I Give Up the Desire to Be Right

11th Day of Lenten Devotional Series
Guest Post by: Monica Spees, First Baptist Church, Bowling Green, KY

Proverbs 3:30 (ESV) Do not contend with a man for no reason, when he has done you no harm.



Growing up, sometimes I was "that kid." The precocious know-it-all who corrected friends' grammar and challenged facts in classmates' stories. Let me tell ya, nobody likes "that kid." I wish I could say I’ve completely grown out of that annoying trait, but it pops up from time to time. And it’s not just me. I see it on television and on my social media feeds: the desire to be right. Not just the private assumption of rightness, but the public declaration of it.

I’m getting married in June. As my fiancé and I have bought a house, started setting up joint finances and been planning a wedding, I’ve wanted to be right about a lot of things. In fact, I’ve often insisted that I’m right. No, that painting should be hung over there. No, my idea is better for paying bills. No, no no. Not only that, but a new house and an approaching wedding add stress to two people individually and as a couple, and we’ve both jabbed each other with some sharp criticism here and there. Our strategy during these little quarrels has become to pause before spewing out more assertions of rightness and remind the other, “I don’t think you’re stupid. I don’t think your ideas are bad. Let’s figure out a solution. I’m listening.”

The same poison that tries to inject itself into the veins of my relationship infiltrates cyberspace every second, particularly in regard to politics. Whether complete strangers or close friends, more people than I can count seem to repeat the same refrain: How could anyone like this person? I hate all people who support this policy. Just unfriend me if you’re a liberal. I’ve disowned all my conservative family members. Disappointingly, it’s sometimes Christians hurling these verbal grenades at other Christians. I rarely see anyone tell the other side, “I don’t think you’re stupid. I’m listening.” Being right – or wanting others to think I’m right – isn’t important enough in my life to hang on to this Lent season, or ever.

And if we’re not careful, the desire to be right will dismember the Body of Christ.


Proverbs 17:14, 19 Starting a quarrel is like breaching a dam; so drop the matter before a dispute breaks out… Whoever loves a quarrel loves sin; whoever builds a high gate invites destruction.






Comments

  1. What a moving BIG idea, to be found in such a small brief blog post. Well done!

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