Forty-one years ago this morning was a
significant day, a turning point in my life. I still remember it
rather well because I had come to an impasse in my life, not only
spiritually but emotionally as well. But a little background needs to
be explained to make sense of that statement.
I grew up in a conservative religious
environment in the sense that I had been led to believe in a very
strict, arbitrary, demanding God who expected everyone to keep His
rules perfectly or face punishing. Very likely this was because that
was the way I was generally treated by my parents, particularly my
father who was not adverse to using corporal punishment whenever he
felt it might be useful to force me into more obedience. Thus my view
of God increasingly was filled with fear and intimidation.
As I entered my teen years my heart
began to rebel more and more against this kind of life. But at the
same time my conscience had been trained to always be honest, to try
to be good and to seek for holiness as far as I could figure out what
that meant. I now realize that this is the double-mindedness that
James speaks of in the Bible. And as I learned all too well,
double-mindedness always leads to instability.
The religion of my childhood in many
respects resembled the cultural religion of America in those days, a
culture where authority demanded implicit, unquestioning obedience
and every infraction of the law was met with stern retribution. But
as I was approaching adulthood in my early teens things were changing
in our country; the Vietnam war was raging and coming to a climax and
young people both there and at home were chafing under the abuse of a
country exploiting them and using them essentially as cannon fodder
in a far away land.
Protests began to break out, but not
just over a stupid war that was going nowhere but in reaction to
increasingly abusive authority here at home. Hypocrisy was on the
rise among the older generation and the youth were hungry for more
authenticity, for something that addressed the real issues down
inside instead of just repressing everything for the sake of keeping
up appearances. Out of this environment the Hippie movement was born
with a rather colorful history and mixed reviews.
Whatever you might think was going on
with the Hippie movement (which was slightly before my time in some
respects), it was truly a mix of reactions to the abuse of power, not
only by the government but by religion and adults in general. Some of
the young people in that movement were honestly seeking for real
freedom, to explore uncharted waters not unlike Columbus who had
'discovered' America long ago, and they also wanted to a better love
and learn to real. As with any revolution there were also those who
took advantage of the uprisings to express their selfishness by
exploiting others and causing havoc. But it cannot be denied that the
repressive atmosphere of abuse by those in charge brought on this
massive movement not unlike what we are seeing all throughout the
Arab world today.
My own life was being lived out in an
even more restricted, protected environment. I was carefully shielded
from nearly all outside influences such as popular music, movies and
most other cultural activities that were considered worldly in
society. I am not saying that this was all bad but simply stating
that this is what shaped my thinking and perceptions during my
formative years. But because of the intensity of the pressure to
conform to the rule of law both at home and in my church as well as
in society at large, I found myself increasingly chafing under the
pressure for conformity and started having my own urges to revolt
myself.
As I mentioned previously, my
conscience had been trained quite intently to act as a guard against
my straying too far into off-limit activities. I had great ability to
heap enormous amounts of guilt and shame on myself whenever I felt I
had sinned. The problem was that I had very nebulous ideas about just
what sin really was and this was part of what fueled my confusion and
growing resentment against authority. My conscience had become very
sensitive, but without experiencing real love I increasingly lived in
growing terror of losing my soul if I did not 'confess' every last
little 'sin' that might still be lurking in my past or present.
I came to believe from the
teachings/threatenings of well-meaning religious instructors that
God, who could see all things even in the deepest recesses of my
soul, was always looking over my shoulder waiting to condemn me to
burn in hell if I did not perfectly conform to every last
requirement/demand expected of me. To make matters worse I never
seemed to be able to determine just what demands were from God and
which might just be petty demands of those in authority. For it was
not unusual – in fact it was the popular method in even secular
culture – to make up rules more for the convenience of those in
charge than for the good of those under their authority.
So in many ways I entered my own
'Hippie movement' in my own way, but not necessarily at the same time
as the one going on outside my home. And even though I did begin
indulging in listening to forbidden music on a radio I discovered in
my house, which raised the friction level between me and my parents
significantly, the pop music I listened to was more reflective than
instructive in my life.
During this period in my life I began
to experience an internal conflict that I can only describe as
resembling schizophrenia. Because of my very dark views of a
demanding God waiting to punish me reinforced by a father who was
very similar, and an overactive conscience that did its share of
condemning me as well, I found myself in essence 'doing penance' that
increasingly consumed more and more of my waking hours. During this
period of time when I was around 11-13 I took on my first job as a
paper-boy for a Chicago newspaper and suddenly had access to far more
money that the pittance my parents had given me for an allowance each
week. That gave me resources to do many more things but not
necessarily all beneficial for me. But pervading my conscious mind
through whatever activities I found myself involved in, and like a
computer virus running behind the scenes consuming more and more of
my mental CPU, was a mantra of sorts that ran over and over and over
and became more and more obsessive and compulsive.
