My wife and I spent Thanksgiving in Pensacola, Florida a few years ago. Since our kids go to bed awesomely early, 6:30 eastern, we were stuck in the hotel by ourselves at 5:30 central time every night. There are few things as depressing as sitting on a bed for five straight hours in a Sleep Inn hotel room. In addition to suck your soul out fluorescent lights, the room had kind of this potpourri of bad smells. It was part smoke, part cat, part old Hardee’s hamburger and a smidge of feet.
It was admittedly a good time to catch up on conversation with my wife, but after a few straight days of staring at each other, we were both a little stir crazy. One night I walked down to the BP gas station that was beside the hotel.
Behind the counter at the gas station was a sad woman in her mid thirties. She looked tired, like maybe life was hard for her a decade too soon. Like maybe she didn’t get to be a kid long enough and all that adulthood was starting to catch up on her.
On the outside of her hand was a small greenish gray tattoo of an X. I was curious about what it meant, so I asked her the significance. Here is her response:
“Oh that? That doesn’t mean anything. My mom gave me that one night when she was drunk.”
That was a kind of weird answer, so I asked her how old she was when it happened. She scrunched up her face for a second in concentration and then said, “I think I was 13.”
When I was 13, I was really concerned about my clothes. I was worried that my mom would buy me a Knights of the Round Table shirt instead of Polo. Or that I would have Reeboks instead of Nikes. These were the kinds of things I focused on, because at that age, kids would tease you for the smallest thing.
But what about showing up to school one Monday with a jagged, bloody green x tattooed on your hand? What was that experience like? How would kids react to that? Didn’t it hurt when her mom gave her that? She was drunk, writing on her daughter with a shaky hand and a hot needle.
I thought about that the rest of the trip and was considering writing about the marks that our parents give us. They’re not all as obvious as that and many are actually positive, but I realized that was a narrow way to look at it, because it’s not just parents that give us marks. It’s coworkers and spouses and friends and strangers. And when we don’t know they’re there, sometimes they actually stick.
Someone once asked me to review a memo at work that included some disparaging remarks about my writing ability. There on page 4 was a giant circle with a big red line through it that said "Fluff" and a sentence that promised a coworker was going to eliminate my fluff writing. The person that handed me the memo didn't realize it was about me. They wanted me to focus on a completely different section of the document but my eye caught some criticism about the company's writer, and since I was the only writer there, I couldn't help but read what was written.
As I walked back to my desk, I was crushed. I felt like my complete lack of value had not only been noticed but captured in a memo. In the quietness of my head though, I felt like God popped in and said, "Hey, that memo doesn't get to define who you are. I do. And I say you are my son." I was blown away and instead of spiraling into despair and shame over that memo, I went back to my desk and wrote what was probably the best thing I've ever written for that company.
I wish that single event was enough to forever shake off the bad marks I've got on me, but it isn't. I still doubt. I still believe the lies of the marks. I still, like lots of other Christians, forget who I am. I still give other people's words too much power. I don't have it all figured out. Instead, more than anything, life feels like it’s been a long series of believing that I am not who other people define me to be, I am a son of God. I am God’s work of art. And the more I have been open to believing that, the more He’s shown me it’s true.
The thing I realized, is that an experience can't change that. My relation to God is not a mark. It is not a big tattoo or a little sticker, it is who I am. I can not completely cover that up or blot it out with failure. The prodigal son tries, he completely messes up his life. But more importantly, he shows how sometimes, the worst marks are the ones we give ourselves. “I’m a bad husband. I’m a terrible employee. I’m ugly.”
These are the words we sometimes hear from ourselves and they are the kind of words the prodigal son tries to say to his father. (I have written about this story so many times it's getting a bit ridiculous but I love the lessons it has for us.) When the prodigal son rehearses his homecoming speech, he decides to conclude it with, “make me like one of your hired men.” That was the last thing he was going to say. But when he speaks to his father, that is the one thing he is not allowed to speak. The rest of his speech comes off without a hitch. “Father, I have sinned against heaven and against you. I am no longer worthy to be called your son.”
These words are delivered without incident, but he doesn’t ever get to say “make me like one of your hired men.” Why is that?
Why are those eight words left out? You can certainly read that as just accidental, that regardless of the words, the father was going to cut him off before he finished speaking. And maybe that’s right. But when I read that, I read a father stopping a son from saying something the father would never do. The father would never make him like one of his hired men. He would never give the son a new mark of slavery. He would never call him employee, instead of son. So he doesn’t even let those words out. He stops him because no new mark would be given that day. The old truth, the one at the core of the son, still holds true.
