by Karris Golden
Every week, I go through a moment of
dread before I drop my envelope in the
offering plate. "Is it enough?" I ask myself
— not enough for God, but enough to satisfy
what I think others think I should be able
to give. Instead of wondering about my
contribution’s worthiness in the eyes of
God, I consider whether the person who opens
the envelopes later makes judgments about me
based on the size of my gift.
In reality, the intention behind my gift
is all that should matter. What is my hope
for the good this money can do? What good
will come from it? These considerations
drive my giving, and my intentions are good.
But the public act of placing the gift in
the offering plate leaves me consumed by how
my contribution will reflect on me.
The root of my anxiety is fear of
vulnerability; I don’t want to relinquish
control of how this act reflects on me.
Giving unconditionally and unselfishly is
characterized by great vulnerability. That’s
why Jesus confounded and angered many of his
contemporaries.
Not
only did
he give
everything
freely —
from
knowledge
to
himself
— he
scoffed
at those
who
demanded
an
explanation
of his
motives.
When
asked
why he
did
something,
he
rarely
gave
direct
answers;
he told
stories.
His
explanation
was his
act, his
story
was his
example
— and
the
faithful
understood
it.
When I consider my reaction to the
offering plate and Jesus’ example, it
becomes clear to me that I am not "pure in
heart." While my heart is filled with love,
good intentions, and a desire to give, there
is also a part that harbors fear. Fear of
appearing weak, inadequate, foolish, greedy,
selfish, or even arrogant. The list goes on.
The same concern about how others will
perceive my offering gift comes out in other
areas of my life. I often pause before
taking action: Is it too aggressive to ask
for a raise? Does this person think I sound
silly? What will everyone think if I take
the big brownie? The voice asking those
questions warns me that if I can’t control
how others perceive me, "perfection" will
remain elusive.
What people think
We all care about what other people
think of us. Part of growing older is
learning to avoid the impulse to control
what others think of us. As the mother of a
preschooler, I am painfully aware that it’s
impossible to maintain such control.
Sometimes I just have to go to work with
jelly smeared on the front of my blouse.
Then I must resist the urge to explain the
stain to anyone who will listen.
Do you feel the urge to explain your
mistakes or faults to others — even complete
strangers? Do you believe that not
explaining yourself or your actions bears
the risk that someone will form an opinion
about you without your input? If that idea
makes your skin crawl, perhaps you have
difficulty with vulnerability. Accepting
that others will form opinions about
us—sometimes untrue, often unchangeable — is
the first step toward being pure in heart.
I began learning this important lesson
when I was introduced to a technique in a
writers’ workshop. Each writer’s work is
distributed to every member of the group.
They then take the work home to analyze it.
When the workshop reconvenes, the writer
reads her work aloud to the group. As the
writer remains silent, the rest of the group
discusses the piece — what works and what
doesn’t. The writer is not allowed to defend
her work in any way, even to explain the
intended meaning of a word, phrase, or
sentence. She can only listen and ask
questions of clarification at the end.
The workshop is a tough process. Mature
writers find a way to learn from the group’s
criticisms. If a writer seeks to please the
workshop participants, the group will call
her on her dishonesty. The workshop is about
being willing to be vulnerable. If she can
open up and listen, she’ll find a way to
develop her purest work.
Taking chances
I want to be pure in heart. This
requires me to evaluate truthfully what
motivates my actions. The writer’s workshop
taught me that much of my behavior was based
on a need to please others and gain
approval. It also showed me that God’s
impression of my actions was secondary to
me. It was time to ask myself why I cared so
much about the former and so little about
the latter.
My exploration of this — my secret sinful
behavior — makes me believe that many of us
have similar issues. We hide some of who we
are and present to the world the person we
want others to believe us to be. But in
being vulnerable, we take our chances. If we
are misunderstood, we must remind ourselves
that God gets it.
Perhaps you sign up to be lector at
worship and rehearse over and over again to
get that perfect, precise pronunciation. Or
you spend hours making flawless cookies for
the church bake sale and pawn the lumpy,
asymmetrical "seconds" off on your family.
Anything less than the best would reflect
poorly on you, right? Or would it? Do others
really spend that much time judging us, or
are they busy replaying their own daily top
10 most embarrassing moments?
Yes, we should do our best, especially when
it comes to our faith practices. But are we
doing our best, or are we striving to make
others believe we’re perfect? Where is God
in all this? Wouldn’t God be happy with a
"flawed" cookie? Wouldn’t it taste the same?
Why is it that we can remind ourselves of
God’s forgiving nature but can’t give our
sisters and brothers the same benefit of the
doubt?
