Dear Social Media Peers,
Recently I read an article, The One Thing Christians Should Stop Saying. The one thing: blessed. For those of you too lazy or
Internet-challenged to read the entire short article, it basically challenges
our current societal use of the word against its original Biblical meaning. I
commend the author’s calling out of our flippant attitude toward true blessing.
And as a believer functioning (read: barely surviving) outside of the Christian
bubble for almost 3 years straight, I have grown to be frankly annoyed by
Christianese, or Christspeak.
Our new house is such
a blessing.
I
am/we are blessed by such an amazing family/church/community/lover/friend/insert
noun of choice.
That sermon was so amazing,
such a blessing.
I am not attempting to undermine the things and
circumstances that bring rest and humility and conviction to our lives. As
such, those things can truly feel
like a blessing, especially in the midst of an opposing environment. Sometimes
it is even noble and humble to confess blessings.
I will not judge hearts nor inward motives. It can be an act of humility to acknowledge the Provider and Sustainer
of all things tangible. It should be
our regular practice. But does it have to be out loud for—really-- the whole
world to witness?
We, dearest Social Media Peers, have taken it to an extreme.
Go ahead, search #blessed on any Internet-based
venue (Instagram, FaceBook, and Twitter producing the most laughable results).
How is a picture of your tattooed, voluptuous, bronze boobs #blessed? Or your
bare, ripped back and outstretched arms facing an ocean sunset #blessed? And
what does #blessed have to do with #workout, #suave, #itsadogslife, and
#elsalvadorian (all-inclusive #blessed hash tags)? That #blessed mountain
gondola ride: would it still be #blessed if in less than 2.5 seconds somehow
detached itself and plummeted 1,359 feet to its fate…and yours?
The
TRUTH
is
YES.
Why are the poor in spirit, the mournful, the meek, the
persecuted, and the falsely accused #blessed? (As promised by Jesus in the
Sermon on the Mount, Matthew 5.) The rich young ruler is not #blessed by his
riches. Is the board-house, rice-sustained, drought-stricken Jamaican not blessed?
The
TRUTH
is
NO.
It would still be #blessed if the gondola came
unattached and you freakishly died. Maybe not for your perfectly picturesque
life as documented on Instagram and by way of FaceBook status updates. The
mourning mother is comforted by the Author and Perfector of life and will be
reunited with her deceased daughter in the perfection of heaven. That is how she is #blessed. Those Jamaicans
are still giving thanks for their boards and their rice (check out the "Give Thanks" heading on this blog post). They realize
that #blessed comes from more than a perfect life. Consider the true blessing: the beauty in the ashes,
the stars that shine only because of the dark that surrounds them.
Author, speaker, and blogger Jen Hatmaker writes
in her documentary and personal journey of simplification, 7: “Oh, how we love religious yokes, not for what they
communicate about God, but what they say about us. This is the kind of people
we are.” Even if you refuse to believe in any kind of god, your posts about
being #blessed are undeniably about YOU. Which is ironic. Because in the
acknowledging of #blessed itself, you subliminally acknowledge grace.
We are missing the point of #blessed. We are reducing its
value when we use it every 5th post or update. Dare I venture to
suggest we use it selfishly, pompously, as an attempt to appear humble in the
guise of really showing off our envious lives? In a way, I appreciate the use
of #blessed. It’s passive. It acknowledges grace, something we have been given
that we do not deserve or have not earned and can in no way accomplish or
create on our own. Yet we have made #blessed egocentric, solely about us. We
have selfie-ized the true blessing and reduced it solely to an
esthetically-pleasing, carefree attitude of look
at me. No, really, look. at. me.
Whether you believe in God as I do or not, the vast majority
of us would agree that the world is NOT about us. For the God-fearing, this
life is obviously about God and sharing Him with the world around us. For
everyone else, I bet I can get you to admit that this world is about others.
About sourcing drinking water for villages in Africa, about providing meals and
shelter for the needy, about smiling at a stranger, and—in the least—about
donating perfectly usable unwanted items to Goodwill rather than merely
trashing them.
I beg you, Social Media Peers, reconsider your #blessed
life. Are you #blessed because you have something to envy? Or are you #blessed
because you have been given something you know you do not deserve? Give it a
moment of thought before your next hash tag.
P.S. This letter came to fruition after a few weeks of marinating in my brain and a recent trip to Denver, where I discussed all the juices with my sister & her husband. Here is her take on #blessed.
P.S. This letter came to fruition after a few weeks of marinating in my brain and a recent trip to Denver, where I discussed all the juices with my sister & her husband. Here is her take on #blessed.
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