|
Safe People Part 2: Where are the Safe
People?
Last week we described what safe relationships look like. Now the big question
remainswhere do you find safe people?
A client lamented with me about how she had tried the "safe relationship"
stuff, sharing her heart, being honest, etc. and concluded that it just didn't
work. She felt judged and condemned. It seemed that those she opened her soul
to were simply not safe people.
She assumed since they were people in her church that they would automatically
be safe. She had discovered a sad but real truth: the church is not a perfectly
safe place. How can this be? If anyplace should be safe, the church should be.
As much as we would like for it to be true, the church does not consist of
only safe people. If we are going to have a biblical view of relationships and
people, we must see the church as God describes it. Our faith must be able to
square with the reality of life as we find it and with the reality the
Bible describes to us. Let's look at those two realities.
Reality as People Find It
Even in the body of Christ, we find some harsh realities: judgment, pride, self-centeredness,
manipulation, abandonment, abuse, control, perfectionism, domination, and every
kind of relational sin know to humankind. The walls of the church do not make
it safe from sin. In fact, the church by definition is composed of sinners.
To further complicate matters, the church by its very nature as a family of
God activates our most primitive and dependent longings because we want a perfect
family. God designed the church to be our second family, and we often take into
the church our longing for security and love that we take into our families
of origin. And for some, as in their original family, the wish is not only disappointedit
can be crushed altogether. What are we to do with that reality?
The one difference is that, as adults entering into the family of God, we have
choices about who we are going to trust and get close to. David said in Psalm
101:6 that we can pick the "ones who will minister to [us]." But we
are not by nature so discerning. We come into the church feeling and wishing,
"Take care of me. I need you. I shouldn't have to first figure out who
is safe and who is not. You should be good and trustworthy." We want things
to be right and often they are not.
On the other hand, many of us have felt that the body of Christ has nurtured,
loved, and taught us in ways that have radically healed us. Through the acceptance
and love of other believers our character has changed, and we have slowly let
go of the things that shackle us.
The church can be a healing place where lives are transformed and where powerful
love and healing can take place. The body of Christ is still God's instrument
for our healing and restoration (1 Peter 4:10; Ephesians 4:16). So, the question
rings in our needy hearts: Is the church safe, or is it dangerous? The answer
is, "It is both." Sometimes we are fortunate to find good relationships,
and other times we run into disaster.
Reality as the Bible Describes It
The sad thing is that our ideals for the church do not reflect biblical reality,
either. We think that the Bible promises a church where we find only safe people.
But the Bible says that the church is full of wolves as well as sheep. In the
church, we will find both healing and hurt. If we are going to find healing
and minimize hurt we need to make sure that we see the church as God describes
it to us. We need to operate according to biblical reality instead of our fantasized
wishes.
In describing reality of the kingdom of God, Jesus told a story:
"The Kingdom of Heaven is like a farmer who planted good seed in his
field. But that night as everyone slept, his enemy came and planted weeds
among the wheat. When the crop began to grow and produce grain, the weeds
also grew. The farmer's servants came and told him, `Sir, the field where
you planted that good seed is full of weeds!' "`An enemy has done it!'
the farmer exclaimed." `Shall we pull out the weeds?' they asked. "He
replied, `No, you'll hurt the wheat if you do. Let both grow together until
the harvest. Then I will tell the harvesters to sort out the weeds and
burn them and to put the wheat in the barn.'" (Matthew 13:14-30, italics
mine)
As this story shows, God allows unsafe people to be in the church. They are
wolves in sheep's clothing, and they are dangerous. While they may seem religious,
they may not even be true believers. While they do many things in his name,
they are not his sheep. (Matthew 7:22-23)
Another reality is that even with believers, we get a mixed bag as well. Listen
to the parable of the sower:
The seed that fell on the hard path represents those who hear
the Good News about the Kingdom and don't understand it. Then the evil one
comes and snatches the seed away from their hearts.
The rocky soil represents those who hear the message and receive
it with joy. But like young plants in such soil, their roots don't go very
deep. At first they get along fine, but they wilt as soon as they have problems
or are persecuted because they believe the word.
The thorny ground represents those who hear and accept the
Good News, but all too quickly the message is crowded out by the cares of
this life and the lure of wealth, so no crop is produced.
The good soil represents the hearts of those who truly accept
God's message and produce a huge harvest--thirty, sixty, or even a hundred
times as much as had been planted." (Matthew 13:19-23)
Within the church some people are never really born again; the kingdom never
takes hold in them. Others are joyful in the faith, but they do not have the
reality of the life of God within them. Both of these groups can be very destructive.
But it is the third group, where we can get really confused. The seed has taken
hold, they are in the faith, but they are so self-centered and caught up in
temporal concerns that they are not producing loving fruit in their relationships.
