Ray Rice, Manhood, and the Gospel

Every five minutes, my phone lights up with another notification about the Ray Rice saga/scandal/controversy/your word choice here.  If you somehow missed this news item, I’ll sum it up real quick:

Ray Rice, former starting running back for the NFL’s Baltimore Ravens, was suspended two games by Commissioner Roger Goodell for his arrest on domestic abuse charges.  At the time, Goodell claims the NFL had only one video, one showing Rice pulling his then-fiancee (now wife) Janay out of an elevator, the latter obviously unconscious.

Now, another video has surfaced, one that clearly shows Mr. Rice punching Janay in the face, knocking her unconscious.  Rice was immediately released by the Ravens and suspended indefinitely by the NFL.

So, there’s the story. 

At this point, people are calling for all sorts of measures, from Goodell’s being fired/resignation to boycotting the NFL for a week or an entire season.  Some have said that the NFL has “lost its way.”

My take: None of these actions, in the long run, will work.  Roger Goodell’s being fired doesn’t fix the problem, because, as far as we know, Roger Goodell doesn’t beat his wife.  Boycotting the NFL may cost teams a few hundred dollars in advertising (and that’s an iffy maybe), but they have plenty to spare.

If Goodell did indeed view this second video before making his decision (which is now a possibility), I do believe he should resign for outrageously poor handling of the situation (Also, I don’t think Goodell’s a good commissioner to begin with, but that’s besides the point).  However, this doesn’t fix “the problem.”

The problem isn’t Ray Rice.  The problem isn’t (just) the misogyny that is all too present in hip-hop and sports culture (two cultures that seem to go hand-in-hand).  The problem isn’t (just) absent fathers not teaching their sons to respect women.  The problem, ultimately, is sin.  Misogyny and poor parenting, ultimately, are a result of sin in the human heart.  That’s not to downplay the seriousness of those issues.  It’s striking at the heart of them.

While changing external things may help in the short run, changing the human heart produces change in the long run.  And there’s only one capable of changing the human heart.  He is the answer for Ray Rice’s problem, and mine.  And yours.

See, while not all men hit their wives, all men are sinners (all women are sinners too, but the focus of this post, as evidenced in the title, is men).  All men fall short of God’s good and glorious standard of manhood.  We are lustful.  We are prideful.  We want what we want when we want it, and we will do whatever it takes to get it.  And because the world around us is fallen, we are told everyday to celebrate our manhood.  We are told that this is normal, that men are tough and strong and get what they want, no matter what anyone else says.  Rap music tells us that the objectification of women and the celebration of extra-marital sex is not only normal, but right.  If we’re not getting rich, getting trashed and going home with a different girl every night, the culture around us tells us that we’re doing it wrong.

Jesus reverses all that.  Jesus, the God-man, shows us that to be a man means to be a servant to our brothers, not a selfish swindler (John 13).  Jesus shows us that to be a man means to show love to the least of these (John 4, John 8:1-11).  Most of all, Jesus, at the cross, first and foremost as our Savior, and secondly as our Lord and example, shows us that to love someone is not to use them and abuse them for personal gain, but to do whatever is necessary, even laying down our life, to meet their needs and provide for them (Matt. 26:26-29, Matt. 27:32-54, Isaiah 53). 

When we come to follow Jesus, we embrace His Lordship over every area of our lives, and this changes everything.  As we give up a life of sin, trusting Jesus to save us and forgive us, we turn to trust Jesus as the authority in our lives, trusting that He is a much better God than we ever could be.  And His reign extends to our relationships with women.  Jesus, through Paul, tells husbands to love their wives as He loved the church, sacrificing Himself for her.  He actually says that to love your wife is to love yourself. 

In a culture that equates loving yourself with pleasing yourself through using women, Jesus says loving your wife, serving your wife, is how you love yourself.  Jesus says there is infinitely more joy in loving, serving and dedicating yourself to one woman all your life than jumping around from girl to girl, getting what you want and moving on.

Jesus says in Matthew 19 that when a man and woman marry, they become one flesh.  So, biblically, what happened when Ray Rice punched his wife?  He hurt not only Janay, but himself.  “For no one ever hated his own flesh, but nourishes and cherishes it, just as Christ does the church.” (Eph. 5:29).  To raise your hand against your wife is to raise your hand against the God who gave her to you.  To attack your wife is to attack your own flesh, pulling apart the one flesh union God designed for marriage before the creation of the world.

