How Can Confrontation Actually Be A Better Way To Love?
Confronting gets a bad rap.
We see those who confront us as mean, cruel, and divisive. The problem could be in the WAY they confront but not in the fact that they bring up issues.
Did you know that the famous verseβYou shall love your neighborβ is preceded by βYou shall reprove your neighborβ (Lev. 19: 17-18)?
Why are we so fearful to bring up the delicate subject of a friendβs issues? Especially if it is destroying their life, their marriage, their character?
Here are some ways to confront a friend without becoming confrontational:
Listen first.
Listening and asking questions says to them that you are truly interested. You canβt convince them of that if you start off a conversation with a confrontation.
What may be obvious to you is probably not obvious to them. Ask them, βHave you ever thought that _________ may be contributing to the problem?β
If they know you did the hard work of listening, they see you as part of the answer and not part of the problem.
Confront actions, not identity.
Separate a personβs actions from their identity. Identity is about honor for them as made in Godβs image. If they feel you are dishonoring them as a person, confrontation feels like rejection.
Confrontation is coaching. It is believing in a personβs potential so much that you canβt stand it to be wasted.
I had a high school basketball coach who applauded me one minute and reprimanded me the next. He really wanted me to succeed and I loved him for it.
Stand for your convictions.
Loving your neighbour is not βgoing with the flow.β It is not embarrassed participation in something your heart tells you is wrong.
Speak up for your convictions. Without condemning and shaming, express an issue with something they are proudly exhibiting.
Profanity. Pornography. Thievery. Deception. Vandalism. Marital unfaithfulness. The list is long.
βI know you feel comfortable with that but I donβt. I think you are a better person than that and donβt want to see your character and reputation identified with that.β
Overcome the fear of rejection.
Your mind will tell you that if you lovingly confront a friend or neighbor that you will have no friends. Check out this verse:
βWhoever rebukes a man will afterward find more favor than he who flatters with his tongue.β (Prov. 28: 23).
Iβve found this also by experience: βWhen I love a person enough to bring to their attention how they can improve their life they appreciate me for it.β
What is an area in a spouse or a friend that you have inwardly hidden your anger, your suspicion, or your deep concern about?
βDonβt secretly hate your neighbor. If you have something against him, get it out into the open; otherwise you are an accomplice in his guiltβ¦β (Lev. 19: 17, Message Bible).
βLove your neighborβ and βconfront your neighborβ go together. Thatβs the kind of love God has for me.