Shedding Shame

Published: Dec. 9, 2019, 5:15 a.m.

WINNING WITH THE WORDby Dr. MaryAnn Diorio “Winning with the Word” is a weekly blog that will help you to be a winner in life by applying God’s principles for living the abundant life as found in the Bible, God’s manual for life. AN INVITATION TO YOU: To follow this blog, click here.  If this blog has blessed you, please encourage your family and friends to subscribe as well. Thank you! ______________________________________ Do you prefer listening instead of reading? Then click below to listen to today’s blog post: ____________________________________________________ https://media.blubrry.com/winning_with_the_word/content.blubrry.com/winning_with_the_word/WWW_Podcast_12092019_Shedding_Shame.mp3 Shame is to the heart as chains are to the body. It imprisons us and causes us great emotional pain.Shame keeps us bound to the past and prevents us from moving forward into the future with joy and expectation. What exactly is shame? In his wonderful 1828 dictionary, Noah Webster defines shame as "a painful sensation excited by a consciousness of guilt, or of having done something which injures reputation; or by that which nature or modesty prompts us to conceal. Shame is particularly excited by the disclosure of actions which, in the view of men, are mean and degrading." Most, if not all, of us have experienced shame in one way or another. I come from a poor family of eight children. Were it not for the generosity of the nuns at the Catholic school I attended, we would have often gone to bed hungry. Frequently, the nuns would graciously give me a big bag of their leftover egg salad sandwiches to take home to my family. As I rode the school bus with that large shopping bag filled with the nuns' pungent sandwiches on my lap, I felt shame. Shame because the other kids on the bus not only knew what I was carrying, but also why.  Shame because I believed the lie that poor people were inferior.  Shame is the lie that says you're not good enough. While guilt says I MADE a mistake, shame says I AM a mistake.   Where does shame come from? Shame has two sources:1-Shame can come from our own sin.2-Shame can come from the sins of others against us.Let's look at each source.First, shame can come from our own sin. When we disobey God's Word and do something He has commanded us not to do, we feel shame because we know we have done wrong. We also feel shame because we have been found out by God--Who knows everything anyway--and shame because we may have exposed ourselves to the displeasure or scrutiny of others and, as a result, have gone down a notch in their estimation of us. Shame from our own sin makes us want to hide. And so we do. We hide in our jobs, in our hobbies, in social media, in our relationships, in our busy lives. Anything to avoid facing the pain of our shame. Second, shame can come from the sins of others against us. For example, our parents may have spoken negative words to us as children---words that wounded our hearts.  Have you ever heard these words as a child? __"You'll never amount to anything."  __"You're so clumsy!" __"You're stupid." __"You're fat." __"Our family is poor." __"No one will ever love you." __"I wish I never had you!" __"You were an accident." __Why can't you be like your brother? Your sister? __"You're ugly." __'You're (You fill in the blank)." Words such as these linger with us all of our lives, imprisoning us in shame, unless we deal with them. One of the worst things about shame is that, if we don't deal with it, we tend to pass it on to others, especially to the next generation. We do this by blaming them for our problems or by shaming them. For example, a mother who hates her own overweight body will often criticize her daughter's food choices, thereby passing on to her daughter a sense of shame about her body. A husband who was belittled by his boss during the day will come home and belittle his son in order...