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Thursday, July 17, 2008

#349. Shining up our scars.

I don't remember what it felt like when the steel bar tore through my face. The moment it happened my body was flooded with adrenaline and I got drunk on survival. I hit the ground running, streaming blood from a wound that would require plastic surgery and hope. But I probably need to back this story up.

In the seventh grade I was in love with my Santa Cruz Rob Roskopp skateboard. It was my whole world and one day I thought it would be fun to jump off a concrete loading dock at a factory. The plan was to grab what I thought was a stable bar and swing from it while my skateboard sailed off the four foot drop.

Unfortunately, they load and unload things on loading docks and the bar was unattached for convenience. When I grabbed it, the bar fell immediately, catching me squarely on a nose that would never be the same. I could have been killed, the force of the blow sandwiching my head between the loading dock and the steel bar. The doctor said I could have lost all my teeth but they were anchored in from the braces I had received a week earlier.

So for a few crazy seconds I ran through the streets, my face in my hands, my blood on my arms, while cars streamed around me angrily reacting to what they thought was a teenage prank. Finally, a red pickup truck stopped and gave me a ride.

Some of that day has begun to blur, the edges becoming fuzzy under the weight of so many years. But one thing I will never forget is the look on the driver's face when I gave him my assessment of the accident. I clearly remember his expression, when I turned to him and said, "I hope it's just a bloody nose."

That was foolish. It ended up taking dozens of stitches to keep my nose on my face. My cheekbones were fractured. Years later I had to get plastic surgery to stay pretty. It was a serious accident.

And yet I told a stranger it was perhaps a bloody nose.

I think we do is exactly the same thing sometimes in Christianity. We take the blood and gore of our lives, the sin and the failure and the hurt and the horror and we tell everyone that everything is OK. We use the Christian F word, "fine," and keep moving on with our lives. We hide the bad stuff and highlight the good stuff until no one can tell that things aren't perfect. We shine up our scars until they look good enough to not be considered scars.

I don't know where this temptation comes from. It might start the minute you become a Christian. It can be such a powerful, life transforming experience. Things feel different, you feel alive sometimes like you've never felt before. And when the gross creeps back in, when the high of a retreat wears off, when reality comes back and we realize we can't be perfect for the rest of our lives, we get afraid. We fear that our initial moment of faith was fake or not good enough. It didn't "count." Christianity "didn't take" to us. And so instead of telling people we know that things are bad, that we are still doing things that are opposite of what God calls us to, we sweep it under the rug. We take our first hit of the very dangerous drug called "Hide."

Or maybe it happens when we go to a small group and people confess "safe sins." Those deserve their own post but this is when someone shares, "I have to confess something. I have not been reading the Bible enough or praying enough or nursing enough baby birds back to health. I'm so ashamed." Meanwhile, you're thinking about that time you had sex before you got married or why in the depths of your heart you hate your parents and suddenly those things feel really bad. For although reading the Bible more and praying more are to be highly desired, when they're presented in the form of a confession they often silence the real in the room.

I intended to make this chapter 3 of the book but felt like more people than the mailing list might want to read it. And there are some posts that are heavier to carry than others. I did not run in from mowing the lawn when I thought about writing about side hugs for instance. But last night, while out in the yard trying to think of a Bible verse to illustrate this post with, I felt like God threw a not tiny grenade in my head.

Even though I wanted to wow you with lots of Bible verses, the idea I came in, covered with grass and dirt, to scribble down was a lot simpler than that. And it's really just a question.

Have you ever thought about what type of party the father threw the prodigal son in Luke 15?

I didn't until last night. I didn't see the implications for you and me until I thought about shining my own scars. But you know what the prodigal son gets when he comes home? A welcome home party. The father doesn't throw him a "you never left" party. He doesn't call the servants excitedly to get things ready for the "everything is fine" party. Not at all, he makes a point of saying, "Let's have a feast and celebrate. For this son of mine was dead and is alive again; he was lost and is found.'

He says that twice. Once to the servants and once to the older brother. The father got it. The reason to celebrate was not that things were perfect. It was that the son had been lost, voluntarily so, and was now found. He had been willingly dead by leaving but was now alive. The fact that he had blown it, the fact that the son had broken his life was not a source of shame, it was a cause to celebrate. The gross of being lost and dead was part of what made the reality of being found and alive so bright and true and undeniable.

