Friday, March 21, 2014

Judging

Lately I've been on this kick about so-called "Christians" who do nothing but judge people with the time they have. I guess the passing of Westboro founder Fred Phelps during this week, as well as a video I saw from a Switchfoot show in Baton Rouge last week, really brought it to my attention as a topic I feel like needed to be addressed.

I don't know how, as a so-called Christian (not for me to judge) you can just stand on a street corner and spread the message of hate. Jesus never once insulted people to deliver His message,even though when He cleared out the temple He did call the people in the temple "snakes and vipers". He showed by example, and even went as far to say, "Love your enemies. Do good to those who persecute you." The Westboro "Baptist Church" had gotten national attention over the course of the past decade for protesting military funerals and funerals of celebrities who had died as well. While this is protected by free speech/first amendment, does it make it right? Holding up signs saying, "God hates Fags", and "Thank God for Dead Soldiers", what kind of message are they spreading? Which Bible are they reading? Where does it say ANYTHING about God HATING anyone? (even though God said Jacob He loved but Esau He hated) John 3:16: For God so loved the WORLD...". God HATES sin. But God also loves everyone unconditionally. While I agree that homosexuality is a sin, God loves all those people as much as He does you and I. It's a hard concept for the human mind to grasp. How can God love everyone equally? That's why I'm glad He's God and I am not.

The Switchfoot video I was talking about earlier: last week, they were playing a show in Baton Rogue, and there was an over-zealous judgmental "preacher"using a megaphone to judge, not only Switchfoot and their music, but the switchfoot concert goers. I forced myself to watch the 15-minute clip...twice, to fully grasp what the man was saying. After the show ended, Switchfoot frontman Jon Foreman told the crowd that there was protestors outside and for the concert goers to go outside, give them a hug and tell them they love them. The "preacher" basically said that, because Switchfoot is a "Christian rock" band that they cannot be of the world because they are "in the world", and that there is no Switchfoot music in hell (he was actually RIGHT about that, unknowingly), and that if you listen to their music, you're going to hell. 15 minutes (probably longer, the clip was only 15 minutes) of just straight judging. Jon even confronted the guy, lovingly, offereing him a bottle of water, telling him he loved him, and thanking him for coming out. I assure you that Jon Foreman was a more Christ-like example of true love/humility than that man could even think to be. That man was out to see glory/attention for himself while speaking a message of hate. The guy was a modern-day Pharisee.

It's unfortunate as well, seeing that Switchfoot's music has such a broad audience, that some of those fans/concert goers may not have been Christians and sadly the only "Jesus" those people would have seen would be an angry man w/a megaphone judging every person and telling them that your sin will send you to Hell, and unfortunately may have turned them away for good.

Here's the good news: yes we are all sinners. We ALL deserve hell. That's why Jesus came,to save us from hell, to give us a chance to spend eternity with Him.

When I first heard that Phelps was on his death bed, my first thought was, good, happy burning buddy! Then I felt convicted, and I was like, only God can judge him. Then I changed my tune and said, hopefully before he steps into eternity he can see the error of his ways and the message he chose to give, one of hate instead of one of love, and to be truly repentant. When I heard of his passing a couple days ago, I immediately thought, I hope he saw the Light before it was too late, otherwise he is in a place where love is nowhere to be found, and has eternal seperation from God.

The irony is that, before his death, his own family and "church" excommunicated him from their church, and that they didn't want anybody protesting his funeral. I had a couple people tell me they would picket/protest his funeral but that's what they would want. Why would we lower our standards to stoop to their level? I saw a picture on twitter that I posted as well, hold up a sign at a WBC rally that says "God is Love" and watch their heads explode!

This has gotten my attention as well, I find myself sometimes, in my mind, being just as judgmental as the people I have mentioned. I'm getting better, but it's not my place to judge ANYONE. I am no better than anyone. "How can you be worried about the speck of dust in your brother's eye while you have a plank in your eye?" I wrote a song about something similar to this topic when I was in college a decade ago, it said something along the lines of, "How can you spread the love when you're too busy judging everyone?" I need to try and find a written copy of it somewhere or just try to re-write it.

To sum it all up: why do we judge? Why do we rank sin? God treats everyone..and all sin...equally. How can you be a professing Christian while condemning others to hell? That's NOT what Christianity is about. It's about the opposite. It's about telling others about the love of Jesus that has the power to save and to conquer sin.

1 comment:

  1. Well said Steve! I had similar thoughts when I first heard about Phelps, but then I realized that in no way, shape, or form did I want to stoop to his level! Somehow I feel that protesting his funeral or speaking out in hate is exactly what the devil would want. Doing so would allow him to "win" both through Phelps life and his death.

    ReplyDelete