But
there are a few things missing from the picture. The blemish that was on one of my children’s
faces, gone! The out-of-place hair on
another child and the lines that have begun to appear on my face around my eyes,
gone! Oh the wonders of Photoshop and
what a skilled photographer can do to make us look better than we did on the
day of our portrait session. I suppose she could have even put some additional
hair on my head so my receding hairline wasn’t so pronounced, but I had to look
somewhat like I look in real life.
While
it is great to have a few minor defects Photoshopped out of a family portrait,
I’m afraid that many of us who follow Jesus Christ too often portray a life to
others that is a little too perfect, a little to all-together and full of faith
and confidence in God. It’s not our real
life. It’s our edited, air-brushed,
Photoshopped life.
I have actually had
people say to me that if the people in church really knew what they were like,
they knew that they would be rejected and nobody would want them around. So week after week they project an image of
themselves to others that they hope won’t get rejected. The problem with that is, you can’t really
move forward to find help, healing and wholeness if you only let people see an
image of the real you.
We
have become very good at hiding our blemishes, our pain, our problems, and the
hidden parts of our lives where we wrestle with our private “demons”. Too many of us only allow people to see our
Photoshopped lives. We smile and say,
“Praise the Lord. God has been so good
to me”, while on the inside we are hurting so bad we could hardly get ourselves
in the church door. The depression, the
alcohol abuse, the pressures of parenting or caring for an aging loved one, the
thoughts of suicide, the sexual brokenness are never shown, not talked
about. We wouldn’t dare let the people
at church see that!
We come to church in
pain and often leave without one small touch of grace to our hurts. We know God sees our deep dark inside and we
pray for His help and touch, and He does respond. I’m absolutely confident that He does. But the help that we need, the help that God
wants us to receive usually comes from others.
It comes about when we allow people to see our imperfect lives and allow
them to help us walk through our messes and hurts.
My
desire, and I hope your desire, is that we leave our Photoshopped lives at the
door when we walk into our church. No
one’s life is perfect; we all have blemishes, pains, problems, and private
“demons”. I do. I would hope the safest place to bring them
out into the open is the church.
Yes
it’s a risk, but there is great reward when we find that others care and
understand and are willing to journey with us.
James 5:16 says, “Confess your sins to each other and pray for each
other so that you may be healed.” Let me
paraphrase this verse, “Expose your blemishes, pains, problems, and private
‘demons’ to one another and pray for each other so that you may be able to walk
into healing and wholeness.”
Well written words of wisdom. Now how to do it.........
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