This is longer than I intended and I don't want it to sound like I'm saying, "you're smart enough, you're good enough and dog gone it, people like you." The truth is that I don't know your story. And I'm not telling you to get into a "look how bad my past was" contest with other people. I don't know what kind of baggage you're carrying right now or what kind of scars you're shining. I don't know if you hate God or left the church years ago for some really valid reasons. Maybe you're supposed to send this to a friend. I don't know your story, but I do know mine. I used to write church prayer devotionals during the day and take ecstasy at night. I mortgaged years of my life to things that wrecked me. I've been a sucky husband, a bad dad and an embarrassing son. But you know what? God loves me.

Stop shining your scars. It's OK for them to be painful. The things you did and the things you had done to you hurt and admitting that out loud doesn't add more failure to your heart. If anything, it creates a lighthouse of sickness in you for the doctor that came looking for the sick, Jesus.

We're having a welcome home party. And it won't be nearly as fun or as sarcastic or as interesting without you.

79 comments:

  1. Thankyou for this post, only yesterday a good friend told me not to say that everything is fine when it clearly isn't-because it is ok for things to not be fine sometimes. I find it really hard to present myself to other Christians because I think they expect me to be perfect, but God knows my inmost flaws, and loves me anyway. Something I must try to remember!

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  2. Great post, Jon.

    The other thing about getting our personal darkness into the light is that we are no longer enslaved by it. We are all addicted to some kind of sin. Worry, greed, gossipping, lust, controlled substances, selfish control, laziness.... But, they only have power over us, when we allow pride to keep them a secret. Those secrets make hypocrits and Pharisees of godly and wonderful people. So, let the light shine in the darkness.

    See you at the party!

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  3. I always read {never comment} for the "funny" and really enjoyed your "funny" version of true trials in Christianity this morning. Thanks for a great morning devotional.
    And skateboarding at a loading dock with new braces? Sounds like a great PBS after school special-

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  4. Powerful and well written. I love the funny/sarcastic things you write, but I really appreciate these more serious posts as well. I don't know anyone (Christian or not)that wouldn't be able to identify with this.

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  5. That's great. And shining the scars makes them stick around longer. As if investing all that time making them look acceptable somehow drives us to hold them a little closer and cherish them a little more. Because I'm not weighed down nearly enough with my present day sins, I'm gonna really want to cling to the junk from my past as well. sure.

    I spoke once at my church on a past struggle with Postpartum Depression and I was amazed at the number of people who came up to me afterward and said "I've never told anyone this but..." and then would express the pain and hurt from their own lives. When we are real about the icky, it frees up others to be real too. How can we help each other and pray for one another if we don't know each others needs? Thanks for reminding us to do that.

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  6. Thank you for this post. I needed it.

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  7. You know...the beginning of your story proves a statistic. They say that each boy a woman has (I have 5) takes 18 months off of her life expectancy. These are the sort of things boys do that literally kill their moms. lol

    Seriously though, I so appreciate your honesty here. I'm reading Beth Moore's "Why Godly People do Ungodly Things" and she has a chapter devoted to had. I'm reading this book because I was not "fine" and you are so spot on with the covering of our scars. The crazy thing is when we show people just how messed up we are amazing things happen. I think you are an example of a phrase Beth uses. She says, "Healed Hads heal Hads." Thanks for using your own scars to help others.

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  8. I love this because I love to be the one who shakes it all up in Bible study with some horror story of my past. I love it when all the ladies start talking about how they made a mistake today by yelling at their 4 year old. Well, I can dish it, man, and when I do you can watch the whole room either shrink back in judgmental horror or come alive with authenticity. It's awesome! Great post, Jon. I write about my scars on my site regularly. I might be all out of the big shockers: affairs with married men, herpes, drug use, vanity... etc. It's really awesome and liberating to be so dang honest. Healing.

    Heidi Reed

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  9. I find that the 'before' stories (before they became a Christian) are usually quite graphic, sad, horrific even. I don't have such a story. I used to feel left out, kinda, because I wasn't a drug addict, I wasn't abused, I was never poor, there was no drama, my life would not make a good movie.

    And then you get to the transition and everyone learns how good God is and His forgiveness and then...?

    It seems from that point everyone is competeing for the best of these 'God is good' stories. It's like if you don't have one of those then it follows that He isn't. (Or you're not). There I feel left out again. Because the struggles and failures I have to deal with as a Christian is so much worse to me than anything before.

