Remembering Father Neuhaus (1936-2009)
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About John Shore

A former magazine writer and editor, John Shore’s life as a Christian writer began the moment when, at 38 years old, he was very suddenly (and while in a supply closet at his job, of all places) walloped by the benevolent hand of God.

 

 

 

John's most recent book is Midlife Manual for Men, which he co-authored with Stephen Arterburn, author of the best-selling Every Man series and host of the nationally syndicated Christian radio show, New Life Live. Midlife Manual is the first of four books John and Steve will be writing together for Bethany House Publishers; the next, Being Christian, will be out in September 2008. John is also the author of I'm OK--You're Not: The Message We're Sending Non-Christians and Why We Should Stop (NavPress); Penguins, Pain and the Whole Shebang (Seabury Books); and co-author, with Richard Lederer, of Comma Sense (St. Martin's). Both Penguins and Comma Sense won San Diego Book Awards for best books in their respective categories (Religious/Spiritual, and How To/Reference).

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John Shore

Writer, Editor, Author

Friday, November 21, 2008

"Can You Help My Husband Feel Like a Bride of Christ?"

Yesterday a young woman sent me an e-mail in which she wrote:

I have a question that I've been researching for quite a few days now, with not much success. Recently, my husband tearfully confided to me that he trusts fully in Jesus (since age 6) for his salvation, but he finds it hard to feel the love for God that Christians often speak about. He is a man of integrity---he is kind, compassionate, and generous. He is knowledgeable in the Bible and believes that it is the true word of God.

Is it possible for someone to be a Christian and be reverent to God, but not feel love for him? Is it just more difficult for men to connect emotionally with God?  I have never heard this topic touched on or talked about in any capacity. 

My husband is a highly intellectual individual---a thinker. I want to be able to understand his feelings, but I can't relate and haven't heard this issue addressed.  I would be truly thankful if you have any ideas or know of any resources that may expound on these things. 

Here's the short version of my answer to this earnest, good-hearted wife:

Tell your husband not to worry. His is a problem of language, not soul. Christians use the same language as everyone around them, but oftentimes what they mean by the words they use is so different from what the rest of the culture would mean if they used those same words that a kind of disconnect in the Christian's mind can result. And nowhere is there a bigger difference between the way Christians and everybody else uses the language than in the way Christians talk about their "love" of Jesus.

Not long after becoming Christian I read about how a believer is meant to be the bride of Christ. My first thought was, "Oh no. I look awful in taffeta." Then I tried to picture Jesus and me feeding each other cake at our wedding reception, and me getting it all over my veil, and everyone laughing and laughing until we all remembered that it's wrong to be gay.

See? It's a problem of language. I'm not a bride; I'm never going to be a bride. Jesus never got down on one knee and proposed to me. I would have loved to see his line of groomsmen, but ... no. (I'm voting that his best man would be Isaiah.)

I think Christians feel stress over the way their emotions don't fully accord with the language they use when they talk about God. I can say I love Jesus, but the relationship I've then connected with that word is so radically unlike any other relationship with which I ever connect that word that I've automatically set myself in uncharted territory. As much and as readily as we talk about Jesus as if he were an actual, living, corporeal being, he's not. We can't actually, literally walk with Jesus. We can't hold his hand. We can't get into anything like a normal conversation with him. We can't send him a letter, phone him, hug him, tousle his hair, or buy him a tie he has to pretend to like for Christmas. The relationship we have with Jesus isn't anything like any other relationship we ever have with anyone---and yet we talk about it using the exact same words we use to talk about all of our other earthly, loving relationships.

I think this perpetual linguistic dichotomy causes Christians stress and even doubt. I think Christians hear other Christians rhapsodizing about Jesus as if he really were their husband or lover or friend, and then they, following suit, say the same things about their relationship with Jesus---and then secretly feel weird because of the disconnect between the language they've used and the reality of the relationship they've used that language to describe. I think they fear that disconnect they've sensed is an indication that they're in some way disconnected from God. I that's what happened with this woman's husband. I think it speaks volumes about the quality of his relationship with Christ (not to mention of his marriage) that he would be honest enough that perceived disconnection to bring it to his wife.

Young man: Fear not! You're not suffering from anything more serious than a language issue. You love Jesus, and Jesus loves you. Your problem is that you're stuck, as are we all, using the only language you have to describe the one relationship in your life for which there is, in fact, no language at all.


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