I have spent many years living in a glass house. I am no stranger
to the never-ending rock-throwing that goes with it. Most of those bounce off
and are barely noticed. Some make a lot of noise, but no damage to the glass.
Then comes a rock that finds a weak spot. Doesn’t even have to be a big rock,
maybe more like a little piece of gravel. But it finds that weak spot, and
comes right on inside the house with you. The presence of that rock creates all
kinds of emotions: sadness, anger, grief, fury, pain.
Sometimes, you can see on closer inspection that there is no
new hole in the glass. Sometimes those rocks get in the house because I have
thrown my own stones from the inside. I have reduced the protective value of my
own house by the damage I have done. Myself.
I am pretty tough; no, not in the “come at me bro” kind of
way. But I have grown some thick skin through the years and have learned to
deflect a lot of criticism (and slander, and gossip) that comes directly at me.
But it is different when that is directed at my wife or my children. In this
case, someone decided to say some harsh things about my son. Lashing out via social
media was not the best way to respond. In fact, I didn’t really need to respond
at all.
I realize, just maybe, that the person who “warned” others
about my son believed they were being helpful. I have been guilty of throwing
those “if it was my kid…” rocks. It’s easy to do that, and to convince yourself
that it’s justified. Even though it’s not. You think you are doing other
parents a favor, or that you are somehow protecting a kid. But you do that at
the expense of the kid you are running down. Which kid are you concerned for?
Does that concern not extend to my son if you think he’s caught up in sin? You
see, that person who was bashing my son has never once been to me to talk about
those rumors. Not a text message, not a phone call, and certainly not a face-to-face
with me or Dana. And that’s why it shouldn’t have happened the way it did. They
decided to tell other people, to do damage to my son’s reputation. I don’t take
that lightly. Your kids’ reputation is something most parents worry over.
But I responded by throwing more passive-aggressive rocks.
Not my finest moment.
It is true that Jesus said I should judge righteous judgment. He told me that I could see what kind of metaphoric tree someone is
by looking at the fruit they bear. But he also said that I’ll be judged by
whatever standard of judgment I impose on others. And he said I needed to
work on getting the planks out of my own eye before I try to remove splinters
from somebody else. Sometimes, I realize just how much work I have to do, and
how great is my need for grace. May that realization of that need help me give
a little grace to others…even if they have a handful of rocks.