    But CS Lewis says it best:

    "When a man is getting better he understands more and more clearly the evil that is still left in him."

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  10. I'm guessing you've read "The Return of the Prodigal Son" by Henri J.M. Nouwen. If for some crazy reason you haven't (especially since you've said yourself that the Prodigal Son story is one of your faves), I highly recommend it.

    Personally, I prefer to call it "The Story of the Loving Father," because the main point of the story is about the Dad, not either of the sons. It's not about us or what we do, whether staying home or running away. It's all about God's wild, reckless love for us that accepts us no matter which choice we made. As soon as we can get that truth through our heads and into our hearts, then we can realize the beauty of our scars, for they are the very evidence of Christ's redemption in our lives.

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  11. Thank you Jon.
    So many times my scars have kept me from being involved. How can I sit in a room full of ladies from church when their biggest sins are - I raised my voice to my child or I didn't pray enough. I always felt ugly and like a beast compared to them.
    Someone once reminded me that by thinking that I couldn't belong I was also thinking that GOd wasn't big enough to forgive me. That was just more conviction. It wasn't that he isn't big enough. I know he is awesome, but Lord, why would he want to? Really?
    This was/is an awesome post and it is working in my brain.
    Thanks again!

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  12. Scars.....don't be afraid of them, God usually uses them to further us......but they are SCARS, not scabs......don't keep picking at them , opening them up and reveling in the pain......SCARS show God's healing.....

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  13. Jon - awesome post. When we attempt to shine up our scars, we often encourage others to do the same and may leave them with a sense that their big, ugly sin is too much for God (or other Christians) to handle. I spent many years far away from God and I have my share of scars. I don't unload them all haphazardly, but if someone (especially a young woman) is struggling with overcoming a particular sin, chances are I've been there too and letting someone know that often gives them permission to be open and honest without fear of being judged.

    I love candidchatter's comments. We need more gals like her to shake up women's bible study groups!

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  14. Great post!

    Check out the link on Ken Murphy's Blog http://www.kenmurphy.org/ to an article from ESPN about MLB player Josh Hamilton. Fantastic article and it fits your theme today.

    Being real from whatever "platform" God gives us is our responsibility. It doesn't matter if it's a blog, an auditorium, a classroom, centerfield or a cubicle, our story is to be shared with others. Someone needs to hear it.

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  15. i heard someone talking recently about 'beauty in the scars'. we christians need not make everything pretty, but we should strive for beauty. after Jesus' resurrection, he was made in this entirely new, perfect body, but in that beautiful representation of new creation and power over death, he still had the scars he could show thomas.

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  16. The only scars we need to take stock in are the ones Jesus still wears.

    I know that sounds ultra churchy, but the point is still the same.

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  17. Thanks PJ – The momentarily sobering stuff you dish, eventually always takes me back to the party. Someone responding to your post on drinking commented that Jesus’ first miracle was to keep the party going (in reference to water into wine at the wedding). I’m glad you’re following in those footsteps. In my brief foray into the Baptist world, I’ve found telling folks I enjoy a nightly sip of hooch to be less likely to induce painful attacks than to admit to having doubts. I’d like to blame them for teaching me this but, I have to come to grips with my own aspirations of being honest. I wonder how they’d react if they knew I’m prone to the occasional, full-blown nihilistic jag? I’ve found the serious, as well as the sarcastic posts, helpful in combating doubts, since they both offer fresh ways to contemplate God. Thanks for the encouragement to be real and the reminder to celebrate God’s grace!

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  18. Totally awesome blog - and so stinking spot on!

    Where can I get a copy of Chapters 1 and 2 of this book you're writing? Am I too late?

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  19. I actually just finished writing a sermon about the prodigal son... about how he stuffed up... and yet his father ran towards him... when he tried to apologise and say i'm not worthy to be your son i'll work for yu, the father didn't listen cos he was too busy planning the party...

    powerful stuff...

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  20. Thank you. I needed this today.

