Without a doubt there are plenty of cringe worthy things that come from the mouths of well-meaning and good intentioned friends and family that if they paused, for even just a moment, would probably have never had said it.The same goes for Christians. There are plenty of Christians, me being one of them, that say or have said things to other Christians, and even worse said them to people that arenât, that if said to them, would make them want to fight the person saying it. âJust give it to Jesusâ is one of those things.
It isnât that the person saying it doesnât care what youâre going through, they do, but they may not know any other way to help. This has got to be one of the most misused and abused Christian phrases ever uttered by well-meaning Jesus followers. Unfortunately Iâve been on both ends of this misguided attempt to provide âwise councilâ. Somewhere along the way Christians turned King Davidâs song lyrics and Peterâs encouraging reminder into a witty, solve all, catch phrase that has often caused more frustration than help. Hereâs three reasons why it isnât exactly helpful.
1. It isnât Biblical.
Weâll at least the way that weâve interpreted it isnât. As I already mentioned, âJust give it to Jesusâ most closely comes from David in Psalm 55:22 and Peterâs reiteration of it in 1Peter 5:7. The verse tells us to cast our burdens or, when Peter says it, anxieties on God. The problem isnât with the word âcastâ, that actually means âgiveâ or âtossâ. The issue is with the words âburdenâ and âanxietyâ. People have taken these to mean any problems or negative circumstances that we experience, but what these words refer to isnât that simple.
Each word means something far deeper. The original Hebrew translation of âburdenâ is actually âgiftâ. Thatâs a bit unexpected. In this case âgiftâ can mean affliction, trials, and troubles, but it can also mean things that are agreeable and pleasing to us. While that may be confusing, the purpose of why David says this is far more important and clear. David is telling us that no matter our portion from God, we âcommit [it] to His custody, and use to His glory; and particularly commit the keeping of thy soul to Him.â Itâs about our ability to trust Godâs faithfulness in keeping His promises to us. Likewise, the word âanxietiesâ doesnât mean that you arenât concerned for our circumstances, but is about letting circumstance divide our heart between God and anything else. In those cases, we are to give over those things to God so that our heart would not be divided and we are not drawn from Him who sustains us. It isnât always easy or clear how to do this, so at the end Iâll talk about that a bit more.
I know what youâre thinking, if âGive it to Jesusâ isnât exactly biblical, what is? In Galatians 6, Paul tells us how we are to respond to otherâs burdens, so that we would honor Jesus. He says, âBear one anotherâs burdens, and so fulfill the law of Christ.â The appropriate response to a brother or sisterâs heavy burden is that you bear it with them. While Paul was in prison and in dire circumstance, he continued to have hope and comfort in Christ, but he still asked for people, like Timothy, to come be with him. Â He still needed the comfort and encouragement of fellow believers to help bear the burden. While it may be hard to carry your burden by yourself, it becomes easier and easier with the more people who help carry it.
âBearing otherâs burdens is often far easier than bearing our own.â Tweet this!
2. Itâs Dismissive.
It really is. Itâs like asking someone, in passing, âHey, how ya doing?â and they arenât quite with the program so they offer more than the standard, âGoodâ or âBusyâ, and actually tell you how they are doing and it isnât all good. All of the sudden youâre left standing there, with no idea what to say, so you go to the other standard Christian âdeflect and evadeâ counter-measure, âThatâs tough, bro. Iâll pray for you.â While you might believe that they actually need someone to pray for them, you only say it as a means to indicate to the other person that you donât know what to say and you want to leave. Once youâre out of there, whether you actually pray for the person is a different story. When you tell someone to âJust give it to Jesusâ youâre telling the person that you donât know what to say and have nothing to offer them. It communicates loud and clear âThat sucks that YOUâRE dealing with that, but Iâm not and I donât plan to.â As I mentioned in number 1, if youâre a Christian, you donât get off that easy. If you want to honor Jesus, you have to bear their burdens with them.
3: Â Itâs Not Tangible.
Youâre not there to make the situation go away, although I would argue that real love does eliminate burden if itâs within their ability to do so, you know, Jesusâ whole âno greater love and a friend laying down his lifeâ example. But just throwing out those four words and bouncing out isnât very Jesus. The burden brother/sister needs comfort, wisdom, insight, encouragement, and the list goes on. Youâre gifted by the God for the purpose of helping and serving others. Thereâs a whole list of gifts in Romans 12. Chances are you have one of them and it wasnât given to you for your benefit. If we have the ability to lighten the burden of otherâs, why are we so stingy?
It really has everything to do with our heart. If youâre seeking Jesus and allowing His Holy Spirit to transform you, your heart will change, you wonât have a choice in that. But we have to be willing to recognize that we make the decision to be like Him, because He never forces Himself on us. Sometimes, itâs a matter of not knowing how to respond to anotherâs difficult situation. Thatâs ok, but itâs not ok to never grow out of that.
Knowing how to respond isnât always the easy. Hereâs how theologian John Gill explained Galatians 6:2 and what bearing each otherâs burden should look like,
ââŚby gently reproving them, by comforting them when over-pressed with guilt, by sympathizing with them in their sorrow, by praying to God for to manifest his pardoning grace to them, and by forgiving them themselves, so far as they are faults committed against themâŚâ
Itâs things like, praying with them in that moment, giving a word of encouragement, taking there kids for a couple of hours to let them have a moment to think, buying their groceries, making them a meal, just being with them, crying with them, hugging them⌠I imagine if you thought about it, you come up with better ones.
If we stopped assuming that the bible was written for other people, maybe we would be able to live it better ourselves. It wasnât written for you to quote it to others as a means of getting out of doing life with them. Yes all scripture is “profitable for teaching, reproof, correction, and training in righteousness and so that we may be equipped for every good work“. It exists as a means of encouraging others and as the foundation for providing wise counsel, but if we try to apply it to othersâ life before we apply it to our own, it becomes lifeless and heavy.
âWhen we can accept that the bible is written to us first, then we can better followers of Jesus.â Tweet this!
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