The Rejection Infection
LYSA TERKEURST
“But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you.” Matthew 5:44 (NIV)
The plastic seats were green. The desks a dirty beige. The perfect pale color /to make pencil marks easy to read.
That’s
how I saw what was making the group of girls in front of me laugh. They
looked at me and then added to Jennifer’s desk art: a frizzy-headed
stick figure /with huge buck teeth and crazed eyes. I knew even before I
saw the name scribbled, she’d drawn me. Me. An awful caricature of me.
It’s
been years /since I sat at that dirty beige desk. But it hasn’t been
years /since I’ve had those same feelings of rejection and hurt. Of
course, they aren’t from girls /drawing pictures. But meanness hurts, no
matter what age or how it’s delivered.
You can take the girl /out of middle school, but for many of us, you can’t take the middle school out of the girl.
If you’ve been hurt in this way, you know what I’m talking about. If we’re a stuffer type of person, we want to withdraw and get away from the source of our hurt. If we’re more of an exploder person, we want to attack so they’ll feel as badly as we do.
But here’s where things get a little complicated. Jesus flies in the face of conventional wisdom and instructs us, “love your enemies.”
Seriously?
Something deep inside us whispers, “Don’t you dare love this person. This situation is the exception.”
Let
the internal battle begin. But what if I were to assure you () Jesus isn’t
being cruel or naive in His command for us to love? He’s actually
showing us [how to get free from the sting of another person’s wounds].
When we’re wounded,
we can either pursue healing by extending love back,
or, we can refuse healing and allow the “rejection infection” to set
into our wound.
Here are three things to remember:
The Command
My
job isn’t to fix my enemies. My job is to be obedient to God /in how I
deal with them. And He tells us in our key verse how He wants us to deal
with those () we would label our enemy.“But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you,” (Matthew 5:44).
The Caution
If
there is abuse, we must get wise people to help us and learn to love
from afar. How? By forgiving the person who hurt us — releasing their
offense into the hands of God. By trusting God (and others in authority)
to reveal to them their wrong and deal with their actions.
But we must also remember this: Forgiveness and restoration don’t always go hand-in-hand.
You can forgive someone but not necessarily do everyday life with them.
Ask God to give you discernment /to know when and how to love from afar.
The Catalyst
So,
back to Jennifer and the hurtful drawing. I wish I could relive that
moment /with the knowledge I have now. Jennifer drew that picture /because
of her own insecurities. And while it’s tough to have compassion /for
someone// who’s hurting us
/in the moment of rejection, it is possible to
have compassion /for their obvious hurt.
Hurt people hurt people.
Dig beneath the surface of a mean girl and you’ll find a girl riddled with insecurities and possibly even self-hatred.
Romans 12:20 says, “On
the contrary: ‘If your enemy is hungry, feed him; if he is thirsty,
give him something to drink. In doing this, you will heap burning coals
on his head.’” (NIV)
Jennifer was hungry and thirsty for
affirmation. And the only way she could figure out how to get it was to
make those around her laugh at me.
What might have happened if I
were to have walked /by her desk and given this desperate girl a drink
from the living water? “Jennifer, you are beautiful. Do you know that?”
Not in a million years could I have done that /in middle school. But I’m not in middle school any longer.
And now’s a good time to remember that.
Dear
Lord, I am thankful You don’t give up on me. Please help me love those
who hurt me, and teach me when to seek restoration and when to let a
relationship go. I want my relationships to honor You. In Jesus’ Name,
Amen.