I thought I’d take a moment and explain why I post some things I do, especially on my personal Facebook page. You may not realize most of what I put there is quite intentional, with a purpose.
I’m sure you’ve noticed I post a lot of humor, and I do that for a couple of reasons. First, because it keeps me laughing, and I’ve found that’s important for your mental health. But most of all, because I think the worst witness a Christian can have is to be deathly serious about life. Because if Jesus is real and heaven is already my home, most everything else is pretty trivial.
A sense of humor, especially about yourself, is a sign of humility. But taking yourself too serious is a sure sign of arrogance. When you have time, read theologian Elton Trueblood’s The Humor of Christ, and you’ll discover how much of Jesus’ humor is lost in translation to English. Jesus used humor regularly in his teaching, but many Christians read His words with a lack of understanding of the original languages, so we miss it.
Next, you’ll notice I don’t feature my current place of employment, a church, in my bio. This is not because I’m ashamed of my church. It’s because I’ve learned that most nonbelievers shut down as soon as they learn I’m a vocational minister. When you say you work at a church, walls go up and most conversations stops.
I’ve only recently put the word “pastor” in my bio at all, simply so I won’t appear deceptive. But my reason for being on Facebook is to chiefly to speak to non-Christians. My main goal is to offer folks outside church my friendship in hopes that may lead them to meeting the best Friend of all, Jesus. I do talk about my faith there, quite a lot. But I can forego bragging about having a Masters in Divinity and pastoring for almost 38 years if that keeps me more accessible to someone who doesn’t know Jesus.
Finally, I’m sure you notice I write some pretty transparent things. Though I’m careful not to indict other people or my family, I very often indict my own weaknesses and struggles. A post earlier this week about struggling with criticism probably raised some eyebrows, as if people don’t know pastors are the subjects of endless gossip. People even still call my 98 year-old dad to gossip about his pastor! I even had one person tell me recently, “You’re a ‘hot topic’ in this town!” Wow, terrific.
Knowing that, it would be easy to be guarded about any struggles and try to appear perfect, hoping this would discourage the gossip. And that is certainly one strategy many pastors have, but I don’t think it stops gossip. If you’re a pastor, people are talking about you, whether you post anything or not. While we all should be careful not to post offensive things (you wouldn’t believe all the posts people “tag” me in that I remove), I’ve found that one of the best ways to defuse Satan’s weapons against us is to expose them to the light.
Being vulnerable to a group of friends on social media is a scary thing because not everyone there is truly “your friend”. Indeed, there are some of my wounds only Jesus will ever know, because people can be ruthless. People with an agenda will use your transparency against you, count on it. But what I learned from the past 13 years of trying to reach past my church building and into the real world is this:
No unbeliever listens to you until you are honest.
No questioning person will trust you until they know you too have had questions.
And no hurting person will open their life to you if you pretend like you’re impervious to pain.
Too many Christians try to look like spiritual supermen on their Facebook page. We use social media to brag: on our kids, our accomplishments, on our sparklingly perfect lives. That’s how we live our lives OFF social media as well: guarded and impenetrable, well-insulated with only “church friends” around us, keeping everyone at an arms length.
Most Christians I know have few nonChristian friends. Which is ironic, since the main reason God has left us on this earth is to bring people with us to heaven. Otherwise, He would have raptured us right after our salvation. So my marching orders are to offer my friendship to as many people OUTSIDE the church as possible. I’ll never cram my ideology down their throats, but instead I’ll open up my life to them in hope they turn and open theirs to me, and eventually, to God.
In my experience, that’s the only way most folks can bring people to Jesus, unless you’re an evangelist. Not trying to brag, but that’s how I’ve led people of other faiths to Jesus, as well as several “angry atheists”. I used to have a blog published regularly in the local newspaper where I’d invite nonChristians to talk with me at the local coffee shop – boy, that got to be exciting! That picture at the top of this blog is from the article the local newspaper wrote about me meeting people at Starbucks to talk about God. I actually got pretty good at leading people to Jesus before I moved to this beautiful new place. But the temptation to hunker down behind church walls is always inside me, and I’m struggling to push myself out into the public once again.
Occasionally church folks don’t understand what I’m trying to do. They’ve thought that the silly dances in Christmas shows were just because I was unserious about spiritual things. That my posts about struggling with a foster child or life in general were from a lack of restraint or wisdom. That me “friending” every non church member I can in my new town is because I don’t value Christian friendship. That doing community theatre is because I’m drawn to “worldly things”. Certainly, I would never be misunderstood if I just sat in my office with my Bible opened.
But maybe that’s the price of playing “spiritual offense” and not just playing defense: the folks who know Jesus sometimes think you’re wrong for playing with the kids outside church walls. But I believe that’s where Jesus wants them to play too. Why? Because none of them would have ever made it inside the church unless someone from inside had held their hand first and walked them in.
Here’s a link to the article about my coffee shop conversations – https://archive.naplesnews.com/lifestyle/faith/pastor-dave-gipson-sips-coffee-talks-religion-ep-648584674-336360411.html