According to a recent survey, the majority of people do not
have an intimate confidant. The discussion group began to analyze why this was
so. A consensus emerged that it was largely about shame. People are ashamed to
open up and to be exposed. (Perhaps they were reflecting on themselves.) However,
earlier studies have indicated that this kind of alienation has never been so
prevalent. Why not?
It seems that it is harder to now accept ourselves, and
therefore to allow others in. Instead, we are now more likely to wear an
impenetrable façade. We cannot bear the thought of others seeing us the way we
really are.
What has changed? Don’t we now live in a society that is
more accepting of weaknesses and differences? Well, I have a theory about this
and couldn’t hold it in:
·
I think that we now have a greater difficulty in
accepting ourselves because we have abandoned the love and acceptance of God. Without
Him, we are now left to fend for ourselves. We are therefore burdened with the
task of loving and believing in ourselves. However, this generally means that
we have to lie to ourselves – to deny the dark side and to accentuate the good.
This means that we are playing the hiding game. Instead, of receiving the defining
affirmations that come from God, we are in desperate need of the affirmations
that come from others and from our “successes.” If we are so needful of these
affirmations, how then can we allow our brokenness and shame to be seen!
I also shared how I too had been living in hiding, too ashamed to allow anyone to see me, until my Savior had gradually convinced me that He truly loves and forgives me. It was only with His acceptance that I began to accept myself.
Some seemed to get it, but not entirely. One young man responded, “That’s why we need spirituality – meditation, sunsets, and walks in the woods.
Some seemed to get it, but not entirely. One young man responded, “That’s why we need spirituality – meditation, sunsets, and walks in the woods.
It seemed as if God was off-the-table and out of their
radar. So I decided to be a little confrontational:
·
With only that kind of “spirituality,” you still
lack Someone to take you out of yourself. You are still stuck in the rut of the
self.
I was surprised and happy to see that he agreed. However,
the God of the Bible was still an option beyond consideration. The group seemed
to be convinced that, although this remained a lingering problem, God was an
alternative residing on the opposite side of the tracks.
However, the seed was planted, and I left encouraged.
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