Matthew J Thiessen Profile picture
May 9, 2019 23 tweets 10 min read Read on X
These are very good questions. My impulsive response is "yes" to all.
I realize I’m RTing this as a Christian white male, and anything I have to say on this comes with a lot of context re: my privilege, and anything else so many other Christian white males have said, with no empathy for the mother or her child once he or she leaves the womb.
So much is wrong with how we’ve gotten here, and I’m not talking about the progressive side.
It seems like once we Christians decide a thing is a sin, and the "other" group is committing it, we feel entitled to throw out any pretense at empathy or respect. They are not worthy of dignity, or the effort it would take to lift them up. Bc God loves us, bc we "have less sin."
God does not exclude us because we have more sin.

He includes us, because he GIVES us his Holiness.
I believe he would love and respect and lift up the mother—the same as he would her child, unborn or after birth—no matter her choice.

No matter her choice.
Whether it’s a sin or not, some sins we commit, not knowing what we do. He spoke directly on the cross about that.

Sometimes the life he gave us is more complicated or nuanced than our small-minded theologies have provided for.
Me yelling at someone from my limited perspective about how unholy their decision is does nothing to show the holiness of God.

In fact, I am representing Christ in a decidedly anti-Christlike manner.

Something Jesus will likely be waiting to have strong words with me for.
Words, and maybe even consequences... for all the consequences I likely gave to others.
We conclude that others reject God and his ways as if they’re truly informed, when in truth they’re really rejecting us, and how we’ve represented him.

Rightly. Deservedly.

And to us that’s always been their greatest sin.
As Christians we believe abortion is a sin: It is a life. The most helpless life. And that life is ending.

But sometime immediately after that statement is made, we lose all of Christ in our responses to it.

Why is that?
Why don’t we even care to look at ourselves? Those who Christ TOLD us to look at?
I believe Christ takes care of that child, infinitely better than we’ve taken care of the children at our borders. His grace that we enjoy covers even this.

I know that’s a strong statement. He’s a scandalous God. His Grace would be obscene, if it weren’t so Holy.
But I’m confronted with the fact that Christ never reduced a woman to someone who inherently had no right to choose—whether seeing a sin or not—and then policed it bc she was incapable of policing herself.

Only caring for the theology, but never the person or people involved.
He never took away dignity. He always gave it.

Always gives it.
What am I doing? What is my job description? Whose name am I claiming, when I identify as Christian?

Is God policing me? As I throw his name around, and act, and speak, and hurt others, and fall short... has he taken away my dignity because I am incapable of policing myself?
No.

He gives me dignity, so that I may be lifted up out of that. He tells me the truth about sin, and myself, not to reduce me, but to raise me up.

He finds a way to include me—with his Son!—and GIFT me with Holiness.
And maybe, just maybe, I can start identifying with him—not just in my mind or theology, but in my heart of hearts.

Maybe... that’s the only thing that will EVER be effective, and he knows it.

Maybe it’s the only thing that ever saved me in the first place.
So I support a woman’s right to have dignity.

I endeavor to be like this hero of mine, Jesus of Nazareth, and not let any sin—perceived or otherwise—stop me on the way to the heart of someone our Father loves.
Because it was Jesus’s job to take care of that sin, and he did. Effectively. Brutally. It’s not my job anymore.

I don’t have to nail anyone to their cross to show them the love of Christ. I just have to actually love them.

I have to see they’re worthy of it.
I know this one is..controversial. Some of you may not agree. I’m thankful for the intimacy I have with this Twitter community—what intimacy I have with each of you. I’m thankful that Christ has made me your brother. This is what I appreciate most of all. Thank you for being you:

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More from @MattJThiessen

Jun 24, 2020
Okay, I don’t know who will see this, but my wife asked me for one present on our 26th Anniversary.

That I share a Tweet to the online community I’ve become a part of, tagging her in it.

It might seem like a weird request, but I get it.

She knows you are important to me.
She can’t share too many deep, meaningful, personal thoughts online because of her job. (Because it’s Twitter… everything’s controversial, right?) She can’t wisely navigate what she does at work—which she does excellently, btw, imo—while putting herself out here like I do.
So…

Happy 26th Anniversary to my wife, @hathiessen.

Thank you for your heart. Thank you for applying yourself to the work we’re doing with each other. Thank you for bravely finding your worth, and mine.

Thank you for your work to understand and implement equity, …
Read 5 tweets
May 14, 2020
It feels like looking at everything through a filter of despair. Every positive gets discounted, and the world starts to confirm to me in excruciating detail my view of my own self worth.
My rational arguments for low self esteem make the most sense. I long for someone to come along with a better argument as to why I‘m worth something, but the better argument never happens.
I’ve learned it’s not that I need to figure out how to argue better on my own behalf, or come up with or believe in a better theology—my arguments against myself are actually sound. It’s that my depression blinds me to all the variables that would change the equation:
Read 6 tweets
May 10, 2020
I’ve just called 911 for a friend who told me he was suicidal, that he has a plan, and that our FaceTime call was the last time I’d be seeing him.

I’m asking for prayers right now. All of them.
@HeatherTDay, @AliaJoyH, @aundikolber, you’re the first that come to mind with tender hearts and a following. Please.
Pray for me too.
Read 11 tweets
Apr 26, 2020
I love this question. I know it can easily become a simple semantic argument, but I think the question of Faith is worthwhile.

For me, faith has become equal to "trust." It doesn’t HAVE to be opposed to certainty, but we have to know what it is exactly we’re trusting in. 1/
My whole life I’ve tried to get my emotions (what I consider my heart to believe) to match what my head wants to believe. But, so as not to be led by emotions, I kept them under firm control so I could be a better Christian—bc it was obviously what God would want, right? 2/
Due to childhood wounding, though, I could never fully feel myself actually trusting God. This then became my nightmare.

I hated that I never had enough faith to feel it. I blamed myself and my "faith level" for my prayers failing. Obviously I wasn’t cutting it. 3/
Read 21 tweets
Apr 11, 2020
I think of this day a lot... The time in between times, where Jesus died horrifically, and there’s no context for anything else to come after. There’s no hope today...only hurt.

I know a lot of people are dealing with hurt. I know what it feels like not to be able to hope.
To need someone just to sit with that with you, without trying to fix it, because in the moment it can’t be fixed.

There’s healing there. I know the beginnings of wholeness start in that place. My heart is that we don’t skip it in our rush to rejoice.
Sometimes it hurts. Let it hurt. Let hope be the thing that surprises you, because it will. Let’s hope for each other, when we can’t hope for ourselves. Let us find we are worthy enough to have someone sit with us in our pain, and be that for others.
Read 6 tweets
Mar 25, 2020
Prayer requests, for praying types—and thoughts and heartfelt, good wishes from those who aren’t (as my heart believes God hears those, too).

I have a friend who is high risk and presumed positive. Can we maybe start a thread and boost a signal for prayer for these people?
For healing and protection, definitely. But most immediately I think of the isolation—literal and figurative, as they deal with their own fears, and fears of family for them as well.

The feeling of being a threat to those closest to you has to make one feel so awful and alone.
I know some who fully identify and deal with these fears already. Even if only high risk and ill with things other than COVID. @AliaJoyH, I know you’ve been public with that, and recommend your book and Twitter feed to anyone. Still praying, and loving who you are from afar.
Read 11 tweets

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