What
Does the Bible Say About
Shame?
JESUS,
OUR SHAME BEARER
"For
your shame you shall have double..." (Isaiah 61:7)
This study
is about how Christ identified with us in our shame and bore it away so
our personal dignity could be restored. If you have ever been shamed, embarrassed,
made to feel worthless, or otherwise degraded then you need
to read and
study this special message.
WHAT IS SHAME?
Nelson's Illustrated
Bible Dictionary ¹ gives this definition: SHAME -- A negative emotion
caused by an awareness of wrongdoing, hurt ego, or guilt. In the Bible,
the feeling of shame is normally caused by public exposure of one's guilt
(Genesis 2:25; 3:10). Shame may also be caused by a hurt reputation or
embarrassment, whether or not this feeling is due to sin
(Psalm 25:2-3;
Proverbs 19:26; Romans 1:16).
Joseph, not
wishing to shame Mary, desired to divorce her secretly (Matthew 1:19).
Ultimately, God will expose the guilt of the ungodly, putting them to shame
(Daniel 12:2). God also puts to shame the wise of the world by exposing
their guilt before Him and by choosing to save the foolish of this world
by a "foolish" message (1 Corinthians 1:18-31). Finally, our Lord Jesus
suffered the shame of the Cross because He was put on public display as
the recipient of God's wrath (2 Corinthians 5:21; Hebrews 12:2).
According to
this Bible dictionary, shame is caused by one of two ways: either the awareness
or exposure of guilt, or a hurt reputation or embarrassment, whether or
not this feeling is due to sin. I would only add that shame is also caused
by being wronged, abused, or mistreated when one's personal rights are
violated. This could occur a number of ways, but the most vivid example
I know of is when a child is verbally, physically or sexually abused by
an adult. The shame received by such abuse can be lifelong and far reaching.
HOW DOES SHAME
AFFECT US?
Think back
over your life to a time when you were shamed. Perhaps a parent disciplined
you publicly and other children teased you about it. Maybe you were falsely
accused of cheating in school and unjustly punished. Perhaps your reputation
was marred in some way and you had to live it down. Maybe you did something
wrong but were improperly corrected and have carried the embarrassment
of your actions ever since. Here are some important facts about shame which
have been verified
through many
fields of study:
1. Shame always
results in a loss of dignity.
Each individual
is born with a sense of personhood which, if properly nurtured, will instinctively
help him or her make the right life choices. There are many unbelievers
who are basically moral people due to the fact they have chosen to keep
their dignity and were fortunate enough to avoid abuse during their formative
years. Some, however, were needlessly shamed in early life and grew up
with a sense of loss about their personhood. There are too many ways this
can happen to list here, but a few are:
If a father
really wanted a son but got a girl he can unknowingly damage her sense
of personhood by treating her like a boy and shaming her when she acts
like a little girl. There are many masculine women in our society whose
personhood was not properly nurtured during childhood. "Daddy's tomboy"
for a girl is not anymore healthy than "Mommy's little girl" for a boy!
Another way
children are shamed is when they are told they are stupid, dumb, etc. When
adolescents go through a clumsy stage it is easy during those tender, vulnerable
years, to degrade their sense of personal value through family members
calling them names, even in times of humor. The gangly teen may laugh along
with the rest of the family, but is often crying inside.
Teenagers who
engage in sexual sin enter adulthood with guilt and shame dogging their
steps.
Adopted children
are sometimes stigmatized by our society. They grow up with a spirit of
rejection, feeling unwanted or illegitimate. Even as adults they often
feel loss because they do not know their biological parents and go to great
lengths to find them.
When children
are punished in anger or punished in the wrong way (slapping in the face,
etc.) their personal dignity is demolished by the authority figure in their
lives which can cause them to incorrectly surmise that God thinks they
have little value, too. A damaged person is often tempted to doubt God's
ability to restore from guilt and shame. God encourages all who were shamed
in their childhood, however, that "Thou shalt forget the shame of thy youth"
(Isaiah 54:4).
Adults can
be shamed, too, through divorce, failure, rape, bankruptcy or other traumas.
There are a
host of ways a person can be shamed. Ask our Father to show you how you
have been degraded by your life experiences. However your dignity may have
suffered, or your personhood destroyed, you need to realize that part of
the work of God in your life is to restore you to wholeness in your concepts
about yourself.
2. Shame produces
emotional pain.
When a person
is shamed his or her emotions are damaged. This causes a sense of loss,
hurt, and devaluation.
The macho mentality
refuses to acknowledge the reality of emotional pain boasting, "Sticks
and stones may break my bones, but words will never hurt me." God's Word,
however, teaches that words can injure the innermost part of a person (Proverbs
18:8). Unlike broken skin, though, a broken spirit does not automatically
heal.
