by Sarah Van Diest @SarahVanDiest
https://www.thunderclap.it/projects/42813-damn-shame
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Find freedom from shame's shackles - @SarahVanDiest (Click to Tweet)
Sarah has worked in Christian publishing since 2005 as both an editor and an agent.
Currently, she works with her husband, David, in their agency, the Van Diest Literary Agency. Writing is a growing passion for her as she hopes to bring hope to hurting hearts.
“I praise
you because I am fearfully and wonderfully made” Psalm 139:14
Shame: “a
painful feeling that's a mix of regret, self-hate, and dishonor.”* We all know how
it feels.
Simply put, it’s a negative feeling we work diligently to avoid, and
yet so many of us live with shame as our constant companion. (https://www.vocabulary.com/
Today is
my youngest son’s sixteenth birthday. (Happy Birthday, Colin!) We have five
sons ranging from sixteen to twenty-four. I’ve watched each one struggle with
shame as they’ve passed through various life stages. I would do anything to
take it from them, to lift shame from their shoulders and throw it far, far
away. I’m not talking about the sense of guilt for having acted badly, because
that can lead to a change of heart, I’m talking about the sense of
worthlessness that shame brings.
“Worthless”
and “insignificant” are lies, and it angers me to see it creeping up to any one
of my boys; doing its darndest to leach on and drag them down…
…because I
know personally the agony shame brings.
Shame
tells me I don’t have a seat at the table, unless somehow I’ve earned it (an
ever-shifting target).
It tells
me I can’t eat, because I don’t deserve food (it’s reserved for others).
It tells
me I am not worthy of the air I breathe or the ground beneath my feet.
It tells
me to disappear into the floor so no one has to deal with me.
Shame is
shackles and prison bars. It paralyzes and controls. It is fully the opposite
of freedom and life.
We all
know shame in an experiential sense; some to greater degrees than others. Being
born into the human race guarantees our acquaintance with it. But why?
Shouldn’t we be asking that? Shouldn’t we be able to find a way to bring a new
born into the world and keep the ugly monster of shame away from the door? Why
is a meeting with shame an inevitability? Can we do anything about it?
I think
the why is pretty straightforward: the
Fall. It’s that simple. We live in a fallen world and shame dominates the
landscape. When Adam and Eve first realized they were naked, they covered
themselves and hid. I love God’s response, “Who told you that you were naked?”
(Gen. 3:11). The Liar twisted what God had decreed was good and told them it
wasn’t. Shame entered the story of man with that infamous interaction with the
Serpent.
The
Serpent’s words clouded their vision both of God and of themselves. God hadn’t
changed. Man hadn’t changed. But their perception had. Though they were confused
by the lie, God remained steadfast, faithful and loving; and man remained His
cherished creation. This is the point I want to make for us today because it
has to do with what we can do about shame.
Simplistically
stated, we learn to discern our Father’s voice. Studying the truth about this steadfast, faithful and
loving God and abiding with Him is how we learn His character and know His
voice. It’s how we can separate truth from lie.
The obfuscating
storm cloud that is shame is where the truth about God and about ourselves is
turned and twisted into harmful, painful messages. Just as Adam and Eve did, we
cover ourselves believing that hiding will ease our discomfort and protect us.
Shame makes promises it cannot keep: “Hide yourself and you will be safe,”
“Cover yourself and you will be protected.” When God is our true refuge and God
is our secure hiding place (Ps. 46:1 and Ps. 32:7).
If our
enemy is not able to create anything new, because only the Father can do that,
then all he can do is distort what already exists. All he can do is turn the
truth on its head, either completely upside down, or off kilter just enough
that it is believable, but still a lie. So when we hear the words of shame
telling us we are not worthy, that we don’t deserve a seat at the table, that
the ground beneath our feet should swallow us whole; and if we know who our
Father really is and we have learned His character, we can know the words of
truth are the not those words. We can know that a lie has been made out of a
truth.
Standing outside
the storm cloud is the Lord loudly proclaiming our value and worth, but the enemy
takes His words and confuses them. Hear the Father’s voice and be set free from
shame!
My dear
friend and pastor, Curtis Tucker, has just finished a profoundly powerful book
on the issue of shame. It’s called Damn
Shame: Finding Freedom from False Beliefs. It comes out this week, June 15th.
He looks at the biblical derivation of shame, demonstrates how our errant
understanding of who God is and who we are effects our sense of worth, and
shows us the wonderful truth a straight forward reading of the Bible reveals.
Freedom
from shame may feel impossible, but nothing is impossible with a loving God.
TWEETABLE
Find freedom from shame's shackles - @SarahVanDiest (Click to Tweet)
Sarah has worked in Christian publishing since 2005 as both an editor and an agent.
Currently, she works with her husband, David, in their agency, the Van Diest Literary Agency. Writing is a growing passion for her as she hopes to bring hope to hurting hearts.
Amen, Sarah. I struggled with feelings of shame until God's word transformed me. As a new believer I memorized the Word. I wrestled with the truth because I was safe in my shame. I was familiar with hopeless feelings. Then God put a new song in my heart. Freedom is found in Him. Thank you for the reminder. I will check out Damn Shame. I may purchase it as gifts for friends. I will read it because the evil one rears his ugly head and still tries to shame me and blame me. I claim the Word and he flees.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Cherrilynn! You are always such an encourager and a blessing to me! Continue to walk in His truth and freedom!
ReplyDeleteBlessings,
Sarah
Sarah, thank you for these words. This sentence hit me hard: "Shame tells me I don’t have a seat at the table, unless somehow I’ve earned it (an ever-shifting target)." You just described my childhood in one sentence. Praise God for freedom through the true of the Word. Thanks for sharing truth.
ReplyDeleteSo you know, as I do, the longing to be at that table. That's the table where someone finally says, "You are enough." I'm so thankful it's an open invitation to come and dine.
DeleteBlessings to you, David!
Sarah
Thank you Sarah. I sure needed to read this today.
ReplyDeleteThank you, Barbara. We are all welcomed at the table every moment of every day, but sometimes we can't hear the host calling us. May you hear Him today!
DeleteBlessings,
Sarah
Beautiful and powerful post, Sarah!
ReplyDeleteThank you, sweet friend.
DeleteBlessings!
Sarah