I’d be willing to bet that most men reading this post have never hit their wives.  Many men reading this may not have led a lifestyle of lust, going from woman to woman.  But every man reading this post is a sinner.  We’ve all fallen short, whether that’s in failing to love our wives completely, failing to honor women with our eyes, tongues, minds and hearts, failing to be humble and gracious toward others…you really don’t have to look far, unfortunately.  While I’m not married yet, I most definitely am a sinner.  There are far too many times where I have failed to honor my sisters in Christ, far too many times where I’ve failed to be humble and gentle in speech toward all peoples, and far too many times where I have failed to reflect the image of God like I was created to do.

That’s the bad news.  Here’s the good news: Jesus saves sinners.  And once they become Christians, He continues to save them, over and over and over, from their failings, day by day, transforming them to look more like Him until one day, all sin is crushed.  He lived the perfect life that I may be counted righteous before a holy God and died on the cross that I may be forgiven.  He rose again to lead me as my Lord and teach me to trust Him and live like Him.

What’s our responsibility, men?  Repent.  Humble ourselves before God, genuinely confess that we’ve gone astray, whether that’s by hitting your wife or speaking harshly to her, whether that’s by living a life of lust or living a life of pride, and that we need Christ.  We need Him to be the Lord of our lives, and we trust Him to graciously come rule over us, and through His amazing grace, forgive us, and restore us to God.

Whether that’s the first time you’ve ever repented and placed your faith in Christ or the 500th time you’ve repented and placed your faith in Christ, know this: He is faithful to finish what He starts (Philippians 1:6).  Far from removing responsibility from us, this calls us to, as Paul says a few verses over in Philippians, “work out” our “own salvation with fear and trembling, for it is God who works in you, both to will and to work for his good pleasure.”

Domestic abuse is a serious problem because sin is a serious problem.  While domestic abuse is and should be illegal, and any man that hits his wife absolutely deserves legal punishment and needs to seek help from others concerning anger management, the deeper problem is always sin, and Jesus is the only one that can fix that.

In the long run, our only hope of overcoming the serious issue of domestic abuse, of any sin, is the work, person and power of Jesus Christ, for both men and women.  Come, Lord.

May we seek you.  May we repent, hating the sin that keeps us from you, despising it and desiring to walk with you.  May we trust your grace, your cross, your righteousness.  May we trust your power as our Lord to overcome our sin.  May you finish what you started, in all of us, Lord.

God bless,
Neal E.

What Are We Pursuing?

When I was in middle school, I changed my hairstyle quite often. Like every other middle school student, popularity and what other people thought of me mattered more than anything. So my hairdresser, bless her soul, changed the way I looked several times over the course of a few years. One month, I’d want it short, the next, I’d want it longer, the next, I’d want my hair styled in the front. Now, none of these haircuts looked good. None. Not a single one made me feel better about myself, and not one of them gained me a single friend. So why did I do it?

Because I was pursuing a certain kind of image, namely, the image set by my peers and the culture around me. I wasn’t satisfied with who I was. I wanted to be who others told me to be.

Culture creates and fosters the idea of an “image” that we all have to fit into. If you aren’t “x,” you aren’t cool like us. If you don’t have “y,” you can’t sit at the cool kid’s table. You need “z” to make you happy. The pressure is enormous to be like the rest of the world. Look at any makeup, cologne or clothing advertisement. It’s pretty ridiculous. And it changes everyday!

And even if we manage to not give in to cultural expectations about who we should be and what we should do, we set up our own image of what we want ourselves to be, and we don’t even live up to that. For example, if I want to be more athletic, and believe that would make me happier, I chase that, when the truth is, while I should definitely get in shape and take care of my body, I will never be the first guy picked in a pick-up game, in any sport. While I can get better, it’s apparent if you’ve ever seen me play, I was not born to be an athlete.

We are all pursuing an image, a picture, of what we want our lives to look like, of what we want to be. Maybe that’s married with three kids living in a modest home in Birmingham, maybe it’s living in another country as an international businessman. Maybe it’s a professional athlete. Regardless of the details, we all are pursuing something.

The Bible has something to say about that. Let’s start at the beginning, in Genesis 1:27:

“So God created man in his own image, in the image of God he created him; male and female he created them.”

So while we are pursuing our own self-made or culturally made images, God tells us we are made in His image. While we are busy chasing other, lesser images, God says, “You were made by me, to look like me!”