Despite the pigpen and the prostitutes, the dirt and the deception, the father doesn't see a hired man.
He sees a son.
He sees his child.
And that changes everything.
This speaks to every single one of us. We all have the equivalent of that jagged tattoo, and we all have the equivalent of "fluff" circled in red.
ReplyDeleteI like serious Wednesdays, just as much as the other days. Thanks.
"I am God’s work of art".
ReplyDeleteI will take that with me today...
Thanks!
thanks, I needed that as I get ready for another day to go to a job I can't stand Eph 2:10 all the way!
ReplyDeleteSerious Wednesday's are so awesome. I love all the other days you write too, but Wednesday's are extra special I think. .
ReplyDeleteThanks for today's important and challenging thoughts. May we all remember who we are in God's eyes instead of man's (that includes our own eyes too).
So glad you re-posted this Jon. Thank you.
ReplyDelete"no new mark today"......
ReplyDeletelet this be the guide for my lips today......
I really needed to hear this today. Too many red edit marks, too many self depreciating thoughts and not enough trust on my part. This came right on time. Thanks PJ.
ReplyDeleteYou could repost this every day, and I would always be grateful to see it.
ReplyDeleteI missed this the first time around- so glad I made it here today.
ReplyDeleteThis is beautiful- brought tears to my eyes. I am feeling very loved right now.
Thank you.
The first time someone told me I was God's masterpiece, I pictured myself as a gorgeous tapestry. The problem was (and remains), I was the backside of the masterpiece, I was showing all the knots and lumps.
ReplyDeleteSometimes I don't live showing all God has created in me. That's my struggle.
thx for the serious wednesday. it was the best thing i could have read to start my day.
ReplyDeletewhat can i say? you wrote exactly what i needed to read this morning. thank you.
ReplyDeleteOne of the best posts I have ever read.
ReplyDeleteGreat post, Jon -- just beautiful... And that's what our God is, too -- beautiful.
ReplyDeleteSerious Wednesdays, FTW. I really needed this today. And I put it up on my FB profile for all to see. :) I've got several different friends who are going through some rough stuff the past few weeks. I want them to know that this mark won't last.
ReplyDeleteI wish you could see in my eyes how much I needed to read this post this morning. This morning I have been feeling ugly and useless, lumpy and slow, and then feeling even worse because I know I am only lying to myself, even when it feels true.
ReplyDeleteMy heart is gouged with the marks of my own insecurities and I have not been letting God heal me because I keep believing that I deserve these marks. I needed to read that I am God's daughter, I am precious to Him, I am beloved.
He never stops pursuing our hearts, does He?
Thanks, Jon.
Serious Wednesdays never let me down.
It's all the 'knots and lumps on the backside of the God's Masterpiece' that make it what it is! Both sides are necessary. I should never judge His work - including His work on me - before its time. He's not done yet! Thank you so much for today's post. I!
ReplyDeletewow... I really needed to read this today. God is good
ReplyDeleteWHOOOOOO Jon A!
ReplyDeleteAnd that's all I really have to say.
~GL
"...sometimes, the worst marks are the ones we give ourselves."
ReplyDeleteThis hits home and brought stinging tears to my eyes. Oh, how I needed to read this post today. Thank you.
Eh, it was all fluff.
ReplyDeleteJust kidding! Definitely spoke to me. I relate.
Have you read "You are special" By Max Lucado? I worked in a Christian Book store before I had children and tons of people would come in asking for it. I never read it while I was an employee there! Just last summer I found it in a Thrift store and bought it to read to my little girls. I sat down to read it to them...all about the marks we give each other and ourselves....Broke into tears and then I realized what all the hype had been about!
ReplyDeleteLove reading your blog... Thanks for Writing!
This is by far my absolute favorite Stuff Christians Like post. When you posted it 364 days ago, God used it. And again today, when I've been feeling like I can't do anything right at all and that there's no point in me being here, I am reminded of who I really am. The part that hits home the most with me is what I will take with me today: "My relation to God is not a mark. It is not a big tattoo or a little sticker, it is who I am. I can not completely cover that up or blot it out with failure." Though I can't get everything right and I'm by no means perfect, when God looks at me, He doesn't see a failure or a loser or any other negative thing. He sees me as his work of art. His work of art that by His grace alone is perfect.