This kind of well-intentioned, but growth-stagnant, person can be very hurtful
as well.
Finally, Jesus describes the fruitful person. This person, although not perfect,
is involved in the process of growth with God. Love, confession, humility, truth
and grace are present and increasing. This is the kind of person is the one
that brings about healing in other people's lives.
Wisdom and Character
Our experience and the Bible affirm the same thing. The church is full of safe
people, unsafe people, and hurtful lingerers. There is no perfect family short
of heaven. The Bible's message is that we need to be discerning. We need to
make informed choices, and we need to be careful. But we also need to avoid
becoming pessimistic and learn to recognize the goodness that abounds within
the family of God.
The long and the short of it is that we have to work to find safe people, using
our wisdom, discernment and character.
Where to look
Within the body of Christ, God has gifted people to heal each other. We have
found these people in a variety of settings and structures, from informal to
formal. Here are some of them.
Safe Churches
Look for churches where relationship is preached and community is formed. While
churches have different personalities and cultures it is possible to find churches
that have the following qualities:
- Grace is preached from the pulpit and is the foundation for how people are
treated.
- Truth is preached without compromise, but also without a spirit of law and
judgment.
- Church leaders are aware of their own weaknesses and need to grow. They
are open about their hurt, pain, failings, and humanity. Instead of "having
it all together" and being insulated from confrontation and change, they
are in a process of healing and opening up to their own safe people for support
and accountability.
- The church uses small groups to touch people's lives, and sermons focus
on community in the body of Christ as well as doctrine.
- The culture is one of forgiven sinners, not self-righteous religious Pharisees.
- The church, instead of being a self-contained unit and thinking it has all
the answers, is networked into the community, utilizing input from other sources
such as churches, professionals and organizations.
- The teaching has a relational emphasis as well as a vertical one. Relationship
between people is seen as part of spirituality as well as relationship to
God.
- The teaching sees brokenness, struggle, and inability as normal parts of
the sanctification process.
- There are opportunities to serve others through a variety of ministries.
Restorative Friendships
We (John and I) value friendship. We believe that friendship is one of the most
powerful tools God uses to change and heal character. In relationships with
others we are healed, our character is changed and sanctification happens.
Friends give us what we need in the areas of acceptance, support, discipline,
modeling, and a host of other relational ingredients that produce change. Good
friendships are an absolute must for our spiritual growth to happen. In picking
good friendships that produce growth, several qualities are important:
- Acceptance and grace.
- Mutual struggles, although they do not have to be the same ones.
- Loving confrontation.
- Both parties need other support systems as well to avoid the same kind of
toxic dependency on each other that led to the problems.
- Familiarity with the growth process where both parties have "entered
in" and have some knowledge of the process so as to avoid the blind leading
the blind.
- Mutual interest and chemistry, a genuine liking.
- An absence of "one-up and one-down" dynamics.
- Both parties in a relationship with God.
- Honesty and reality instead of "over spiritualizing."
- An absence of controlling behavior.
Support Groups
Groups are an extremely powerful tool for spiritual and emotional growth. A
dynamic occurs in a group that is absent in one-on-one relationships. Members
realize the universality of pain and suffering, and they are not as tempted
to condemn themselves.
Support groups come in many styles, from therapy groups to twelve-step groups,
to prayer groups, to groups that form around a particular issue, such as grief
or sexual abuse.
One caution needs to be mentioned, however. Groups are powerful and need leadership
by people who know what they are doing. They need to know the issues that will
arise and how to deal with them. That is why groups have trained leaders, or
leaders who have experience in the growth process. We generally discourage informal
groups of hurting people who get together with no trained or experienced leader.
These groups can re-create all the problems that someone is there to get help
with. Unless you are far along in the process, try to find groups that are structured,
have an expressed purpose, and have experienced leadership.
Individual Therapy
Sometimes people are so hurt and have so much to deal with that they need specialized
one-on-one attention. Individual therapy is a powerful, proven method of dealing
with deep issues and developmental impasses.
In choosing a therapist, remember that you are a consumer and have a right
to know that you are getting good care. Check out her credentials first, and
make sure that you check around with people who are familiar with her work.
Pastors can be a good referral resource.
Be Careful and Go for It
There are many good people out there. To find them, use discernment, wisdom,
and information, and trust your experience with people. Keep looking, praying,
and seeking until you find safe people-people who will give you all the benefits
that God has planned for you.
Next week
Safe People -Part 3: How to be safe once you've
found safety.
Taken from Safe People, © Drs.
Henry Cloud & John Townsend, Zondervan 1995
Safe
People will help you restructure your approach to relationships.
Put an end to getting burnedand start enjoying the healthy, balanced relationships
everyone wants and needs.
This is Part 2 in a series of excerpts from Safe
People. |