Emotional pain
can be so real it can actually cause physical pain--heaviness in the chest,
upset of the digestive process, headaches, sleep disturbances, etc. Sometimes
there is a physical pain which is based solely in the emotions.
3. Shamed people
medicate their pain.
We humans lick
our emotional wounds by medicating our pain through a multitude of means:
sports, food, money, sex, television, personal achievements, immoral relationships,
drugs, alcohol, tobacco, rage and various other things. Some of them, in
themselves, are not wrong (take food for instance) but we abuse them by
over indulgence in an attempt to medicate our pain. In the thorough book,
Love Hunger, the doctors of the Minirth-Meier clinic spell out reasons
why we overeat and show how,
in most cases,
a person is actually attempting to fill a hole inside.
Many hurting
people turn to the church in an effort to alleviate the pain they feel.
After being involved for awhile they often drop out, still hurting. Some
people use religion to evade their pain and deny their true feelings.
Church is an
escape to them like theater is to someone else.
Pain calls
for alleviation. If the alleviation itself is sinful then the individual
feels guilt which produces more shame-pain which, in turn, calls for more
of the addictive substance or practice and so the cycle goes. This is how
a person, or a society,
becomes compulsive
and addicted.
JESUS CHRIST,
OUR SUBSTITUTE
I believe Jesus
Christ is alive today and able to meet our deepest needs and that these
next years will witness a revolutionary healing in the deep cores of hurting
people. They will no longer need to medicate pain because their gut feelings
will be healed and their compulsions will be forgotten in the light of
His grace! Jesus is not only our Guilt Offering,
but our Shame
Bearer as we shall see this month and next.
HOW DID JESUS
BEAR OUR SHAME?
All His sufferings
on our behalf, in a general sense, were for our shame when the Messiah
was publicly beaten, mocked, whipped, and nailed to the Cross. In a specific
sense, however, Jesus bore our shame in two distinct ways: when He was
spit upon.,
and when He
was exposed.
SHAME BY SPITTING
In the Old
Testament spitting in the face was a gesture of contempt, a deliberate
insult. Job, during his trial, was such an object of disgrace that people
spat upon him in disgust (Job 30:10). He not only lost his children, his
wealth, and his health--he lost his honor, too, and the people expressed
it by spitting on the poor fellow as they walked by.
Miriam, after
criticizing Moses for his choice of a wife, was smitten with leprosy. Moses
prayed for God to miraculously heal her rather than having her wait throughout
a seclusion period demanded for curing leprosy in the Levitical laws (Leviticus
13, 14). The Lord answered him, "If her father had but spit in her face,
should she not be ashamed seven days? let her be shut out from the camp
seven days, and after that let her be received in again" (Numbers 12:14).
In this scripture
we see reference to the accepted custom of a father spitting on his daughter
if she had behaved foolishly. The daughter would be publicly disgraced,
though not disowned, by her father's public spittle. After a period of
humiliation and isolation she would be welcomed back to her family. If
this seems harsh, and it was, just remember that a son who behaved foolishly
could be brought to the city's gate and stoned! (Deuteronomy 21:18-21).
The key thought
is that many ancient peoples, not only Hebrews, expressed shame by spitting.
THEY SHALL
SPIT UPON HIM
Jesus Christ
was spat upon during the course of His vicarious sufferings (Matthew 27:30;
Mark 15:19). He foretold this would happen two different times: when He
was on earth (Mark 10:34; Luke 18:32) and centuries before He became flesh.
The Word spoke through Isaiah, "I gave My back to the smiters, and my cheeks
to them that plucked off the hair:
I hid not My
face from SHAME AND SPITTING" (Isaiah 50:6).
Notice how
the phrase "shame and spitting" go together in Isaiah's prophecy. Jesus
actually bore our shame when He was spit upon so we could be emotionally
healed of shame and disgrace! Christ was mocked and devalued, jeered and
mistreated on our behalf.
HAVE YOU EVER
BEEN DESPISED?
Think back
over the course of your life. Can you remember times when your sense of
value was cheapened by the behavior of others? If they were your authority
figures did you accept the unkind remarks they made about you as true of
yourself? Have you ever said about yourself the same type of things others
said long ago? If you answer yes to any of these questions then
you may be
living in a very real sense of shame.
Jesus Christ
made those He contacted feel better about themselves. Even an adulteress
walked away with her sense of worth restored (John 8). Isaiah predicted
that the Messiah would be "...despised and rejected of men" as Spurgeon
commented "so the reader need not bear it" (Isaiah 53:3). Christ bore the
emotional ills of His people so we would not have to medicate our pain.
Instead we can believe that He "...carried our sorrows" for us (Isaiah
53:4).
Go to Him now
and ask Him to minister this vital provision in your life.
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