One way of defining shame is as a perpetual negative self-image.
One way of defining shame is as a perpetual negative
self-image. That is, it goes deeper than
simply feeling guilty because you happened to do something stupid. Shame is feeling that, in fact, you are stupid!
As a result, if you feel shame, you are often distrustful of
others. No matter how many people
compliment you, or sing your praises, you don’t really trust what they are
saying, because, deep down, you don’t believe it about yourself. Thus, you tend to be guarded around others,
and wary of letting anyone get too close, because you are convinced that if the
other person really knew what you were like, they would go running off into the
night.
Shaming people was a very common practice in first century
Palestine. However, from what I read in
the gospels, Jesus never participated in it.
He called the Pharisees on the carpet for acting hypocritically, and he
became incensed when he saw how folks had turned the Holy Temple of God into a
flea market. But he never shamed people!
Remember that scene when a group of religious leaders
brought a woman to Jesus, demanding that she be stoned to death for committing
adultery. “All right,” Jesus agreed,
“but let’s do this in an organized fashion.
Why don’t we form a single file line, beginning with those who have
never sinned themselves?”
After the crowd slipped silently away, Jesus turned to the
woman and said, in effect, “They have all left.
No one remains to condemn you, and neither do I. But don’t do this again, because you are
worth far more than this.”
Notice that Jesus does not condone what the woman did. He is not saying, “Adultery doesn’t
matter.” What he is saying is, “You
matter! You have been created in God’s
own image and you should live accordingly.”
Too often Christianity is portrayed as being intolerant and
judgmental. But as Christians, our
calling has never been to condemn people.
Do we live in a world where people sometimes do shameful things? Of course.
Should the church be speaking out against those things? Absolutely. However, we do not live in a world filled with
shameful people. We are all children of
God; and the best way to reach people—indeed, the way to guide them back to the
paths of righteousness—is by helping them feel loved, not
by making them feel ashamed!