Take King David. He was God’s golden boy,
a popular king. He enjoyed being liked. He
seemed pretty close to perfect to most.
His flaw was that he fell for a married
woman. How could he continue to be publicly
perfect and still get the girl? David
thought the answer was to conceal the issue
by putting Bathsheba’s husband in harm’s
way. Read the story in 2 Samuel, chapters 11
and 12.
At last, David realized he had to make
things right with God. Perhaps he prayed the
words of Psalm 51, verse 10: "Create in me a
clean heart, O God; and put a new and right
spirit within me."
We falter. We fail. We can ask God to
renew us. To be renewed, we must lay
ourselves bare before God.
Losing control
I admit I must remind myself to seek to
please God first. I must actively remind
myself to do what God expects and not worry
about the expectations of others. I have to
be willing to do what I believe God wants —
even if it leaves me exposed and vulnerable.
This requires daily diligence. I am
becoming. I am actively working to become a
Christian, a Lutheran, and a fuller, better
version of myself. I am becoming a wife,
mother, daughter, sister. This journey would
be boring if I were already finished. How
dull I would be if the person I will become
were limited to my imagination.
Poet Theodore Roethke said, "Those who
are willing to be vulnerable move among
mysteries."
What a reward it would be to be pure in
heart. Yet becoming vulnerable is difficult.
It goes against our human nature. Our
aversion to it begins at a young age, when
we fear looking stupid or making mistakes in
front of others.
But it is through vulnerability that we
learn. Synonyms are exposed, wide open,
naked, susceptible, and sensitive.
Not bad words, but they carry a lot of
baggage. Few of us would use such words to
describe ourselves. When we hear
vulnerable,
we associate it with weak,
helpless, at risk, and defenseless.
To be pure in heart is to disregard
those connotations. We can move to a place
where we act, speak, and live from our
hearts. I have not reached a point where I
do this gladly, but I can do it with great
hope.
I have hope, because to be vulnerable is
to live in the light wants — even if it
leaves me exposed and vulnerable. This
requires daily diligence. I am becoming. I
am actively working to become a Christian, a
Lutheran, and a fuller, better version of
myself. I am becoming a wife, mother,
daughter, sister. This journey would be
boring if I were already finished. How dull
I would be if the person I will become were
limited to my imagination.
Poet Theodore Roethke said, "Those who
are willing to be vulnerable move among
mysteries."
What a reward it would be to be pure in
heart. Yet becoming vulnerable is difficult.
It goes against our human nature. Our
aversion to it begins at a young age, when
we fear looking stupid or making mistakes in
front of others.
But it is through vulnerability that we
learn. Synonyms are exposed, wide open,
naked, susceptible, and sensitive.
Not bad words, but they carry a lot of
baggage. Few of us would use such words to
describe ourselves. When we hear
vulnerable, we associate it with
weak, helpless, at risk, and
defenseless. To be pure in heart is to
disregard those connotations. We can move to
a place where we act, speak, and live from
our hearts. I have not reached a point where
I do this gladly, but I can do it with great
hope.
I have hope, because to be vulnerable is
to live in the light of Jesus Christ. I
have the light of Jesus Christ inside me.
This is my mantra, and it is true. How
difficult it would have been for me to type
those words 10 years ago; how vulnerable I
would have felt. I say my mantra to myself
when fear of vulnerability threatens to
consume me. I say it aloud on days when I
don’t particularly believe it. On my
journey, I strive to become worthy of such a
gift.
We all possess this gift, the light of
Christ. We can train ourselves to listen to
God’s call to open ourselves. In doing so,
we accept that we are hopping into God’s
arms to be carried. We’re not in control.
We’re giving in, trusting that God knows the
way, even if it is not the way we would have
chosen.
Is there something you hold back from
because you fear the ridicule of others? Is
this fear keeping you from realizing a
dream? Helping others? Risking fully? To
fulfill the promise of the sixth Beatitude,
we can embrace vulnerability and with God’s
help become free of self-serving
motivations.
Karris Golden
writes for Lutheran Woman Today
and other ELCA publications. She lives in
Waterloo, Iowa, and is a member of Trinity
Lutheran church. She is assistant director
of communication and marketing at Wartburg
College in Waverly, Iowa, an ELCA
institution. You can read her article "What
is the sound of your faith" at
www.boldcafe.org/0407/hottopic.hml
We're glad you enjoyed
this online preview of Lutheran Woman
Today. But there is so much more
inside each issue. For just 3 cents a
day, you can receive a year's worth of
LWT's award–winning
graphics and articles in your own home.
Don't miss another issue —
Subscribe now!
|