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Encouragement for Today
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[Aubrey Sampson]
February 11, 2019
Responding with Compassion (When Youâd Rather Not)
[AUBREY SAMPSON](
âYou came near when I called you and you said, âDo not fear.â You, LORD, took up my case; you redeemed my life. LORD, you have seen the wrong done to me. Uphold my cause!â [Lamentations 3:57-59]( (NIV)
I would like to tell you I responded by taking the high road and was a model of maturity. But to be honest, I became slightly unhinged.Â
Years ago, an old colleague accused me of gossiping behind her back. It wasnât a soft accusation, either; it was bitter, hurtful and destructive. She sent me vicious messages on social media and began attacking my reputation.
This was the first time Iâd experienced a false accusation, my first time being blamed for something I was entirely innocent of doing, and the first time my name was dragged through the mud.
I actually typed up about 25 versions of vicious retorts (which thankfully the Lord nudged me to delete before sending). I vented for days, cried, lost sleep. I made up imaginary conversations with this woman, including all of the witty things I would say to put her in her proper place. Then I enacted these conversations ⦠aloud ⦠in my car ⦠by myself ⦠like the dignified woman of God that I am.
This continued until I realized how much power I was giving this injustice. I was allowing it to steal my joy, creativity, thought life, prayer life and disposition. On top of it all, I completely lost perspective. In my mind, I turned this woman into a villain, rather than a human being who was likely walking through some hardship herself.
I neglected to feel or show compassion, refusing to see her as a woman created in the image of God, who needs Jesus as much as I do, who needs her pain alleviated just like anyone else.
The book of Lamentations resonates with me, because in it, we find Jeremiah crying out to God on behalf of people who have continually rejected, ridiculed and rebuked him.
Jeremiahâs laments are rugged and oh so real. But somehow, in the midst of his raw pain, he still chooses to show compassion to the same folks who push him away.
Instead of nursing a wounded ego, Jeremiah focuses outward, passionately advocating for his nation. The prophet laments the pain of others while continually surrendering his own fear, worry and suffering to the Lord.
Jeremiah never succumbs to the burning urge to defend his personal reputation (nor for that matter, have ridiculous imaginary conversations in his car).
Whatever relational difficulty youâre facing right now, you can adopt the same attitude as Jeremiah, which says, âDo not fear. God is near. He will take up my case. Godâs got this.â
The undeserved compassion God has shown us in Jesus can empower us to follow Jeremiahâs example and show others â especially those who havenât earned it â that same supernatural compassion.
Itâs unlikely Iâll ever become BFFs with my accuser. In fact, one way I protect my heart is to maintain healthy boundaries with her. Still, I can choose compassion for her and ask God to open my eyes to her pain. I can pray for her and lament with her.
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