ReplyDeleteBoy i needed that today. I've been dealing with a lot of pruning lately and nothing makes you feel uglier than being pruned. But praise God for when the pruning is done! I can't wait to see the marks that God leaves....
ReplyDeleteI think it was St. Francis who said: "What a man is in the eyes of God, that he is and no more."
ReplyDeleteTo me this usually helps me when I start becoming swell headed. (I tend to err more on the side of pride). But in those moments when I really take a beating to who I am, and start to believe I am worthless, the same quote reminds me that God sees me as His daughter and that is what I am.
Well said, Jon. This is a good reminder for me. It's always important to remember that no matter what mark the world puts on me, God's the only one with a permanent marker.
ReplyDeleteGreat post.
ReplyDeleteThis post is stuff Christians don't like, but Stuff Christians need to hear.
Once again, a fabulous, thought-provoking, life-changing post. Thank you for reminding me that at the core...I'm God's child. That doesn't change regardless of the marks (I keep thinking...the red pen marks editors make - thanks for that visual) we get. I'll take that thought with me today. Great stuff!
ReplyDeleteBravo, John. What an important lesson to learn and you learned it well.
ReplyDeleteI think sanctification, growing towards Christlikeness, is in part a process of doing just this. We grow more and more certain of our true selves rather than the lies that we have taken into our hearts. Often, the lies are easier to hold on to because they are familiar, and we have based how we live around those lives and who wants to disassemble one's whole life around just to fix a little error like that? But we are called to die - and I think part of that dying is disassembling the life and the lies that have taken us away from the image of God in us and the love that God still has for us. Death to self is what you're talking about here. And it's a marvelous thing.
ReplyDeleteNo red fluff circles on this post! Thanks for the excellent Word.
ReplyDeleteThat is one of the best pieces I've seen in a very long time. Excellent, excellent stuff, Jon.
ReplyDeletethats some really good writing...I appreciate that
ReplyDeleteYou wrote this post for me. I know it! God spoke to me through you. You see, I got laid off yesterday. Of course that plays into self doubt. I have been beaten down by the devil this year with a son born prematurely and my husband also losing his job. Thank you for reminding me that God is shaping me into who he wants me to be. And that is better than anything I have to endure here on earth...
ReplyDeleteIncredible stuff as usual, Jon
ReplyDeleteI really needed to read this today. I'm going to come back in a little while when my eyes are blurry from the tears and read it again. Then will probably read it again after that.
ReplyDeleteThank you.
I needed this reminder today.
ReplyDeletebest post yet.
ReplyDeletethank you.
isn't it weird that - even though it's our core - we forget its there?
ReplyDeletei am so grateful for His eyes and that they are not my own.
So, I'm seventeen. Greatly affected by people's words & constantly at a loss to remember what you just wrote about. Lately, it's been A LOT worse. I don't know why, but the devil has been hitting me hard the past couple weeks. I've been searching for hope or something to give me what I need. I've been praying for an answer. You gave it to me. :] Thank you so much.
ReplyDeletecassie.
i was linked to your page through a friend's facebook. he was actually wanting me to read the vbs song post. i read it (quite witty) and then decided to take a quick look around your blog and decided to read your most recent post. wow. . .thank you. it was if you were reading my mind but the truth is that the struggles you wrote of ARE the same struggles that we all face. our markings can define us or can help remind of grace. i'm a work in progress relying on that everlasting grace! thanks for sharing your heart with readers who just "happen" upon your blog! :)
ReplyDeleteI *heart* Serious Wednesdays!!
ReplyDeleteThanks!
Thank you for this awesome post! From the flip side - I was blessed with wonderful people and circumstances that bolstered my self-worth my whole life. So I too-often err on the side of pride. Most of my marks may be better than the truth - "beauty marks" if you will. :) But it is wonderful, as I grow older, to uncover what is under those marks and discover the TRUTH, all the fluff, knots, cracks and imperfections and know that it is okay to be broken. Because being broken allows me to fully know the grace of God; allows me to see that I am, indeed, a child of God. And the joy in that mark is far beyond the joy of any "beauty mark."
ReplyDeleteI absolutely love this side of you. I know most folks come here for the flippant, sarcastic side, but THIS is who I see when I think of you. What a blessing. Thank you...
ReplyDeletejust what i needed today. thank you.
ReplyDeleteI've enjoyed this "serious" post more than the sarcastic ones. Most liekly because people are generally so sarcastic out there about everythign and to everyone anyway. It's nice to get away from all that.
