Warm-Up Day 6: Fixating on Weaknesses
“If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.”
Romans 12:18
How I love the disclaimer!
“if it is possible” – notice that big, beautiful if?
My natural instinct says, “Oh well, all the people in my life are so messed up, I guess living at peace with everyone just isn’t possible for me. Shucky darn!”
But the Holy Spirit keeps redirecting my gaze to the middle phrase–that annoying “as far as it depends on you” part.
More Like Me
Left to my own devices, I happily interpret “as far as it depends on you” to mean that I should pour my efforts into making others more like me.
I mean, if everyone did everything my way, surely we’d all be at peace!
(I know I would!)
However, God keeps reminding me that the job of creating others in One’s own image is filled.
(Such the disappointment!)
I Accuse
Focusing on negatives is such a knee-jerk reaction for me (and some of you have said you’re the same way!)
Especially if your personality is different from mine, I’ll hyper-focus on your weaknesses.
I start thinking in accusations:
- “I can’t believe you said ___!”
- “How on earth could you _____?”
- “A good ___ would never ___!”
- “At least I don’t _____!”
Accuse means to “call into account” and “charge with a crime.” So when I fixate on your weaknesses, I literally start thinking of you as a criminal! (Click to Tweet this.)
I Abuse
Repeatedly accusing you, even if it’s “just” in my mind, leads to a huge (but unspoken) issue for many Christian women today: contempt.
According to marriage researcher John Gottman,
“…criticism is bad, because it is a global condemnation of a person’s character. But if I speak from a superior plane, that’s far more damaging, and contempt is any statement made from a higher level.
Contempt is closely related to disgust, and what disgust and contempt are about is completely rejecting and excluding someone.”
I Excuse
When I harbor contempt for you, I self-justify all my complaining, criticism, gossip, sarcasm, plus a whole host of other ill treatment. In fact, I convince myself that my bad behavior is all your fault!
- You brought it on yourself.
- You asked for it.
- You’ll have to change before I’ll change how I treat you.
Right back where I started.
Trying to make you more like me.
Which, at its core, is idolatry.
My Finest “Foot in Mouth” Moment
(Here is a particularly humiliating event that happened two decades ago. I’m grateful that I had to face my capacity for contempt early in our marriage!)
I am right.
Far better than that: he is wrong.
And I am here to witness it!
Our weekly visit to the OB/Gyn had started out normally enough. Daniel parked the car and helped me out. I started waddling to the front entry doors of the hospital but soon realized that I was on my own. When I turned around, I discovered Daniel marching of in a completely different direction.
“Where are you going?” I ask.
“Follow me!” is his only reply.
Now I’m a Choleric personality. I don’t like being told what to do. And I really hate being told what to do without a reasonable explanation.
I pause momentarily and follow purely from vanity; being enormously pregnant, I prefer to be seen with my husband rather than wandering around alone.
As Daniel leads me up unfamiliar stairs, my annoyance threatens to blossom into anger. Who does he think he is, leading an 8-months-pregnant woman on some wild goose chase? This is ridiculous!
But my anger is interrupted by a most delectable thought: What if he’s wrong? What if he has no clue where he’s going and is just bluffing?
A delicious glee wells up inside. Obviously, he’s lost. This means that my “I married Mr. Right but didn’t realize his first name was Always” husband is about to be Mr. W-r-o-n-g.
Finally!
I am right.
He is wrong.
And I am here to witness it!
Smugly, I follow with feigned compliance. With each corner we turn, my anticipation grows.
He’s wrong. He’s wrong. He’s wrong.
NAH-na-NAH-na-NAH-NA!
I can tell from his face that he is about to give up. As he grasps the doornob of what I know would be the last door before he turns to me and says those magical, never-before-heard-from-a-Melancholy words, “I’m wrong,” I set off inner fireworks, launching my victory party.
Startled, I see my doctor’s office window; behind the receptionist, the clock points to our precisely on time arrival.
How is this possible? As my inner expectations clashed with outer reality, I look at Daniel in wide-eyed amazement. My Sanguine mouth goes into motion with no filtering from my brain, and I blurt out,
“You do know something I don’t know!”
And it’s not until I see the wide-eyed amazement on Daniel’s face that I rewind.
Hear what I’ve just said.
And recognize that this is what I’ve been saying, in attitudes and actions, from the moment we said, “I do.”
Glad to be joining this challenge. I am trying to teach my 3-year old daughter not to whine and complain. I pull out Phil 2.14 with her when encouraging her not to complain but I am not living it myself…and I wonder where she gets it! I want to be complaint free – so that I can be more like Him, so that I can be obedient, so that others see something different in me (and know it is Him) and so I can be a REAL example to my children.
I think I finally found out what type I am! My mother is melancholy totally, my boyfriend is definitely phlegmatic and me… I don’t like it at all but I must confess I am choleric with a little phlegmatic… Its been interesting figuring out who is what!
I definitely need to remember this in my dealings daily… Not so much (that I see yet, at least!) within the family circle.
It’s on me to live in peace…with everyone…even when I am criticized for my beliefs and my values or the way I comb my hair (just and example)As long as I do whats right according to God…is what matters.
To live in peace is to understand and ask God to help you when these things happen…I am living for him…he will help me to pray for their heart …to be filled with him…
Its on me to live in peace. That’s what I have chosen.Dear God …This is huge too…I am a work in progress and help me God to always say and do what is right I know I have fallen short many times…It all comes back to knowing you..
In walking out “living at peace with everyone, as much as it is up to me”, I have to remember that I can not make people forgive me, and I try to be aware of (but not held prisoner by) what might offend others. I tend to be a people-pleaser, so it’s not TOO hard for me. ;p
I need a makeover! WOW I am ready GOD for the overhaul.
It says to me that I can do only what I can but not to be the reason for the lack of peace. You can only change your mind and not someone else’s.
Good grief, I am one hot mess!! ;p
Romans 12:8 – as far as it depends on me…. I have to remind myself that only I control my actions and reactions and that I was created in His image, so I have it within me to be loving, considerate, think good thoughts, etc. I’m sure I’ve been the object of someone else’s contempt, hate to think that, but it’s life! I am a very critical person, mostly of myself. I’m trying very hard to get past that! I tend to have moments like the story you shared, where I am thinking to myself how wrong someone is and I can’t wait to say I told you so! That’s totally not following what God has commanded of me!
Very difficult when you truly don’t know where the other person is coming from. I figure, if I can be misunderstood, then so can everyone else. That means we are all on equal playing grounds here. Tough to admit, but easy to see. When I am hurt, this ideal thought process is hard to stand on, but it’s reality.
~Jacque Thompson
I learned about a year ago that I am called to love and treat everyone in love…. The Bible never says we have to enjoy it!! And Jesus showed love to everyone from day 1. Even those he knew would turn on Him, even though He KNEW the pain He’d suffer because of our sin. I do my best but I’m sadly most guilty of being unloving at home. Time to pray away my contempt!
Romans 12:8 reminds me that I cannot change someone else. If I can get along with someone I should try – if they refuse to get along with me I cannot do anything about that. My obligation is to try. We should be kind, no matter what someone else does. I will answer to God for my actions (and thoughts) and mine alone (not someone’s response to me).