James Clear wrote,
“In many circumstances, social connection is actually more helpful
to your daily life than understanding the truth of a particular fact
or idea… We don't always
believe things because they are correct. Sometimes we believe things
because they make us look good to the people we care about…
The way to change people’s minds is to become friends with them, to
integrate them into your tribe, to bring them into your circle. Now,
they can change their beliefs without the risk of being abandoned
socially.”
Whether he intended so or not, his
observations have profound implications for the Church. How often
have we heard, “People don’t care what you know until they know
that you care”? And yet we often don’t practice what we preach.
We think that people will be won to our point of view simply because
we rehearse the facts with increasing frequency and volume. For some
people, this seems to be their only purpose for using social media.
(Those are the ones I hide from my Facebook feed.) It doesn’t
matter if the subject is politics, education, abortion, or the
gospel, we’ve forgotten that relationships trump truth almost every
time.
Jesus said, “You shall love the
Lord your God with all your heart and with all your soul and with all
your mind. This is the great and first commandment. And a second is
like it: You shall love your neighbor as yourself. On these two
commandments depend all the Law and the Prophets” (Matt. 12:37-40
ESV). He didn’t say, “Love God and preach the truth.” As
important as the truth of God is, “teaching them to observe all
that I have commanded you” (Matt. 28:18-20) is subordinate to
loving others. Making disciples has to flow from a heart of love for
others. The Apostle Paul wrote, “So, being affectionately desirous
of you, we were ready to share with you not only the gospel of God
but also our own selves, because you had become very dear to us” (1
Thess. 2:8).
If we were to focus more
effort on loving others well, more people might be drawn to believe
what we believe. That’s not to say that we never state the truth,
but that there’s rarely anything to be gained by hammering someone
over the head with it. More hearts are changed by walking alongside
others than by getting in their faces. Recently I was reading part of
Jesus’ teaching, and it made a big difference when I imagined it
not as a lecture, but as a friend drawing close and giving counsel to
His friends. A lecture is either information that can be ignored or
condemnation that puts us on the defensive. But loving counsel is
something to be seriously considered and heeded.
Rosaria Butterfield has
shared in her books and this video how it was “radically ordinary hospitality” from a
Christian couple that led her to leave the LGBT community and become
a Christian. “They didn’t see me as a project, but they saw me as
a neighbor… It’s God
who saves. It’s not about us being perfect, or our words being
perfect. But show up, we must, in the lives of unbelievers…
Hospitality, biblically speaking, takes strangers and makes them
neighbors. It takes neighbors and makes them family of God.”
I think churches tend to
overestimate their friendliness and underestimate the amount of time
it takes to build strong relationships with people. If young adults
truly felt loved and valued in their churches, they wouldn’t be
nearly so quick to drift away. It really was different when the
church was the center of the community and everyone knew their
neighbors because they saw each other almost every day. Those
relationships were a natural outgrowth of time spent together. Today
we spend an hour together once or twice a week and think that is
sufficient to build a strong community bond. We settle for
“friending” people on Facebook rather than loving them as our
neighbors, and then we wonder why no one wants to become a Christian
or to join the church. Have they truly experienced the love of God
through us? Have we offered them our very lives, or just the facts?
“By this all people will know
that you are My disciples, if you have love for one another” (John
13:35).
© 2019 Dawn Rutan. Unless otherwise
indicated all images are copyright free from pixabay.com. The
opinions stated do not necessarily reflect the views of my church or
employer.