ReplyDeleteI never actually read your serious posts with a lot of attention (sorry...) but this one grabbed me. Probably since I grew up with an abusive alcoholic mother and though she never tattooed me, she marked me in enough ways. I'm in therapy for the millionth time these days to get rid of all the marks other people haven given me and it's starting to pay off. Thanks for sharing, today's honesty means a lot to me.
ReplyDeleteWow! Your words are so inspirational to me at this time in my life. I was promoted b/c I would be good "fluff" for the front desk. Not because of my education or that I had earned my way. Then I was fired 2 years later because of the bitterness someone had for me. The bitterness grew bc I would no longer participate in her gossip and judgment. I have been experiencing horrible feelings of failure, but your thoughts have been very inspiring. Thank you. Phil 3:1
ReplyDeleteMax Lucado wrote a children's book along these lines - can't remember the title because Lucado pours out like twenty masterpieces a minute - but it was about this little wooden puppet who lived in a village of wooden puppets who went around giving each other gold stars for good things, grey dots for bad, and this one little puppet had no stars and a whole boatload of grey dots, until he went up the hill and met the Maker and you can guess the rest...anyway, Jon, your writing just made me think of Max Lucado! You and Max Lucado in the same breath! Ha! Who's fluffy now? Huh? ;>
ReplyDeleteSeriously, thanks. Much needed. Much appreciated. Blessings.
What a great word! Never give up serious Wednesdays.
ReplyDeleteFantastic.
ReplyDeleteAnd I've wondered if there could be another reason the younger son didn't get to the part of his speech about "hey dad, can I get a spot in the servant's bunkhouse?"
I wonder if he is so surprised and so shattered by this unimaginable expression of his father's love that he can't even speak. I wonder if -- on his long walk home -- he sketched out every imaginable scenario except for this one: a Father who ran to him and embraced him... So he gives up his little "hired servant plan" and surrenders to the love of his Father.
Who knows? But it's fun to wonder...
Incredible post. I had to link to this from my facebook & twitter.
ReplyDeleteMy problem is that I don't really know what God says about me. Sure, if I read the Bible it says "daughter" but that, to me, at home, meant conform or get grounded, don't ever seriously answer the question "how are you" because those who ask don't REALLY want to know, and do better than you can at everything you do (which should be everything since only achievement counts). So, where is God and how do I trust the Bible if I was raised by people who went to church and apparently never learned this "grace" business? Is Jesus real? Is this "trusting God with who I am" really what it's all about? What about so many who don't/can't find God? Is it just a coincidence that I was born into the "one true" religion?
ReplyDeleteDear God, help me , Please!, not to leave any marks on anyone today. And help me see if there are marks on others which I can help remove or diminish. Help me be a mark remover today!!
ReplyDeleteWOW! I was hooked on your blog several days ago when I read the "Metro Worship Leader" but this is really deep and something we all need to hear and be reminded of daily.
ReplyDeleteAs a husband and dad I must remember not to "mark" my wife and kids but also to remember that no matter how the world sees us..... we are children of God created in his image and He loves us more than we could ever imagine.
"Despite the pigpen and the prostitutes, the dirt and the deception, the father doesn't see a hired man.
ReplyDeleteHe sees a son.
He sees his child.
And that changes everything."
This made me weep. I needed to hear this.
This may be presumptuous but it sounds a lot like that poor lady was abused by her mother as a child. Probably on a regular basis...
ReplyDeleteReally, really good post. I'm grateful that God gives me the grace to move beyond many -- maybe even most -- of the destructive marks. And in His grace, I've received more encouraging remarks than I deserve.
ReplyDeleteBeautifully put.
ReplyDeleteA family member linked me to your blog. I'm indebted to her. This was beautiful. Today of all days to read these words, I needed it. It filled my heart with joy today. Thank you :)
ReplyDeleteReading this today reminded me so much of a great book by Pete Gall called "Learning My Name," where Pete learns during a time of physical stress that God doesn't call him "Asshole" as he always calls himself. Rather, God calls him "Sweetheart," a name that sounds a whole lot closer to what our Dad would call us.
ReplyDeleteI've spent a lot of time lately with the "prodigal son" story, mainly through Tim Keller's "Prodigal God" book and sermon series, but I'd never picked up on the point where the father wouldn't let the son call himself a hired hand.
Wow...what a truly wonderful Father we've got.
Thanks for a great reminder lesson here!
btw, if this story of the prodigal resonates with you, here's a modern day example of how God calls his children home:
ReplyDeletehttp://pulptheology.com/?p=408