I remember it like it was
yesterday. A Thursday night, I had a math test the next day and had been up
studying. He knocked on the door, or more like banged. Mom had finally changed
the locks. My brother cupped his hands over his eyes as he tried to peer
through the window, thinking it would help, but he could not see. He had
not seen in a long time. He had been looking through a filter of red, that
seemed to be the only color his eyes were those days. There were no other
colors in the world to him anymore.
My brother was in the thick
of his drug addiction and my mom asked me what she should do. This was the first
night I ever experienced true darkness. I sat at the top of the steps and said
nothing. I was nineteen, I did not know what to tell her. But he knocked,
begged for us to let him in, and my mom looked at him through the window. They
say pictures are worth a thousand words but if someone would have stepped back
and flashed a snapshot of this moment I do not think it would have been a
thousand words. I think it would have just been five words: You are worth
fighting for. Those were the same five words she told my brothers day in and
day out when there were using.
Three years later and a
couple thousand miles away, the tables turned. I stood on a front porch and
knocked on a door. My brother opened the door and that night came back to me in
an instant. I did not realize why at first but as he welcomed us into his home,
I was slow to find words because I did not realize until that moment how much
me and my brother were alike that night all those years ago. I was fresh out of
high school with not a clue what I wanted to do or where I wanted to go:
searching, and so was he. We were just looking in different places. I went to
church and he went to the pawn shop to pawn whatever he had left. Just to get
enough money to pop one more pill. What broke me in that moment was the
realization that from the outside I was the one in the family that always
looked like I had it all together, but I had been just as lost. That night, my
brother knew exactly who he was. He was an addict. But who was I?
I was judgmental of him. I
was resentful of him. I was ashamed of him. There was so much sin taking root
and growing in my heart towards the situation/him, but I would not dare admit
that, for that would require me to take a look at myself. That would have
required me to admit that I really was no better than he was, because sin was
running rapid in my life too.
Yes, I stood inside the
house and he stood outside of it, but it is very clear to me that we can be
inside the house and still miss it. Still get it wrong. Sometimes the people
outside of the house are way better off than us who are in because they are not
naïve about where they are, who they are. My brother wasn’t but I was. It is
this “holier than thou” mentality we christians are so guilty of taking on but
so oblivious to when we do it.
I can’t help but think
about this truth in the midst of all that is happening in our nation right now.
Maybe the issue is not just with those outside of the house. Maybe the issue is
also with us inside. Where are we going wrong? Where are we missing it? What is
our part in this? We love to take a step back and point a judgmental finger in
the direction of the protestors and the police men, but we are slow to stop and
ask ourselves how many fruits of the spirit we have been cultivating. Because
in the end, everything the world needs right now is simply the fruits of the
Spirit: love, joy, peace, patience, kindness, gentleness, goodness,
faithfulness, and self-control. Scripture makes it very clear we will never
bear the fruits of the Spirit if there is any bit of self or as Paul would say
“flesh.” [Romans 8]
I have been fascinated by
the story in Matthew 8 when Jesus heals the man with leprosy. Oh how we can
learn from this man. He comes to Jesus, kneels down, and says in verse 2,
“Lord, if you are willing, you can make me clean.” This man, the one who was
outcasted, disgusting to see, and looked down upon by everyone is the very one
who got it right when it came to approaching Jesus.
First: he knelt. Our words
show belief, but so do our actions. He postured himself in the manner that he
knew was needed.
Second: his uses the words
“if you are willing.” The man saw and realized that Jesus did not have to heal
him. He did not approach Him demanding but simply asking. He was bold to ask
for what he wanted but saw that ultimately it came down to if it was something
Jesus wanted to give him or not. His will, His way.
Third: he says “you can.”
Before Jesus did anything the man was full of belief.
We can come to Jesus with
the desires of our hearts. We can boldly ask for what it is we want. We can
stand full of belief that He is able to do/give what we pray for, but if we
never reach that point where like the leper we say, “if you are willing,” then
we are missing it. If we never reach that place, it us saying that what we know
that what we ask for is what we need. It is us saying we are entitled to it.
Above all, it is us not submitting to God’s authority. It is us saying we just
want it our way.
I think this story is such
another reminder that those of us who look like we have it all together might
just very well be the ones who are missing it the most. The man with leprosy
got it. My brother, in active addiction, knew exactly where he was/who he was
and his wrongs. But me, I missed it big time that night all those years ago.
Last week, I stood on the
front porch looking into my brother’s eyes. He sees life in color again. Of
course, I cried, but it washed away a perspective that needed to go. It washed
away how I saw people and life. My brother is not the only one who needed a
change of eye sight.
Church, yes we are inside
the house. But we cannot let ourselves go to the place where we think that the
problem is only with those outside. We cannot let ourselves go to the place
where just because we appear to be the ones who have it all together that we do
not stop to check ourselves. We cannot point fingers at all the wrong in the
world and say “oh God have mercy on them” without individually saying
“God have mercy on me.” Because whether we realize it or not, us insiders
are not doing as great as we think we are. Oh how we need His grace, every
single one of us.
Today, take a step back
from looking at all that is happening outside of where you are and take a hard
look at what is happening inside of you. If I had to guess, you will probably
have a front porch moment like I did. Welcome the moment. It will change you
for the better.
Wow! So many things that were so good for my heart to hear. Especially loved the "if you are willing" part, it puts us in full reliance on Jesus. Thanks for this!
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