"You should be ashamed of yourself!"
No doubt many of us as kids heard remarks like that from our mom or
dad. Maybe we had lied, played with matches, or been stopped for
speeding in our mom's car. Whatever the infraction, we all implicitly
knew (and rightly so) that we should feel bad about the wrongs we
committed.
But too often our understanding of shame dwells at the extremes. Some
are captivated by absolution and excuses, finding reasons not to be
ashamed of the sinful behavior they are responsible for. On the other
side are those who seek to dominate others through shame, using it as
part of a harsh and controlling punishment that lacks anything
resembling the grace and mercy God exhibits toward us. Neither of these
extremes is appropriate; both avoid significant truths about God and
humanity that Paul made clear in later chapters of Romans.
Novelist and essayist George MacDonald wrote: "To be humbly ashamed
is to be plunged in the cleansing bath of truth."¹ Appropriate shame
neither cripples through domination nor remains altogether absent. Shame
should bring us to humility, not to humiliation. In its proper
function, it serves to remind us that we are not self-sufficient, that
because of our weakness in the face of temptations, we need to rely on
Someone greater than ourselves to live well.
Too often we experience shame over the wrong issues or in too great a degree. Paul, in Romans 1:16,
drew an important boundary around shame. He marked off the things of
Christ, leaving shame to the realm of the sinful and disobedient. So it
made perfect sense for Paul to say that he was "not ashamed of the
gospel." He had no reason to be ashamed of it!
As we walk humbly with Christ and grow in Him, we will become more
aware of our imperfections and more appreciative of His grace.
Therefore, we should humble ourselves before God that we might be
cleansed of our sin and shame, allowing ourselves to walk boldly into
the world as God's representatives on earth, speaking truth, encouraging
love, and showing kindness to those we encounter, just as Paul did.
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