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  21. Great post.
    Its good to remember about the whole not shining the scars bit - me personally having been through a load of bad stuff, I know how easy it is to say 'Oh I was ill but then PRAISE THE LORD GOD MADE ME BETTER' and have everyone applaud. But its a lot harder to just say that actually, i'm tired of hiding my scars, can I talk about it? Because Christians are so... well, Christian. To a lot of Christians, nobody has ever approached certain subjects. All people preach on is bread and fishes and loving your neighbour, nobody preaches on sex and drugs and killing yourself. So nobody talks about stuff because nobody's talked about it (because nobody's talked about it). Hmm, somebody needs to break the chain here.
    Then again, some people just try and hide the scars they have, without realising how obvious they are. They walk around telling you 'I'm FINE' whilst being seriously broken inside. Its kind of like how people wear hats to hide the fact that they are bald, just pointing to the obvious.
    Anyway, I dunno why I wrote such a long comment, sorry, probably just getting my thoughts straight.
    Anyway, good post.

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  22. "For although reading the Bible more and praying more are to be highly desired, when they're presented in the form of a confession they often silence the real in the room."

    Thanks for this.

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  23. Thanks...I too have a painful, embarassing, grace-filled prodigal son story...and sometimes I can tell it freaks out church folks when i get honest about my own failure...it's like the room gets akward and uncomfortable...lets all get more honest...show your scars...when failure meets grace...broken becomes beautiful.

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  24. I've just recently discovered this site and I enjoy reading it every day.

    I’ve been married 7 years, and it’s only been in the past 2 years that my husband and I have realized that we cannot pretend to be perfect. We were two people who both couldn’t stand to show weaknesses and struggles, even to (maybe especially to) each other. So we kept those things in darkness and they separated us from each other and really damaged our relationship. Then, after 5 years, God brought us to a point of refreshing honesty. I think until then, I never knew real, complete honesty was really possible. I had thought, how could I ever tell “this” about me to anyone? And my husband felt the same. Yet when God gave us both the strength to do that, we realized what misery we’d been living in, separate from each other, and how our problems had been allowed to fester and grow while they were kept in the dark. Now, we understand and try to remember every day that we are not perfect, that we can’t be perfect, and weren’t meant to be. That God wants us to rely on him for strength every day. We know that as long as we are transparent and bring everything out into the light, before God and before each other, sin loses that grip on us. It can be dissolved in God’s light instead of growing stronger when we try to hide it. And it’s not a one-time fix but a daily decision we have to make. We will struggle. We will be tempted. Sometimes we will mess up. But none of that can hurt us if we bring it to light every day and ask God to help us with it, and to help each other with it. I am so grateful for the people out there who have been through tough things and/or who acknowledge that they struggle with tough things. They are an encouragement and they show others that they are not alone in what they try to hide about themselves; that other people out there have been through that, too. When one person has the bravery and honesty to speak up and be real, it can help so many people realize they can be free and live in truth instead of in bondage to secret struggles.

    Thanks for your posts, you are an encouragemnet to me, and plus some of your entries make me laugh out loud.

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  25. Have you ever thought of writing a blog about people who have past sins/scars that are great ministry fodder - for others?

    You know the type of person I am talking about. If they know your past sins - through a testimony, conversation, or a class you may have led - you become the "go to" person for that sin category.

    I was homeless at 10yrs of age - yeah it sucked - I was then abused till I was 16yrs old - yeah that sucked - became homeless again at 16yrs old - yeah that sucked - became addicted to porn - that still sucks.

    With the above statements I have given someone a "go to" sin minister. You know the one I am talking about. If they hear of a brother in the church who is struggling with pornography your number gets passed along because you are the "go to" sin minister guy.

    Are you gay? Here is the number for the "go to" guy for that. He understands what you are talking about. He was abused too.

    Even better is the wife's "go to" calling. This actually brings a good deal of laughter in our household...:-) My wife's go to ministry is "a wife is upset because she caught my husband surfing porn" ministry. If there is a wife who feels betrayed by her husband because of sexual sin (and I agree she has been betrayed) then call this woman...the laughter comes when my wife and I add the words "because her husband sucks and is a rotten sinner too" to the sentence.

    I would love to see a blog listing the "go to" ministries in the church. It would be good fun!

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  26. Thank you for this post. Well said!

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  27. This is quite possibly the best post I've ever read of yours, Jon. I hardly know how you have time to read all these comments, but if you get to this one, rest assured that the Holy Spirit kicked butt through you this morning and I appreciate ya, man.

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  28. Jon, this blessed me today (I sound like an old woman when I say that). I live with a Prodigal and let me just say, he is amazing. I would have to say I'm also a Prodigal but I hid my sins very well. Husband, not so much (when you're addicted to acid it's pretty hard to hide it)--so he was every sense of the parable. We're just two broken people who "get" each other because we went through such difficult times in our lives. But we're awesome together and he is such a blessing. When a Prodigal returns, I believe that all of heaven rejoices and indeed, there is a rockin' party!

