Understanding and Battling Shame Through Faith

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shame is a painful emotion that comes from a consciousness of guilt, shortcoming, or impropriety. let me illustrate those three possible causes of this painful emotion take guilt for example suppose you against your conscience withhold information on your income tax form and send it off and uh forget about it and for two years nothing happens and you feel nothing and then suddenly notification arise arrives that you're being investigated and it comes out that you have lied and you have stolen and it is public and you feel now shame for the guilt that is yours [00:41:52]

now one of the things that emerges from this little analysis of a dictionary definition of Shame is that there is some shame that is Justified and some shame that's not justified I think all of us would agree that if if I lie on my income tax and withheld information about honorariums because I don't think Uncle Sam can find out about honorariums and then I was uncovered and it became public most of us would agree I ought to feel shame that's right to feel it [00:21:53]

do not be ashamed then of testifying to our Lord nor of me his prisoner but take your share of suffering for the gospel in the power of God now two things are spoken of as uh shame that ought not to be in this text number one we ought not to feel shame about testifying to Jesus Christ that would be misplaced shame if shame starts to rise in your heart when you have an occasion to Bear witness to Jesus is bad it ought not to be there that's misplaced shame we must battle it [00:05:28]

the hidden Criterion of what constitutes misplaced shame is whatever exalts Jesus ought not to bring shame upon his people no matter what the world thinks of us now let's look at another text to illustrate this second Corinthians 12 verses 9 to 10. in this text you remember Paul is struggling with the thorn of the flesh The Thorn In the Flesh and uh he asked God Christ to take it away and and Jesus responds to him in verse 9 of second Corinthians 12. my grace is sufficient for you [00:06:55]

weaknesses and insults are usually in ordinary Human Experience Grounds For Shame if you try something and you look like a weakling it is shame if you try something and all you get is insults from people you feel shame ordinarily an ordinary human criteria now Paul says just the opposite he says weaknesses and insults cause me to now exalt which is the opposite of Shame exalting why how can this be notice the Criterion that he's using this is the mark of a Christian [00:08:01]

the biblical Criterion for misplaced shame and well-placed shame is radically God centered the biblical Criterion for misplaced shame says don't feel shame at something that honors God even if you look weak and foolish and wrong in the world's eyes and well-placed shame the Criterion there is do feel shame when you've had a hand in dishonoring God no matter how strong or wise or right you look in the world Orient what you feel shame about on God not on man [00:13:21]

the answer to the question how you battle shame whether misplaced or well placed is the same in principle namely you battle it by battling the unbelief that feeds its life now let me illustrate with three closing instances of Shame I'm going to take well-placed shame and show how to battle that and why to battle it I'm going to take an instance of misplaced shame like shame in the gospel and I'm going to take an instance of misplaced shame where others are keeping shame upon you that you ought not to have [00:14:19]

how do you battle well-placed shame for example Luke 7 says there was a woman who came to Jesus he was in the house of a Pharisee named Simon eating she was a sinner probably a euphemism for a prostitute she comes in and her face is streaming with tears of penitence evidently had heard Jesus or known Jesus in some context and had been broken this is an occasion for well-placed change he is a sinner she ought to be ashamed of what she's done so she comes with tears of Shame and tears of uh penitence on her face [00:15:28]

now what is at stake at this moment belief in the promises of Jesus if she believes the Pharisees she will pull her veil down over her face and Scurry out and be done for her as a woman if she believes Jesus she will stand and back away with his promise filling her and walk out into a new life and Hope the issue for how to battle on an inappropriately extended and crippling well-placed shame is the Battle of unbelief will she believe Jesus or the forces around her that are shaming her [00:18:14]

Paul talks about his own battle with feeling shame for something that ought not to cause shame because it is God honoring and God glorifying let's read verse 12 to see how he fought this battle he said in verse 12 therefore I suffer as I do that is I take insults I take the imprisonment of others then he says but I am not ashamed for I know whom I have believed there it is I am sure that he who is able I am sure that he is able to guard unto that day what has been entrusted to me [00:19:31]

you fight it by believing the promise that in the end all the efforts of people to shame the people of God will fail and there are dozens and dozens of texts that say that for example Isaiah 45 17 you shall not be put to shame or confounded to all eternity says the Lord Romans 10 11 no one who believes in the Lord will be put to shame for all the evil for all the deceit for all the Judgment for all the criticism That Others May Heap Upon Us in order to increase our shame [00:21:37]

the promise stands sure they will not succeed for the people of God the people of God will be Vindicated the truth will be made known those who trust him will be glorified all who believe in the Lord will never be put to shame we fight with those kinds of truths against misplaced shame it's a battle of unbelief this is light and Truth god-centered preaching to help you see Christ clearly and treasure him truly [00:22:27]

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