I still plan to write my feelings about Ravi Z's fall from grace, hopefully next week. However, I remembered another blog post I had written when Josh Harris said he rejected Christ and walked away from ministry. While the events are not exactly the same, my reactions were similar. This post is from August, 2019.
I've been writing about heroes lately and this week we saw a former hero
to a lot of young people turn his back on Christ and everything his
parents stood for. I've been thinking about it a lot since then but
first I want to remind us of one Truth. A very real Truth all parents
must remember.
Parents can do everything right and still have a child make bad
decisions. Adam and Eve epitomize making the worst kind of decision and
they lived in a perfect environment. Contrary to Freud, we cannot
blame everything on our mothers... or fathers. We have all seen kids
from good homes go bad and kids from bad homes do amazingly well.
I don't want to speculate what led to Josh Harris, who became a pastor
of a mega church, rejecting the faith he once promoted. However, since
he made certain through social media that everyone knew of his momentous
decision, I do want to talk about it. He did not go quietly into the
night.
I read what his dad, Gregg Harris, wrote in our early days of
homeschooling and I cannot recall it being anything legalistic...
conservative, yes. But I do understand how the courting instead of
dating scenario Josh wrote about in I Kissed Dating Goodbye could morph into legalism.
We didn't do the courting thing but I didn't allow dating outside of
group activities until my kids were sixteen, and even then I discouraged
dating with marriage in mind until after high school. I even prayed
neither of them would find the person they wanted to marry until the
appropriate time.
However, both of my children met and married people perfect for them...
not perfect people for they do not exist... but people I love having as
part of our family. Is courting more legalistic than being careful
about dating? I haven't really thought about it much but like so many
things, it could turn that way... and some articles think the backlash
to that book started the crumbling of his faith in his youth. I wasn't
aware of it at the time.
But true legalism turns Christianity into a religion not unlike the
Pharisees Jesus spoke against. I was close to someone deeply hurt by
growing up in a legalistic Christian home and I saw the results of her
bad decisions. I came to realize that under legalism instead of the
right kind of grace, she figured that she could not keep all the rules
so why try to keep any? To her, Christianity was not about Jesus... it
was only a set of do's and don'ts.
Why do I bring this up? Because there has been a lot of speculation
that perhaps he had been brought up in a legalistic home and that is why
he eventually walked away from Christ. I'm not so sure about that,
even if the book that made him famous could be seen as more rules
oriented than grace based.
I am thankful to Josh's parents as homeschool pioneers and his dad was
one of the founders of the Homeschool Legal Defense Association, which
continues today as arguably the best advocate for homeschoolers who run
into legal situations. I don't recall anything in their writing that I
thought was legalistic and I'm quite sensitive to the subject.
The scenario with Harris reminds me a lot of what happened with Franky
Schaeffer when he turned his back on the faith and went on to write
scathing things about the Church and his parents. The enemy of our soul
is always looking for ways to get the proverbial foot in the door to
bring down a Christ centered legacy and both of these men were used by
him to do so.
It seems that at the center of each of these men, one of my generation
and the other more my daughter's age, is a buildup of anger that may
have resulted in an explosion heard throughout the Christian community
but in reality... it had been smoldering and building for a very long
time.
Do I still believe in living heroes? Absolutely! But as I wrote in a
previous blog post, we must never put our heroes on a pedestal for most
of them fall at some time in their life. Obviously, not to the point of
rejecting their faith but human beings rarely reach the end of their
years without making a dreadful error in judgment here and there. I so
often cringe when I think of something I did or said in past years. We need to give our former selves grace, understanding we have matured in the faith since then.
We admit our mistakes (aka: sin) to God and ask His forgiveness as we
also ask others to forgive, if that is needed. Then we brush ourselves
off, pick ourselves up (actually it is His strength that allows us to do
this), and continue the journey we were on for Him before we stumbled
and fell. For my friends... we all will stumble. We all will fail.
This is the lesson we can teach our children as we talk to them about
heroes. Real life heroes are not perfect. But those who are truly
brave are the people who keep going in spite of their hurts and
disappointments with life. Biographies are full of flawed people who did
great things without destroying their credibility.
Perhaps we need to think of the difference between hero and celebrity.
Just because someone is a super star and well known for anything, even
as a pastor or teacher, that does not make him a hero. Some are but not
everyone. Sometimes it is just good marketing.
I remember when I found out about the secret life of a well known
Christian artist and author. I adored his books on creativity. If he
had repented and changed his ways, even though he had taken a wrong
turn, his books would be on my bookshelves today. They still had good
advice but they only reminded me of his hypocrisy when I read them.
But my bookshelves do contain books by people who also made wrong
choices, those who made bad decisions but who did repent and used the
lessons they learned to eventually return to teach others how not to
make the same mistakes. That is the grace God offers the humble, the repentant.
I still believe in heroes and they do exist... not only in the past but
also today. Some of them are known to God, others are known to a few
people, and some are allowed to reach celebrity status. I am pretty
sure that is why the Bible warns those who teach to be careful for they
will especially be judged.
Their influence could affect many souls if
they left the faith. Perhaps this is a reminder for all of us to
remember that there is a difference between heroes and hero worship, heroes
and celebrity, and heroes who are regular people simply doing heroic
things.
In the meantime, I pray for the Harris family for while one is
transforming himself... as did Franky Schaeffer... into a superstar of
the disenfranchised former Christians, there are many in his family and
sphere of influence who are heartbroken in the fallout.
3 comments:
Thank you for your message!
I think that there needs to be repentance, in order for there to be forgiveness. We have all sinned and come short.
But I have no sympathy for those false prophets who knowingly sin and have no remorse...whether they be politicians or celebrities or mega church preachers.
It is heartbreaking. I agree we should never elevate people to pedestals. We are living with the reality that people turn away from truth, even live in sin many years, while 'preaching' a different message than their own life choices.
I remember when I was struggling in my teens with someone in my life who claimed Christ, yet didn't seem to live it. One day when God was drawing me, he said to me, "If no one else in the world ever walks with me, I want you to walk with me." He let me know with that word, that he is interested in each one of us, individually. I pray that those who have chosen to walk away from God, or in the case of people we know personally, have decided there is no God, that they will see the truth and repent.
I'm so sad about Ravi.
Thank you, Brenda, for your thoughtful post. I'm always glad to glean from your gentle, well-thought out posts on various subjects, including this one. Times like these gives us room to pause to consider our own hearts and to keep our focus on Jesus as the one we follow; even when others fail and fall, He remains the same yesterday, today, and forever.
Wishing you a beautiful week ahead.
Brenda L.
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