    I do, however, identify with Olivia because all of my big struggles and ugly, gross sins were after I became a Christian (same for my husband--we were both saved at around 7 years of age). I don't have a Damascus Road conversion experience...you know what, that's okay! I did some stupid things as a young adult but praise God that the Holy Spirit kept on convicting me until I returned to him! And what a sweet reunion it was...

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  29. This was simply an amazing post. I think too often, as I've stated in my own writings, that we get too caught up in our perfect Sunday clothes and our Denteen-gleam smiles to admit to others that we love God, but sometimes we're just messed up people. I think we can get caught up in that "everything's ok" mentality to the point that we even blind ourselves to what's really going on. Brutal honesty with oneself means acknowledging those "messy parts" of our lives that God wants to fix, not hiding it away in a hope that by not acknowledging it, it somehow won't exist.

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  30. Wonderful post -- nothing beats authenticity, i.e., the truth, for bringing life to yourself and everyone around you. Be not afraid.

    But also the quote from Stuart Saves His Family -- awesome. A movie my husband and I watch at least twice every year.

    "It's easier to put on slippers than to carpet the entire world."

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  31. This post was beautiful. It spoke to me in a way none of your others have. It was real. Thank you.

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  32. Awesome post, just wanted to say thank you. Keep up the good work.

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  33. Great post. I am free (thank Jesus) from that I have to be perfect mindset. It took a lot of prayer and the power of Christ to get there. I've now come to the place where it's OK to talk about what I'm struggling with (ya know the stuff that's hard to talk about). In fact, it is freeing. It's only when we get real with one another that we see the awesome power and redemption of the cross. And that we are all messed up sinners saved by the grace and love of our Savior.

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  34. Challenging post Jon.



    I find that when I shine up my scars its because I don't want to burden people with my struggles or failings. I don't have an intimate relationship with them so I am not ready to load that on to them. They have not shown me that they truely care.



    I usually save my scars for those I have intimate relationships with - my accountability group or close friends.

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  35. @katdish: Thanks! :)

    Heidi Reed

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  36. When older brothers (who now own the farm) come into the party, maybe prodigals will feel free to talk about the scars.

    I learned that the hard way, but was also blessed to see what getting real can do, and how liberating it can be, not for me, but for so many who desperately want to know that somebody can know all there is to know about them, but love them anyway.

    Great post.

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  37. Hey Jon, I agree with you. However, part of the problem with this is that when you do open up, it seem more time then not, that it is used against you later. I confessed to a Pastor some thing I was dealing with at the time, and two years later, and a different Church the Issue was brought up in a interview for a ministry position. It seems that when my new Pastor called my old Pastor for the reference the old Pastor told him. So I think we shine our scars because of fear. We simply can not trust someone with those scars. Maybe this is a post in it self. But I did what I needed to do confess it, and then move on, and it just seems to me that the Church does not allow for you to move on. I'm a different person now then I was two years ago, and I will be a different person in a month or a day because I'm growing more Christ like everyday, but the church seems to think that people do not grow. Just my thought.

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  38. Between your post and my required Bible study reading, I got a true insight into God's character this morning. Very cool. It was intensely multi-faceted in a way it couldn't have been without the other. That truth, Reader's Digest style, is that sometimes we have to show those scars so we can share how big God is.

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  39. The Christian 'F word' can be so frustrating. If you are going through a difficult time (stress at work, dealing with a severely ill family member, etc..) using the 'F word' only serves to deprive yourself of love, prayer, and support!

    On the flip side, I was once told by a Christian so-worker that 'No one wants to hear you complain.' I had had a bad weekend, and a friend at church asked me why I was upset. Co-worker overheard our conversation and later accused me of complaining and being ungrateful. For a while after that incident I freely used the 'F word'.

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  40. This post was like an arrow straight to my heart...thanks.

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  41. than you, jon. you have to know the holy spirit is all over this!

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  42. I love the post and I really love the fact that candidchatter and Olivia posted back to back. I really appreciate the dichotomy of their experiences. Thank you for sharing and giving me lots of stuff to think about.

