QUESTION: You
taught about unconditional love and respect, but how can I respect someone who
isn’t respectable? It seems to me that
respect is something you earn. How do
you respect a Charles Manson?
RESPONSE: It's important to distinguish between the
value of how one is acting and the value of the person. The way a person acts may be, in all
honestly, worthless. But does that mean
the person is worthless? No. That person, foolish and self centered as they
may be, is made in the image of God, with will and freedom and a moral center,
an immortal soul and nobility. These are gifts, you don’t earn them or work for
them, they are just the value that you carry because God made us in his image. A person is a magnificent creature, a thing
of awe and beauty - no matter what.
It’s due to this inherent worth, that in marriage we can
love an unlovable wife or respect a disrespectful husband. Because it is based on their worth as
children of God. It may help you to look
at it like this: I am not respecting
this man, so much as I respect the God who made him “fearfully and
wonderfully”. (Ps 139) He made ALL men this way and there’s not a
person you’ve locked eyes with who doesn’t carry the stamp of God, and therefore
also an inherent worth and incredible value – they matter.
So there is no time at which they become someone whom you
are “allowed to” or “ought to” disrespect.
They may have done disrespectful things and this happens – often! Those things are not to be honored, or
respected, nor tolerated indefinitely (see my example below).
Of course, we should be long on tolerance for
disrespectful or unlovable behavior, since everyone carries the disease of sin
as equally as we carry the Image of God.
And that's another reason why just don’t ever have that moment where God says, “OK, now treat
this person disrespectfully, because they deserve it!”
So then we shouldn’t say that love or respect should be
earned. What we are probably trying to say is that is it is foolish to trust someone who has been untrustworthy. Yes, it is foolish to trust an untrustworthy person, since they will put you at risk by their established bad behavior. But even with trust (as opposed to love and respect) to rehabilitate a repeat offender, trust cannot always be earned, it must sometimes be given as a gift.
So the Christians gives love and respect and sometimes yes, even trust,
unconditionally.
What a terrible world
we would live in if I only got the respect or love that my actions at any
moment deserved. Certainly there would
be times that I would get praise and honor and reward, but then, I’d have just
as many times as I’d reap shame and dishonor.
And then what kind of person would I turn into? A miserable one either way, because I’d be
proud and judgmental when I receive honor or I’d be shameful, guilty and
fearful when I fall out of favor. This
is the yo-yo world of just desserts, of Karma, for every action an equal and opposite
reaction, and it’s a world that God’s grace in Christ was meant to save us
from.
But what should we do when disrespectful or unloving behavior happens, and affects us deeply? Here’s
what we do: Don’t condone or
ignore. Also don’t treat this as a
justified opportunity to become sarcastic, critical, shaming, withdrawing or
vengeful – because “they deserve it”. We
have no right, because God commands respect and love unconditionally. Instead, we approach such bad behavior with
the truth in love. We truthfully point
it out (after proper self examination Matt 7:3-5) and we do so in love (Ephesians 4:15), always ready
to forgive (Matt 18:22). The language we use, is
respectful, and the treatment is loving, because the person who has failed us
is still valuable to God. We respect God
by respecting them, yes, even a murderer.
Now, if there’s no repentance, no honorable acknowledgement,
no confession, no humility, we are not called by God to continue to expose
ourselves to reckless and sinful behavior indefinitely. This is where we say, "trust must be earned." Paul tells Christians to “warn a divisive man
once, warn him a second time, after that have nothing to do with him.” Titus
3:10. The respect is given in the
gracious confrontation and love is shown in the repeated warnings (we don't just dump people after one offense).
But we may have to protect ourselves if the man of dishonorable
character and actions won’t have the respect for himself (or God) to see
correction as a gift and return to love and relationship. So even as we may distance ourselves from
disrespectful and dishonorable behavior, even if we cannot trust them, we are continuing to honor and respect
that person! How? By giving them the honor of correction. And the honor of honesty. And finally we give them the honor of a
choice, the honor of freedom to do as they please.
Great example I saw recently: A man's wife left him for another man. It was ugly, unloving behavior. But she’s valuable to God, made in his Image,
and my friend treated her like that, even after she ran off. It was a struggle for him, of course, but this showed me it’s possible to honor a dishonorable person. How did he do it? He didn’t vengefully dump her. He patiently sought good counsel and invited
her into reconciliation talks. He didn’t
flame her out or seek immediate divorce.
When she showed some signs of life, he welcomed them. He treated her nicely in their
post-separation conversations, even when she was clearly still shacking
up. He didn’t maliciously seek to keep
her from her son, or her stuff still lying around their house, or even half of
his retirement! All that is loving and
respectful behavior towards someone engaged directly in unloving and disrespectful
behavior.
At the same time, this did not go on indefinitely. After 2 years of total abandonment, as a sort
of a last act of cowardice, the cheating wife didn’t even have the decency to
make official what she had clearly, already done, which is divorce her husband. Too lazy?
Too cheap to hire the lawyer? Who
knows. So my friend finally made
official what only his wife made possible – the end of their marriage. His action showed that we don’t simply ignore
disrespectful behavior, nor do we fail to protect ourselves from it when the time
comes. We just believe that we don’t
treat people at every moment as their actions deserve, and in this way my friend imitated God most beautifully. (Psalm 103:10)
And thank God for that, because, as one teacher once said,
“great marriages are populated by two great forgivers.”
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