I never thought of myself as a rebel. I never carried a
placard or joined a radical movement to protest an injustice or acted-out
against it. However, my parents regarded me a rebel. I was dark, sullen, and
brooding, a volcano ready to erupt, its lava ready to consume everything in its
path.
I had become a product of the prevailing psychological
society in which there is no honor or dishonor, no right or wrong, but rather
psychological hungers clamoring to be fed.
However, I had not always feasted upon this worldview.
Instead, I had filled myself with other dreams—hitting the longest home run or
rescuing the world, whatever it took to give me a sense of value and honor.
I needed this sense of worth and mission, but the
psychologist quietly and unintentionally robbed me of my dreams and left me
with the conviction that I merely needed to find what made me feel good about
myself. It was all about me, but this “awareness” further imprisoned me in a
cell of self-absorption. I now became burdened with the endless quest to become
self-actualized.
However, I was a very unlikely savior. I regarded others as
maggots and disgusting scum. I think I learned this from my parents. As an eight-year-old,
I awoke crying, and this awoke my parents. I had recently returned from a
tormenting sleep-away summer camp where I had no friends and felt that I too
was a maggot.
My parents hardly ever talked. Therefore, I was surprised
when they came to my bedside to ask me why I was crying. Fighting to regain
composure, I related to them how I had been rejected by everyone.
Instead of surrounding me with hugs, kisses, and the
assurances of their love, they assured me that I shouldn’t feel bad about
myself, because everyone else was garbage, and this reasoning became my
comfort. If I couldn’t lift myself up, I could at least put others down.
My parents meant well. Mother kept my clothes ironed and
made sure to get me to the doctors’ appointments on time. Dad was a good provider,
and I always satisfied my material needs, but gloom and emptiness filled our
house. No one talked or touched.
When I was 13, a friend invited me for dinner. His parents
began to talk at the dinner table. I was horrified, no less than had they come
to the table without a stitch of clothing. Then they began to ask us questions
about school. “How could they do such a thing,” I thought.
When I was 16, my father amazed me by asking, “How was your
day today, son.” I was speechless! I knew he meant well, but I was unable to
answer.
He had been an absentee father. Coming home from the office,
he would retreat into his room and close the door, to either practice his piano
or read the Times. In either case, Mom always warned us to not disturb Dad.
Emotionally, both were off-limits. My mom wanted to be a
good mother, but she was poorly equipped for the job. She didn’t enjoy
children. Mom once confided that she never held me. She had read a book about
how to raise the male baby, which advised that, if you don’t want your son to
be a sissy, you shouldn’t hold him.
Consequently, I was an anti-social child who didn’t fit in.
I felt uncomfortable with others, knowing that they would eventually reject me.
Therefore, I would reject them before they could.
When I was 14, my parents convinced me to see a
psychologist, but nothing changed except for my growing assurance that I was
damaged merchandise. I was beyond cure, unable to change.
As a college student I was drawn to the anti-heroes. The
movies were beginning to present the outcast as the good guy. They too felt
rejected by society and its standards, but they were affirmed by the movies.
How refreshing, even if they didn’t supply the affirmation I craved, and I
always needed a greater fix.
However, it was when I was bleeding to death from a horrid
chainsaw injury that a Person who was able to provide this “fix” encountered me
in my helpless condition. Instantly, I knew that I was beloved and protected.
Even if I died, I KNEW He would be there for me. I was ecstatic. Only
one thing now mattered— discovering the identity of my mysterious Lover. Only
one fear remained—this might be about Jesus.
I was a committed Zionist and had lived in Israel for three
years, hoping to find my meaning of life there. Consequently, the idea of
becoming a Christian had been utterly abhorrent to me. I would sooner have
become a zombie or a worm, a minor betrayal compared to becoming a Christian.
However, I knew that the One I had met transcended any ethnic identity:
·
If God is for us, who can be against us? He who
did not spare his own Son but gave him up for us all, how will he not also with
him graciously give us all things? (Romans 8:31-32)
I had experienced a love I had never dreamed possible, a
love even promised in my Hebrew Scriptures:
·
The Lord is my shepherd; I shall not want. He
makes me lie down in green pastures. He leads me beside still waters. He
restores my soul. He leads me in paths of righteousness for his name’s sake.
Even though I walk through the valley of the shadow of death, I will fear no
evil, for you are with me; your rod and your staff, they comfort me. (Psalm
23:1-4)
This is the One who had come to my rescue! Jesus has now
shepherded me through some deep valleys for 47 years. Yet, I am more convinced
than ever of His love and care for me, and this has made all the difference.
No comments:
Post a Comment