    Part of that thought process I think might be helpful to the discussion. I have grown up in church as a PK and now get paid to do the youth ministry thing. I wanted to add that from personal experience sometimes we share really shallow unreal sins which silences all the real because we don't have scars to share. To follow the metaphor, we don't have scars because we are hemorrhaging and haven't allowed any kind of healing. Some wounds we are afflicted with or have inflicted on ourselves can only be healed from Jesus working through folks in this world.

    I agree Olivia about recognizing that some people are just competing to see who can have the best scar story. That silences the real just as quickly as the opposite.

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  43. First, let me just say, it's amazing that any of us survive childhood!

    Now, thanks so much for this post. It's one of your better ones (and they're all good) and it really made me think. I ended up following a link on one of the comments and found someone who was writing about your site. I left a long comment there about this subject and I'll try not to here.

    It's such a huge thing to think about that I can't even wrap my brain around it right now. I definately have some scars (most because of what has happened to me, not because of what I did), but it's so much easier to be "fine" instead of being the victim all the time. I feel like I have to be a super happy Christian. I'm going to have to ponder this more...

    Thank you for allowing God to use you.

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  44. wow. this was truly a beautiful post.

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  45. Everything is so true. I am in the process of scarring I think. I'm not convinced that God doesn't like scars, or at least use them most powerfully to help others. I know He is trying to teach me something! Sometimes lengthy sojourns through valleys that are ordained by God will leave scars. I am not hearing words from God right now. I'm not sure what to do, but I'm listening and trying to remind myself daily that God is trustworthy. He hasn't failed anyone, and He won't fail me.

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  46. I love this post.

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  47. Jon,

    I've reading your blog for a few months now. Your posts have made me laugh and think deeply. This one really spoke to me. Thank you for it. Thank you for reminding me that my flaws don't have to be covered up and that the party won't be complete without me.

    Thank you!

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  48. Hey Jon,

    Want to move to socal and start a church with me?

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  49. I'm internet-hugging you right now. Thanks.

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  50. Man, you rock my world, in a total Christian side hug kinda way. As a girl with a lot of shiny scars, and as someone who did not become a Christian until my mid 20s, I do not find many church people that speak my language. You do. Thanks. For being real with God, with us and for creating a platform where we can be real back. Grace & Peace, daphne

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  51. Party on, Jon! The prodigal has returned home.

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  52. what "donna" said about the difference between scars and scabs was amazing.
    part of having faith in God's healing power is knowing that if it's a scar, it is in the past...it might be sensitive, and it probably hurt like hell for a long time, but you have lived beyond it, and God has given you new skin.
    The event changed the way you live, and you will always have a reminder...but not an open wound anymore. Let it be healed. Way easier said than done...but important none the less.

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  53. ou have just profoundly affected my day, and hopefully my life.

    Just this morning in the shower I was thinking about all the stupid stuff I have done in my past, and am still doing in my present. The fact is that I have never shared my raw scars with anyone. I constantly want others to see the prolific pain of my past while I keep putting the best light possible on it. Even so far as lying about most of it.

    Thanks Jon.

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  54. I know this isn't exactly on topic, but it's relevant to the idea of not saying that everything is "fine." I have only told a couple of my Christian friends that for the past few years, I have been dating a transsexual person. He and I are best friends, as well, and he said he would try to become happy with himself without having a sex change, so we can be together. But in the past year, I have felt less and less optimistic that this will happen. I know that God has the power to miraculously heal anything, even transsexualism, but I don't think my friend, who is a Christian, has much confidence that God really cares about this area of his life. Apparently he prayed about it for years, and never got direction from God, and gave up. And it hurts me to think that he and I might not be together in the future. I want to put all my hope in God, and be confident, but it's really hard right now.

    It also doesn't help that although I'm free to date other people, none of the guys I know have shown interest in dating me. I don't know why. They seem to like me well enough as a person.

    If you read this, and don't mind, I'd appreciate a little prayer sent up for me and my friend.

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  55. Thanks so much. I REALLY needed that.

    I'll admit I do use the Christian F word... sometimes I just feel like I'm burdening people with my problems... even people I am close to. And sometimes I feel like when people say "How are you?" they don't really mean it, they're just being polite.

    Bur maybe it's time I start being real... I don't know. But it would be much easier if people admit their true sins, not these "safe sins" so others around them wouldn't feel as vulnerable and would open up more. This is something I am definately struggling with, shining up my own scars. Anyway, I agree with you 110%.

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  56. This is rad, bad dad.

    - sucky husband/bad dad #2.

