I learned some things recently. I probably shouldn’t be
surprised, but I was.
I’d started a discussion about “What one thing would you
pray for Hillary Clinton?” (That conversation is here: http://nwp.link/FB-PFHillary .)
We had a handful of folks ignore the question and rage – sometimes
for, mostly against – Hillary-the-Candidate. And we had a pretty substantial
number of “prayers” that were political rants in disguise.
I get that: people have been trained to have strong opinions
about this election. That always happens. Moving on…
The majority of people didn’t do that; the majority of folks
prayed for Hillary, or described a hypothetical prayer. And that’s where my
eyes were opened.
I was struck by the nature of those prayers. Out of a
hundred or so responses, the vast majority (>90%+) of the responses apart
from the political comments roughly fit into one of two religious categories:
Praying for Hillary Clinton |
- She needs to repent and stop supporting bad things! or
- She needs to have a revelation of God and get saved!
Or some variation of these two. (Full disclosure: my own
prayers were in these two categories too.) They were proper religious prayers. They’re
the things we’re told we “should” be praying for.
These all begin with the
assumption that “Mrs Clinton is messed up, and she needs me to fix her, and let
me tell you how I’d fixer, cuz I’d fix her good!”
I’m not sure any of us would want to have a crowd praying
those prayers for us. She doesn’t believe she’s doing bad things (give her the
benefit of the doubt); she doesn’t believe she needs to be saved (her testimony
of faith was documented in the conversation).
May I be honest? These feel a whole lot like we’ve been praying, “Make
her more like us!”
And that always carries the intrinsic assumption of “You’re
not as good as I am. You need to be better, like I am.”
Ewww. That is, by
nature, something of a curse, not a blessing.
Reading through all the prayers (and I have, many, many times)
leaves me feeling like I need a bath.
Relatively few responses were addressing actual
issues that Mrs. Clinton is facing: health, destiny, goodness, protection,
provision. These were so terribly
refreshing! These carried life, hope, faith, and (dare I say it?) love. These were the prayers I found myself feeling proud of (and they weren’t my prayers!).
This draws my attention to at least one reason why
political leaders don’t like to listen to Christians: our communication (to
them, among ourselves about them) is pretty unambiguous: We think we’re better than you.
We’re going to fix you with our talk, with our prayers.
Our interaction with “the world” is so very seldom actually
focused on their needs, their wants, their situation. Our interaction is pretty strongly “all about us.”
And in reality, it isn’t even a little bit “all about us.” Not to them. It needs to be an awful lot “about them,” if we’re going to actually connect
with them.
Otherwise, we’re wasting their time and ours.
The best part of the conversation will be on Facebook. Come join in.
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