Now, what’s the problem? Same thing it usually always is—sin. We have decided that to reflect the image and glory of God, to walk in His ways and be like Him, is not good. We believe we can do better than God. Although He is our Creator, we have decided we want to make ourselves in our image—we want to determine where we should go and what we should be—we want to be our own gods. And we are terrible at it. It is not cute when a child talks back to his parents and the people and culture around him says, “Oh, he’s just so independent.” No, he’s not independent—he’s a sinner that rebels against God and the authority of the parents God has given him.

So, again, we all pursue an image, whether self-made or culture-made. We know that God has made us in His image and we should pursue it. But we also know that we are sinners, dead in our sin and not reflecting the image and glory of God.

So what do we do? This is where the gospel comes in. This is where we see that the life, death and resurrection of Jesus Christ really is good news for sinners.

God made us to enjoy His presence, to know His love and provision and power and glory, to be like Him and model His excellence. We fell from that. But the beautiful, life-changing, world-rocking truth of the gospel is that God did not give up on His creation. He would not lose His loved ones. I’m convinced the reason we have stories that glorify and praise someone that will not give up on love, even in the worst of circumstances, is because we, being made in God’s image, are impressed and awestruck at someone who loves so jealously and so sacrificially. We find that kind of love first and foremost in the gospel. The gospel is the true story of the God who would not, does not, and never will give up on His people, no matter how far away they fall from Him. While we were still God’s enemies, we were also the objects of His love, and He gave His very life to show the magnitude of that love. God is holy, and He cannot tolerate sin that takes glory away from Him. But God, when we could not come to Him, came to us in the person of Jesus Christ and worked our salvation, and now effectively calls us to trust in Him, be saved, and follow Him. God had a purpose in making us, and He had a purpose in saving us—to bring us into His fellowship, enjoy Him, and be like Him.

What God is accomplishing in sinners through the salvation of Christ is not just about forgiveness of sins and eternal life. Those are really good and necessary things. I need to be forgiven, and of course I want to live forever with God. But if we read 2 Corinthians 5:17, Paul tells us, “Therefore, if anyone is in Christ, he is a new creation. The old has passed away, behold the new has come.”

Our sin keeps us from reflecting the image of God. But because Jesus died and rose again, we can repent, confessing our sin and our sinful state before God, trusting Christ to come be our Lord and Savior, and not only are we forgiven and righteous through faith, but we get new life, where the Creator begins creating us anew in Christ Jesus.

So what we pursue should be the image of our God. We have a higher purpose than to be what society says we should be, or what we say we should be. The God who created us alone has the true right to tell us who and what to be. And He calls us to be like Him, by finding joy in Him and reflecting His holy character and love, by being like Him in all we do. We do this not by our own strength, but by trust in the Savior’s grace to change our hearts and our desires, and by walking by the Spirit. Sanctification is by grace, too. Don’t forget that.

Now, quick clarifier here: This does not mean we are going to be divine in essence. We will not ever be like God in the sense of being divine and omniscient and all-powerful, etc. However, in His character, in His joy, in His love—-oh absolutely, yes, we shall be like Him in this way, if we are in Christ. This is the joy of glorification—the completion of our salvation, to be just like Jesus, who is the only good man that’s ever lived, to perfectly abide in God’s love, to find complete joy and satisfaction in Him, and to be the holy men and women God has created us to be. What a day it will be when this becomes reality!

So I urge you to turn around from sin and idolatry, confess the Lordship of Christ over your life and trust Him to save you, to forgive you and stand as your perfection before the Father. And let Him become your pursuit. What does that mean? It means instead of pursuing joy in this world, which will pass away, you pursue joy in who God is. Instead of pursuing worldly love, you pursue God’s love. Worldly love, like that of a spouse, is wonderful, but it pales in comparison to the sacrificial, eternity-changing love of God. Instead of pursuing identity in a society and culture that changes its standards every day, find identity in belonging to Christ, and living by God’s standards and ways, which are full of joy, life and peace.

The pursuit of God, of His love and His joy and His ways, is so much higher, better and rewarding than pursuing something lesser. The Creator is better than the creation.

Lord, may we pursue you because you have graciously pursued us in Christ. May that not just be a cute phrase that we say in church, but the desire of our hearts. May we spend time in your Word, to know who you are and find joy in knowing that you are who you are for us. May we reach others, to tell them there is something better than sin and this world. May we not fail to find our identity, purpose and joy in who you are and what you have done for us.

God bless,

Neal E.

Next week, I’ll talk about what it really means to be holy. What does being holy really mean and look like, practically? Hopefully, for my sake and yours, we’ll understand that more after next week.

If you have any ideas for this blog or my other blog (reporternealembry.wordpress.com), please feel free to email me at nembry@charter.net