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  57. When I don't explain just how gory my situation is, I choose not to because I don't want to focus on it or give Satan the privilege of hearing me acknowledge how out of order things are. I'd rather think about the fact that no matter how bad it may seem, God is working it out.

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  58. wow

    sweet post

    i actually took notes

    thank you

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  59. "Stop shining your scars. It's OK for them to be painful."

    Wow. reading that is a breathe of fresh air. I love this post.

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  60. Oh snap!
    Why don't you just hit my spirit in the face with a steel pole.

    Thanks for the post

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  61. ..."part of having faith in God's healing power is knowing that if it's a scar, it is in the past...it might be sensitive, and it probably hurt like hell for a long time, but you have lived beyond it, and God has given you new skin.
    The event changed the way you live, and you will always have a reminder...but not an open wound anymore. Let it be healed. Way easier said than done...but important none the less."...

    great response anonymous to a great post Jon.

    I heard Steve Saint speak recently about scars. He said that people are looking for someone who has scars where they have wounds. I have found that to be true. Where we have been healed and restored by Christ, we bear witness to His power. Our scars are signs of hope for those who are still bleeding.

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  62. Thanks for another real post. =) The post and comments have been super insightful -- I never thought about it, but I'm a person that tends to tell my testimony story as "Before I became a Christian my life was filled with [insert traumatic experiences], but then when I found Jesus I've been SO HAPPY." Its true, because I honestly hadn't been so happy and joyful before. But I forgot the real struggles that came with being a Christian, too. Before, I couldn't stop thinking about the bad stuff in my life -- now, its so easy for me to forget about the bad stuff...and forget to deal with it until it blows up.

    You guys rock, and deserve exactly 2 side hugs each. =)

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  63. I recently discovered your blog and I have been going back and reading a lot of old posts. I have to say, I really enjoy your writing. Especially at the point I am in my life with Christianity.
    I'm about to start seminary in August in a conservative little town and I don't know how I feel about that. Not that I'm some big liberal person...but I dunno, I guess I just don't know what to expect.

    It's just refreshing reading a blog like this.

    And as for this particular post, thank you so much! Because I know how that feels. I remember going to one of those Passion conferences when I was a sophomore in college and we broke up into small groups. I think we were supposed t share something to show how broken we were or something, I don't remember specifically. And I remember as we went around the circle everyone saying stuff about not reading the Bible enough, etc. And when it came to my turn I just couldn't take it anymore and confessed that I had lost my virginity to my ex-boyfriend. It was the first time I had said it out loud...and to a bunch of strangers. Awkward!
    The point is, I think I learned then that we need to just be real with each other. It can be difficult...because people WILL gossip...but at least I can tell them my story instead of people wondering and making up their own.

    Anyway...thanks for this post. I think sometimes I forget that we need to just open up with our Christian family and friends and let them now that, hey, I'm not doing so hot.

    Hmmm...perhaps you've given me inspiration for my own blog. ;-)

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  64. AMEN!!!
    I am linking to this post on my blog. It fits perfectly with a post I am writing tonight.

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  65. Thanks. I am learning how not to say I'm fine. I'm not. Not by a long shot. But..I am whole & the scars are part of that. Thank you for listening to the Holy Spirit. We all appreciate your willing ear.

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  66. Ah, the "F" word. I'm all too familiar with that one. I'm the daughter of divorced ministers, one in youth ministry, the other in music ministry. My life for a very long time was just "fine, thanks!" That was before everything exploded. Everyone else thought my life was perfect, and I thought so too. Only when I realized that it wasn't, that was when I realized that Christians are just as screwed up as everyone else. I'm not afraid to be myself anymore, to show people that I am not perfect and neither is my good, Christian family. Sometimes though, I feel like I am slipping into the, "It's fine, I'm fine, We're all fine" way again. Thanks for the post, great job.

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  67. wow. cool post.. but long... and i'm lazy! ahhh

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  68. Referencing this post and all the tattoo chatter: make sure you check out the youtube videos on Josh Hamilton--Texas Rangers--just set HR record at homerun derby--he is beautifully tattooed and talks openly about his trip back from addiction and God's redemption in a CBN interview.

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  69. Wow - 69 comments - you've touched a nerve here, haven't you? Imagine that. :)

    I've definitely been silenced by "safe confessions", but I've also opted for the "safe confession" rather than the real one, too, so I guess I've silenced another person. Too bad.

