I love Miley Cyrus. I know, I'm not exactly the stereotype of someone who loves Destiny Hope Cyrus - (especially since I'm old enough to have someone the age of Miley). So why do I love Miley? Because she's like me. She's goofy. Like me. She embraces creativity. Like me. And... she makes mistakes. Like me. She's immature. Like me. She's ignorant. Like me. She gets lost in this crazy world. Like me. She falls short of being a perfect human being. Like me. She hurts herself and others. Like me. Keeping it real -- do I listen to her music -- well let's just say I don't turn it off. Heh.
I
came across a post on The Christian Post in my FB feed today that
almost made my head explode. Honestly I don't know why I
even follow The Christian Post because a lot of the things they post
threaten to ruin my day just like this specific post. Let me explain.
The article was reporting Miley Cyrus posted a photo photo in
her instagram feed that stated that Jesus 'Was
Never Anti-Gay, Never Mentioned Abortion or Birth Control' --
and all Hell broke loose in the comments of this article with people
- most of them from Christians I assume - completely ripping Miley to
shreds.
Comments
such as "Can this girl
get any more stupid than she already is? Jesus didn't mention
Big Macs but gluttony is still a sin. Good Lord I wish
she would just go away." (which had 62 "likes" last I
looked).
This
isn't the post that even bothered me so much. It's the ones that say
that we should pray for Miley.
Before
I explain why, I must say that I assume that these folks are sincere.
And I also will assume that these people recognize that they
need prayers just as much as Miley.
Why
this bothers me, is because this places the person saying "we
should pray for her" on a pedestal, looking down at someone who
perhaps more exposed sins in their life. It's kind of
like a Christian back-handed blessing.
"We
should pray for her" can be a way to group people into "those
we should pray for" and "those who are OK."
You
might be thinking "Well she doesn't know God so she DOES
need more prayers - she ISN'T in the same group as us - she's
obviously not a Christian."
If
this is what you're thinking -- then how do you know she doesn't have
a relationship with God? Because of what you've seen on TV?
Because of how she dresses? Because of how she sticks out
her tongue?
Before
you group her as someone who isn't saved -- ask yourself if
you've ever willingly done something you know isn't right. Ask
yourself if you've ever struggled ongoing with something
you know isn't right. Ask yourself if you've ever done things
in your life that were broadcast on TV, if people would question
whether you follow Jesus. As you size yourself up as a "good
person" or what you think a "saved person" looks like
as we're talking about Miley, ask yourself if you're counting the
public displays of "Christian behavior" and "public
declarations of faith in God" and if you're mostly counting the
good things vs. the bad things you do -- but not about the
millions of good things that you have not done -- and have as a
result done bad by inaction.
Is
she still in your "unsaved group?"
OK.
Now ask yourself -- can you read Miley's mind? Do you know if she
prays at night? Do you know if she wonders who God is, but
can't feel God now and is struggling with doubt? Do you
know everything about Miley's journey? Do you know that God has
turned his back on the girl that used to openly confess her faith?
Are you positive that if at this moment, Miley got hit by a bus, that
her spirit would never be with God?
I
don't know if Miley is currently choosing to let Jesus save her, but
I can say with 100% confidence that I can't answer any of the
questions above. And I can say with 100% confidence that I need
prayers just as much as Miley Cyrus. I can say with 100%
confidence that I am on a journey, like Miley is on a journey, and
there have been times in my life that I've lived like a dirtbag,
and I've struggled with doubt, but I've always had a faith that has
saved me. My proposal is that we give others like Miley Cyrus a
break and be careful when we publicly highlight those we should pray
for.
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