I'm doing something unscriptural for anyone but Jesus, prophets and apostles if
I say that their actions seem to indicate that they got rid of thousands of us
worldwide, quite on purpose, using any number of flimsy reasons, and they don't
seem to want us back. It really does seem to be an abuse of power.
"But
maybe," people say, "They think they're doing the right thing."
Hm. That defence did not work for Hitler.
Forgiveness
Hm. That defence did not work for Hitler.
Forgiveness
Whether or
not I forgive them for it (I do) I feel tempted to maybe recognize "this"
to be a real situation. I'm tempted to think, feel and act toward it in keeping
with what my best discretion tells me it is, and I might even be unsurprised if
they continue to act how they act. Since they kicked out me, they kicked out
pretty much everyone I ever knew. I wasn't surprised. And I felt like their
claims were suspect, given their actions, and I grew up knowing these people
and feel like I have some insight into their modus operandi and motives alike.
Their refusal to meet with us and discuss anything, being my main indication of
this. But, I am told "You are wrong. You are judging their hearts."
I can forgive
Bill Cosby, but if my sister announces she's going on a date with him, I might
be concerned as to his motives.
Sometimes,
when something walks like a duck, sounds like a duck, and swims like a duck, it
doesn't take any great spiritual discernment, nor even much judging of the
heart to suggest that maybe, what you're looking at, is actually a duck. And
you might be wrong. But this is life. You make your mind up on your best
information, you try to understand things on as many levels as you can, and
(and this is important) you are willing to adjust things afterward. You can
decide someone has bad motives, even if you've forgiven them, but be careful in
future, and be willing to hear more information, even from them.
But these
people don't seem interested in vindicating themselves with more information.
They really don't. They seem to wish there was less information out there, in
fact.
I have
forgiven them. The scope of my interest in the matter has broadened to legalism
as an age-old fleshly battle we see everywhere. I'm not just interested in me
and my assembly. I'm interested in the Brethren movement in all of its forms,
and the Church as a whole, throughout history.
What's the
appeal of legalism? Why does it seem to "win" in so many church
circles, over more spiritual attitudes. Why isn't it taken terribly seriously,
despite how Jesus and Paul spoke about it?
Being Spiritual Means Trying/Tasting Spirits
The letters
to the seven churches, the epistles written in the New Testament, and certainly
both the fruit of the Spirit and the matching list of works of the flesh, do
not seem to limit themselves to physical actions. They do not shy away from
comments on the inner things of the heart.
Being Spiritual Means Trying/Tasting Spirits
But what I'm
repeatedly told is that forgiveness and spirituality mean taking everything
that people say at face value, and never calling people to task for their
claims and their actions not matching. I'm told we're not supposed to ponder
the motives of those who are continuing to hurt us, but claim to be serving the
Lord and feeding His sheep.
Because
that's really the crux of it, isn't it? You get claims, and you get actions,
and sometimes they really don't match. How can you even address that without
running the risk of someone accusing you of "judging motives" or
"the heart"?
We live in
fear of being the Thought Police if we bring the mens rea into the discussion,
right along with the actus rea; if we discuss what exactly it is that Pharisees
are whitewashing (Sepulchres. Graves. " Oh, but they SAY that's a pretty
white house. Who are we to question that?").
When the
Pharisees were pretending to ask Jesus deeply spiritual questions, but were
actually plotting to kill him, he was direct, and ignoring all of the
questions, just cut to the chase and asked them directly "Why do you seek
to kill me?"
Of course they said his judging of their hearts was crazy, but their actions in needing to leave the situation and cook up more plots, rather than being able to maintain the charade of interest in his teaching, was very revealing of their hearts, as was the fact that they paid Judas to betray him, got him arrested and insisted upon his execution.
Of course they said his judging of their hearts was crazy, but their actions in needing to leave the situation and cook up more plots, rather than being able to maintain the charade of interest in his teaching, was very revealing of their hearts, as was the fact that they paid Judas to betray him, got him arrested and insisted upon his execution.
But none of
that had happened when they were asking what they presented as serious
religious questions, in public. Didn't stop Jesus and his disciples from
distrusting them, though.
Someone Else's Story
Someone Else's Story
I usually use
my own "situation," because I don't feel tempted to protect the
privacy of the men in question the way I do with any number of other people's
situations, but here's another one:
-a young
woman who was a TW, came out to all the meetings, and was clearly someone who
loved Jesus her whole upbringing. No one invited her to break bread. But one
day, she "asked for her place at The Lord's Table," which place our
group feels fully qualified and empowered to guard, protect, admit people to,
and throw people out of. (That's not so much me judging their hearts as it is
among their claims.)
-This young woman had a boyfriend she would soon marry. They were both virgins.
-This woman never got an answer as to "her place." As far as she can
discern, it came down to people gossiping about her having slept in the same
bed as her boyfriend once, so he could prove a big stupid point about TRUST to
her. A point that he made by sleeping in her bed and not touching her. They
were married a year later, still virgins.
-To this day, this woman has never been even told "no" as to
"her place." She's just been left twisting in the wind, as it were.
She asked. No one ever answered.
Now, is it
off limits to say maybe they didn't really want her breaking bread very much?
Weren't willing to talk and work with her? Isn't that judging their hearts?
The
temptation is to argue about whether or not she and husband-to-be should have
done what they did. No doubt people will want to take this discussion far off
track by arguing about that. What I ask is:
"Move On"
And I also
don't understand how one "moves on from" one's family and friends and
co-workers and customers, who get married, have birthdays and anniversaries,
baby showers and funerals, and who confide in me as to both dubious wieldings
of power by, and to them.
If someone
gets screwed over in a religious system near me, I am very likely going to be
contacted to weigh in. As some kind of "Getting Screwed Over By
Christians" consultant, or expert witness on that subject. If someone in
Alaska gets shamed at church for a hairstyle, I am not at all surprised when I get a PM
that same day.
And I feel
like I should help. I feel like I should be honest. I do draw upon my past. I
don't feel like it's "dwelling on the past" to continue to deal in
the present with the reality that the majority of the Christians in your
community have either drifted away, failed to connect, or actually been driven
out of the Christian group they either were born or born again into, or which
they chose. I don't know what "moving on" means, apart from
"don't think about/forget."
Forgiveness?
Sure, Bill Cosby. But dealing with the (sometimes stripped or broken) nuts and
bolts of what goes wrong in ecclesiastical circles around here and on the
Internet is not, I do not feel, unforgiving, nor dwelling on the past.
Just because
you don't like to hear about, and aren't encouraged by helping people who get
shafted in church circles doesn't mean there isn't work to be done for and with
and by them.
Things are
real, in the real world outside what we like to pretend. Inside our whitewashed
sepulchres. And sometimes, it's about hearts.
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