    But on the other hand, I've seen some people confess some stuff that probably should have been done in private or with someone who could really help them work through it. I call it "streaking". You know, where someone bears so much, probably too much, that it makes you wonder what's behind that they need to "bear all"? Sometimes people are more interested in the "bearing" than confession, if you know what I mean. I've done that, too.

    Anyway - good things to think about.

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  70. Great post. I love the funny interspersed with the profound. And I love the SNL reference. Well done.

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  71. Thank you so much for this post. This is right where I am at in life. I have been weighed down by so many hurts and issues that I have just not wanted to deal with, so I haven't. As a result, I've just been walking around broken and not stopping to let God heal me and free me. I have lied the word "fine" so many times in my life. My friend asks me "what's wrong?" and the first words out of my mouth, (it really is just an automatic answer now, it's kinda scary) is "I don't know" so I can avoid a response. I am grateful that she sees through this, and always follows up with, "don't lie to me, let's hear it." So on occasion, I let out the hurt, and I let someone else in for a moment. What she keeps telling me and what I really know is that I need to open myself up completely- deal with the hurt, which I know will suck to go through, which is why I haven't done it yet.
    I've been thinking about a perfect line that fits me from the Relient K song "Who I am Hates Who I've Been" for the past couple days. It goes "I don't want you to know where I am, because then you'll see my heart in the saddest state it's ever been. This is no place to try and live my life." It's so true and I've finally decided to do something about it. The second I can muster enough courage, I am going to call a Christian counselor and start dealing with my issues.
    Thank you for this awesome post and just being another positive reinforcer in my life. Sometimes I read these posts I feel like God is nudging me to pay extra attention to the message. ^-^
    Btw, this post also reminds me of the song "Stained Glass Massquerade" by Casting Crowns. I dig music a lot cuz its a way to get out the emotions that I myself can't seem to put into words.

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  72. What an incredible post! Thank you so much for honestly sharing that.

    I know I have not been honest about my scars in the past because of the fear of judgment. I feel that I'm the only one who struggles with certain things.

    Many times I feel like I can't be honest or that I can't be myself around other Christians because I don't fit into the Christian stereotype as well!

    I just have to say it again! What a great post!

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  73. I can't believe this... I was going to say I wish I had read this or know about this or been shown this a couple of years ago, but then I wouldn't be where I am now.
    I answered "fine" to the question "How are you?" way too many times with my preacher's wife... and on a mission trip about a year and a half into our friendship she let me know that I can't be fine all the time, she isn't fine all the time, and things would be much better if everyone had someone to "do life with," as my youth director used to say... Since then, I've stopped being "fine" and started telling the truth.
    Great post... and thanks for the reminder.

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  74. i starred this post in reader.
    thank you.

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  75. You know what really pisses me off about scars? The fact that years later I still feel ashamed and angry and unloved because of the things that caused the scars to begin with.
    That "pray about it" mantra that some Christians like to throw out there like a magic pill for people - doesn't work. That im either resistant to being changed by God into a new person, or Im totally missing the point.
    That the bad things that happened to me or that I did - still control so many aspects of my life and of my "self".
    That Im too cowardly to reveal anything too "juicy" to my loved ones because of fear of being judged, or a somewhat-martyr-ish notion that they simply cannot handle the truth about me.

    Although I love your blog, and try to read it daily, and this post as well - I have to disagree with you on this one.

    I don't know about others here, but I simply don't know how to deal with things. I don't trust people because I've seen them judge. And frankly, I honestly think that majority of people don't REALLY want to know everyone's inner-most dirt. Even the ones that say "Oh i care, I want to hear about the darkness in your life."
    The only ones that do - are the ones who get paid for it. And that gets too expensive.
    I don't see anything wrong with shining up your scars - if that's what helps you get through the day without feeling like a hideous freak (morally, ethically, spiritually or physically).

    Sorry. I just hope that I won't get too many "you obviously haven't grown into a deep relationship with God" thrown at me for this.

    Maybe Ill pray about it. =/

    I really DO love your blog. It makes me feel. And think.

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  76. lookin out for the "safe sins" post. re the Christian "f" every1 uses that word to jus cover everything up...

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  77. Yeah, you seriously need to do a post on safe sins... for real.

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  78. this is a great post! i sometimes forget that it's ok for things to be bad. I think sometimes as Christians, we think that everything has to be perfect and spotless, but the truth is, we are everything but.

    thanks for this post. :)

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