Thursday, March 23, 2017

Negativity

With all the horrors going on in the world today, it's interesting the things that 'break the internet.'  I'm not fond of the phrase, 'breaking the internet,' like things going viral which, up to last week, was a BBC correspondent in Korea whose children decided to crash the interview.  The social media sphere did its best to make this man and his family the most famous people in the world for a little while and as I watched various interviews with him and his family afterwards, the most difficult thing for them was the fact that most people believed that the woman who crashed into the room was his nanny and not his wife.

Racially sensitive, the internet is not.

As I turned on my computer last week expecting the typical regressive articles regarding ways to make the President of the United States look bad (some of which he does himself), I came across what I would say describes the thread that unites all of our current socialized media...

Negativity, or rampant shallowness.

I smacked my head when I read that what was 'breaking the internet' two mornings ago was a trailer for the movie 'Wonderwoman,' and the heartfelt disgust that the character of Wonderwoman, in the editing room, has had her armpits bleached.

Let me write that again:  People were genuinely concerned that the moviemakers bleached her armpits so that any stubble might not be seen on the 'perfect' woman.

Objectification of women should not be trivialized, but for heaven's sake, the first female 'superhero' that Hollywood has come out with since Black Widow (is she a superhero?) is being torn to bits because of underarm hair?  For heaven's sake...

Speaking of heaven's sake, negativity has a way of leeching into almost everything - it has from the beginning of time.  Humans distrust God; humans distrust each other, and so they belittle and tear down because they believe at the same time it will prop them up.  Have you ever been around toxically negative people?  Do you ever stop to wonder how much life and energy is sucked out of you by being around them?  Even though you want to care for them, and support them, there is no black hole in human relationships like negativity.

Take for instance, Nathanael, the disciple.  I'm sure that he was not a constant source of negativity, well, to be honest, I'm not sure because there really isn't that much said about him, but his first words upon discovering Jesus, 'the one Moses wrote about in the Law, and about whom the prophets also wrote - Jesus of Nazareth, the son of Joseph,' (John 1:45b) were of negativity and disbelief. 

"Nazareth!  Can anything good come from there?"

It wouldn't be the last time Jesus' qualifications are questioned; simply by the town he lived in, negativity enters.  He is the son of a carpenter?  Please.  He has brothers that everyone knows?  I think we're barking up the wrong fig tree.

Philip is not put off, but wipes aside the negativity and the shallowness of the response.  "Come and see!"

In a world that insistently tries to brush Jesus off, like dandruff from a dark blue shirt, we are called not to combat the negative claim but invite them to encounter the Savior firsthand.  "Come and see!" We say with a smile knowing that there is something so incredibly, what's the word, vivid, about Jesus.  Through all of his encounters and connections with people, he stands in stark contrast to the negative world positively charging it with altered understandings and expectations.  Moses may have pointed them to the Law, but the fulfilment of that Law points them gracefully back to God. Immediately, he speaks positively about Nathanael; he combats the preconceived notions by encouraging him.  "Here truly is an Israelite in whom there is no deceit!"  (John 1:47)

Whether he was telling Nathanael that he was not lying in speaking about Nazareth that way, we don't know, but what Jesus revealed was that he already knew Nathanael immanently and intimately. 

How do you come before Christ in your connection?  Is it one of negativity?  How do you respond to the negativity that surrounds Christianity?  Do you begin to join the chorus of mockers in the call to crucify Christianity, or do you say to those who puff out their chests and say, 'We have moved past religion,'

Come and see!

Not come and read, or come and think, come and pretend...  Come and see the risen Christ in the body of believers who are not a collection of perfection, but a rabble of sinners claimed by the one who sees us standing still under the shade of our own personal fig trees.  Come and see!

2 comments:

Anonymous said...

Great piece. Negativity is infectious and can easily eat at away at the most positive person.

debbie gortowski said...

I have a prayer note book written by Esther Prabhakar called: Lord, Teach Me to Pray. It is organized around the letters ACTS.
Adoration, confession, thanks giving and supplication. She writes this book on the premise that God is not an ATM machine where we go to get our stuff taken care of. We have adoration, confession and thanksgiving to do first.
Adoration is our response to God for who He is.
It promotes positivity for God’s marvelous works. It lifts us to God’s holy presence.
I find that if I get too busy with all the things in my life, a negative attitude creeps in. I recognized it immediately! Time for a break; a quiet time with God instead of a workout at the pool, a day off work, a walk with the dog, a day at the library ….
Jesus designed us to be fruitful, not busy
It’s impossible to have a positive, peaceful life and at the same time have a negative mind.
Joyce Myers says it well: “It was such a revelation for me when I realized I didn’t have to think about just anything that came into my mind. I could choose my thoughts and do my own thinking—on purpose. There is a way to have righteousness, peace and joy in the Holy Spirit…to have victory in our circumstances and not live according to what the world views as “normal.” And it all begins with renewing our minds. The choice is up to us.”

With all the bad news in the headlines today, it’s easy to become negative. We have to encourage ourselves by purposely feed our minds with information of a more inspiring nature. There’s nothing better for this than the promises of God as revealed through His Word.


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