This virus that increasingly took up
more and more of my waking moments was a cycle of confessing whatever
violation or past sin I might be able to imagine or remember and
begging God to forgive that sin so I would not face punishment for
it. However, even this activity brought very little relief for I had
no way of being sure that God had relented and chosen to wipe that
sin off my records in heaven. Thus I would find myself repeating the
same confessions again many times because I still wasn't sure if I
had gotten it right and removed it from the list God was using
against me for the day of Judgment.
This may sound very bizarre to some but
may resonate a great deal with many others. Whatever the case, this
was my situation and no one around me had any clue that this was what
was going on inside my head nearly every moment I was awake. Things
progressively got worse though, for my overactive conscience pushed
me harder and harder to comply with the expectations of religion as I
perceived them, which meant that I was also supposed to close my
eyes, bow my head, kneel down and fold my hands whenever I prayed.
But since this cycle of fearful, compulsive 'penance' was happening
during many of my waking moments, increasingly it was impossible to
do all of those things at the same time. That of course, brought up
the potential that I was adding even more guilt to the list of sins I
was trying to whittle down with all my frenzied, obsessive praying.
I can remember riding my bicycle
through car traffic in town trying to recite my penance routines and
feeling compelled to close my eyes in because I was praying but with
dangerous results. Finally I had to just keep reciting my mantras
without doing any of the outward physical requirements just to stay
safe but in turn that only increased the weight of guilt I was
already feeling. My condition could easily be compared to the
situation of Christian in the story Pilgrim's Progress by John
Bunyan. He is described as having an incredibly heavy burden fastened
on his back that he could not escape. That description of the
Christian life truly resonated in many ways with my own journey
toward God.
This obsessive-compulsive habit that
was developing in my internal world finally became so disruptive that
people must have begun to wonder about me, yet no one ever bothered
to ask or to allow me the freedom to share my fears and confusion
with them. The only thing I got from the adult world were more
expectations and ever-increasing requirements that I needed to
conform to in order to be accepted as well as prepare my life for
heaven.
With this background explanation it can
be more readily understood why I felt the way I did when I woke up on
my sixteenth birthday and lay in bed pondering my predicament that
cold morning. A number of things crossed my mind that began to
inter-relate to each other. One thing was the popular notion that the
age of sixteen may be some sort of magical transition point in life
from which the expression “sixteen and never been kissed”
emerged. And while it was true that I had never been kissed by a
girl, being the pragmatic sort of mind I was, I rather disdained such
notions. But that morning I began to ponder that just maybe there
might be something significant about turning sixteen that was outside
my frame of awareness. I began to wonder if something might
potentially be different for me that day, something that might
surprise me, that might cause me to take a different direction in my
life. Little did I realize that I was indeed about to turn one of the
most significant corners that would affect my journey for eternity.
As I lay there in bed pondering whether
there was anything to this sixteen business or not, another thought
began to emerge more forcefully from my heart. My resentment had been
building up for years against my internal picture of God who demanded
impossible levels of penance and expected me to live such a
dysfunctional existence as I had been experiencing for several years.
My heart was so suppressed and squashed by all this abusive internal
frenzy that I was finally ready to consider throwing in the towel so
to speak and giving up on all of it. Maybe this religion was too
crazy for me, and certainly it was becoming clear that the direction
I was heading was untenable. It was impossible to live much longer
with this compulsive obsession sapping more and more of my energy and
it was interfering with my relationships and even my ability to
concentrate on normal activities. It was only increasing my levels of
shame, guilt and fear rather than diminishing them and it was
starting to become clear that this must not be the right road to
heaven. The way things were going I would soon have a mental
break-down rather than a breakthrough into holiness.
As I lay there and thought back over
the past few years of my life in connection with this obsession, I
decided to make what felt like a very dangerous decision that
morning. In the light of the pain and dysfunction this obsession was
bringing into my life, I decided that for at least that one day I was
going to attempt to suppress this compulsive urge to confess and
grovel every time it presented itself no matter how insistent it
might feel. Only if I obviously committed some egregious sin would I
choose to try to make it right, but for all the other real or
imaginary sins that seemed to never go away anyway, I decided that
for this day I was going to fight back and refuse to obey this
internal dictator any longer.
As I made this decision I felt a threat
emerging from the demon (I now see that is really what it was) that
was driving me to live this way. I could hear him threaten that I
would surely burn in hell if I didn't continue to obey this
obsession. But in response I decided that it couldn't be much worse
to burn in hell than the miserable existence I was already
experiencing. And somewhere deep inside I felt just a flicker of hope
suggesting that maybe, just maybe what I had been doing was not
really God's plan after all. And if that was true then maybe this
decision might possibly open me up to a better option than the one
religion had produced in me thus far.
