Monday, August 6, 2012

A Picture is Worth Four Words

In the wake of the Chick-Fil-A stories there have been a lot of pictures posted on Facebook, Instagram, and Twitter.  Pictures of nuggets, waffle fries, sandwiches, people proudly proclaiming their love of good chicken, and, well, certain beliefs ...  I posted last week on my feelings around the big theological/political debate.  I threw out my idea, and put it to bed.

Then a picture re-posted by a friend showed up on my twitter feed that made me stop and pause.

It was the picture of a guy standing outside of a Chick-Fil-A, watching the huge line of CFA supporters going out the door and down the block.  On the back of his shirt were four words that read: "Jesus is a (bad word)."  I won't say what it actually said.  It's more than a little NSFW.  Just use your imagination.  It wasn't good.

The friend didn't post the picture as affirmation, just asking the question, essentially, "What do we do with this?"

Like most people, my first reaction was more than disgust.  I mean, that's my Savior the guy is ridiculing.  He's breaking commandments.  And it's in poor taste.

But ... I want to know his story, and the stories of others like him.  At some point the Jesus he was shown wasn't good.  And it's not that Jesus needs to be painted as nice; Jesus wasn't nice.  But the Jesus represented to the guy is bad.  The fact that he wore this shirt outside of the CFA Appreciation Day is also very telling ... Christians were the ones in support of CFA, followers of Jesus.  Maybe this guy is gay, or maybe somebody he loves is.  Regardless, his shirt, which showed judgement of the Church, showed what he knows of the church.

Somewhere along the line, somebody modelled a Jesus for this guy that was a (bad word), and wearing that shirt on that day meant something to him.  And that makes me sad for him, but also for the witness being shown.  When we claim the name of Christian, we are called to put on Christ for the world.

What I really want to know is what happened to the guy after that picture was taken on August 1 ... Did somebody try to show him the love of Christ, or was he damned?  What do you do when you're confronted by someone who hates your faith?

4 comments:

  1. That is interesting, because the usual rap is that folks love Jesus they just can't stand his followers. Perhaps this guy's beef was actually not with Jesus, but with the Jesus they had met through some of Jesus' messed up children. Like me.

    I don't know if I've met anyone that has hated my faith; this probably means I haven't lived it the way Jesus wants, though. Hmph.

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    1. It's kind of the Christian predicament ... We know that choosing to follow Christ can divide people; Christ told us as much.
      But it often seems like it's the Christians themselves that have chosen where the dividing lines are, not Christ, not God.
      This guy's argument against Christ shows sophistication to me, thought it's vulgar. To me, the CFA Day showed a failure to model Christ in a loving way.

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    2. I know what shirt you are talking about. I have seen this shirt where I live as well.

      That said, I completely agree with your assessment of the CFA controversy-- a failure to show these people who Christ really is. Maybe there were Christians out there who really did share the truth and just didn't get attention amongst the drama. I hope so, especially for people like this who obviously feel apathy towards Christians for one reason or another (or several).

      The whole gay marriage ban issue misses the entire point IMHO. When has legislation ever advanced the cause of Christ? Do laws change hearts? I believe the answer is no even from a Biblical standpoint. I think it's a detractor from what (or who) we should really be focused on.

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    3. Anonymous ... Yes. I'm sure there were good faith movements running around during CFA Day. Because not all Christians feel that way about the LGBTQ Community. Unfortunately the predominant view of American Christianity is the politicized version trumpeted by conservative politicians (the ones facebooking and tweeting pictures of themselves holding their CFA cups). I would just want to tell this guy, "We're not all like that. Some of us take the call to love our neighbors very seriously, and this isn't a time for so-called 'tough' love."

      And Christ avoided politics. However, we know that since the Resurrection politicians have coopted the name 'Christian' for personal gain whenever possible ... See "Christ and Empire" by Dr. Joerg Rieger.

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