That day became one of the most
significant turning points in my life up to that point. Because of my
choice to begin to turn away from desperately dark pictures of God in
my head and move toward a more healthy picture of Him, my life has
been on a different track ever since. I am not suggesting in any way
that it was the intention of my parents or religious guardians to
lead me into such insanity. But nevertheless it was the product of a
legalistic approach to religion that always results in malfunction
and a loss of peace in the heart. And peace is one of the most
important ingredients for a Christian to experience if they are to
grow and thrive and mature.
As I thought back on this day that
changed my life 41 years ago this morning, I couldn't help but feel
again that I am in some ways continuing that choice again today. I
find myself in the middle of even more intense questioning of my
dark pictures of God, pictures that still pervade the thinking and
teachings of most of those around me in religion even today. The same
atmosphere of fear still pervades not only my own church but every
brand of religion throughout the world to some extent. Only recently
have I begun to discover that the real truth about God is even more
radically beautiful than I could ever have dared to imagine that day
I turned sixteen. Now here I am still processing and rejecting faulty
opinions about God so many years later and wondering how much longer
it will take before I can be free of the inhibitions and rebellion
that all of those lies instilled into my psyche during those
formative years.
I made a decision back in those days
that I was going to take the harder road than many of my friends were
choosing. Rather than throw out religion as being worthless or
impossible or a fraud as many others chose to do, I decided that the
real problem was that I didn't have a correct perception of what was
really true about God or religion and that I needed to figure out
what was really true in contrast to what I had been taught all my
life that made me so terrified of God. That choice has shaped the
rest of my life up to this day and continues to be the basis by which
I live my life.
I am now more convinced than ever that
the real problem, not only in my life but with all of us, is that we
have grown up in an environment so saturated with lies about God that
unless God intervenes to show our hearts the real truth about Him
there is no hope of us every figuring it out. But on the other hand,
if we allow Him enough respect to give Him a chance in our hearts, He
will begin to share with us a love and will ravish our hearts in ways
that cannot be matched by anything else we could imagine. The human
heart was designed to be satisfied by only one thing, and that one
thing is the passion of the God who created it to start with. But the
thing that keeps us from embracing that love are the myriads of lies
we still believe that prevent us from trusting Him with our hearts.
Religion has miserably failed to
present the real truth about God, not just to the world but to its
own adherents as well. Religion still insists that God operates
primarily through laws and even so-called liberal theology is
obsessed with resolving our legal standing with God. What I have been
discovering is that God is far more intent on winning my respect and
my affections than He is on me achieving perfect conformity to a list
of demands. Trying to fulfill a list of rules actually diminishes my
ability to love, yet love is the only thing that prepares my heart to
live in His presence. The only way I can live in love is to lay aside
my obsession with rules and first learn to appreciate the real truth
about what He is really like in contrast to all the lies religion
and/or culture has foisted on me. Then as I come to know Him more and
more intimately my life will naturally begin to gravitate toward
being like Him without me obsessing over whether I have offended Him
or not.
I still have a long ways to go to get
rid of the many lies that still lurk deep inside me and get triggered
from time to time. But God is faithful and His love is everlasting
which is the only thing I can depend on when it comes to my
salvation. The more I focus on knowing who He really is the more I
sense my own heart beginning to heal and to increase in its capacity
to respond with reflective love back toward Him. And this, I am
discovering, is the real preparation for heaven that my heart has
been longing for all along.
I am pleased to have found your other posts rescently on Love Reality- a community. I followed a few of your posts you shared and started the series by Terri Fivash. I to have been on a long journey of figuring out why did Jesus have to die. So many questions and musings in the depth of the night. God has lead me to discover the big lies told about Him and to learn the realities of His love for me. I still am in the process of unlearning the falsehoods I was raised with. I am slightly younger but felt a deep parallel between my own upbringing. Get ready be perfect, almost told me daily. I never knew what the Redeeming love was about, only that I had to do something to be in Gods good graces and I could just as easily be removed. Thanks for sharing your heart. I have been pondering starting my own story to truth. Just haven't decided on the format. Lookforward to reading more of your shares and comments. We live in ND, otherwise it would be great to meet and share fellowship.
ReplyDeleteThis is so encouraging, and I would love to connect as soon as possible. Please reach out and let me get better acquainted. This is no accident as so many other things lately, watching the Spirit synchronize everything to time them perfectly. Even while I was re-reading this the same issue came up on a live discussion I was in on zoom. And just a few days ago I re-recorded my podcast talking about this very thing. Reading this again made me realize how much I have forgotten over the years, and also have wonderful God is to bring me out of such deep darkness and suspicion into an awareness of and experience in His amazing unconditional love for us.
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