Welcome to the online home of Tim Challies, blogger, author and web designer. My first book, "The Discipline of Spiritual Discernment," is now available everywhere.

Read about the blog or about the author.

Wednesday June 6, 2007
12 Comments

A Notch in the Belt

When I was a teenager, there was a boy in my class who was not quite normal. I don't know if he suffered from a type of mental disorder or if he was just a bit "different"--never completely accustomizing to the culture he lived in. I suspect the latter. Somehow he did not quite fit in. He had funny mannerisms, would sometimes say strange things and often seemed oblivious to social propriety. One of my enduring memories of him is watching him sit in the front pew at church and proceed to give his ears a really good cleaning, sprinkling what he dug out on the carpet below. He was oblivious to this being odd behavior. While clearly bright in some ways, he was hopeless in others. Something of a loner, probably less by choice and more by lack of interest from his classmates, he would spend lunch and breaks by himself, though this never appeared to bother him too much. I don't think he got teased too much simply because he was quite confident in who and what he was and in who and what he was not. Now that I think about it, I don't know that he would really have known or cared even if he had been teased.

Every now and then my parents would tell me I had to have him over on a Sunday afternoon between the two worship services. The church we attended at the time met for morning worship at 9:30 or 10:00 and for a second worship service in the middle of the afternoon. This was ideal for visiting, as a person or family could come over between services and enjoy a nice visit, but not one that grew too long. And so I would sometimes find him in my company on Sunday afternoons. I really didn't mind having him over, despite his eccentricities. I suppose I probably worried that being spied with him would somehow lower my social status (humble though this status may have been) but I'm sure my friends knew that I had been forced to invite him over and that I spent time with him more out of imposition than desire. I never really got to know him too well. A couple of times he reciprocated the invitation and, with trepidation lest anyone spot me, I would go to his house and spend the afternoon with his family. I don't remember what we did on these afternoons together. My memories have faded.

When the afternoon service was over and I had the evening to myself, I was proud of what I had done. I had taken this simple guy who had no friends and had been a friend to him for a few hours. I had allowed him to feel what I thought was acceptance and to feel that he was not entirely alone. But come Monday morning I would not stand by his side and talk to him. I would allow him to walk endless circuits around the school or to sit quietly with a book. When pity was taken out of the equation, I had nothing to offer. I had no desire to give of myself. It was almost as if I would spend those Sunday afternoons clearing my throat to the sky and whispering under my breath, "God! Do You see what I'm doing here, right? I'm being a friend to this guy! And it's not much fun!"

I wasn't a true friend, of course. I didn't really care about my classmate. If my parents decided he needed to have some companionship for a day I would take him under my wing, but I did it for them or for me or maybe somehow for God. But not for him. My true friends are those people I enjoy spending time with just for the joy of being with them. This guy was someone I spent time with out of obligation or out of a desire to put a notch in my belt of sanctification.

A short time ago I reviewed a marvelous little book called Same Kind of Different as Me. The book has touched many people and I think it has done so because it is the story of two people who seem to be so unequal and yet find true equality. One is a successful businessman while the other is a homeless drifter; one is married with a loving family while the other is single and alone; one is normal and the other is decidedly not. The relationship starts as one of pity but ends as one of true fraternal love and acceptance. The one who seems to have everything already is the one who receives untold blessings.

My pastor has spent a couple of days blogging about considering special needs in church. He says, quite rightly I think, that "only the Christian Church is really set up to joyfully co-exist with families of all different types of needs. For a large measure of the tension we feel is bound up in our own sin, and only Christians have a means to genuinely deal with that sin. Because God has given us the Holy Spirit, we can be humble. And large doses of humility are what is needed in order to walk through all this tension and awkwardness." He quotes his friend Justin Reimer who says, "What these families [of disabled children] need is help, not pity."

Pity isn't necessarily a bad emotion, but I've found that it does not tend to be the foundation of good, noble and godly ends. I pitied my classmate and did what I felt was best for him. I extended some kind of companionship, but my pity led me to focus on myself more than on him. What I did, I did for others and not for him. Looking inward or upward I was unable to see past myself to see this boy for who he was. I found pleasure not in anything he was or anything he offered, but in what I thought I might gain through the gratitude of my parents, the gratefulness of his parents, or the blessing of God. Looking back I can see that I really knew nothing about him. I never made any kind of effort to get to know him. I never made the effort to let him touch my life or to show me who he really was. I thought I already knew. I was arrogant, believing in the innate superiority of my normalcy while assuming that his eccentricity necessarily meant he had nothing to offer and that he needed my help. He was pitied, but not accepted; tolerated but never loved.

I've known other people like this. I know some today. They do not need pity. The parents of those who are disabled do not want you to pity them or to accept them as a project--as a means to your own sanctification. They want you to see these people for who they are and what they can offer and to love and embrace and accept them on that basis. This was a point I never got to with my classmate. He was, at best, a project; an inconvenience I grudgingly accepted at times; someone who was somehow less than a full person. When I think of him and I think of the other people in my life who were never quite normal, never quite adhering to the norms of society or never quite able to adhere to them, I wonder what I've missed in forsaking such friendship. I wonder what I've missed in pitying rather than accepting--in seeking myself rather than the other person. I wonder what they've lost and what I've lost because I could not realign my expectations for friendship and companionship. I never learned to appreciate these people, to look beyond their eccentricities and disabilities, and to see the people beyond. I never learned to enjoy their presence, their friendship and all that they offer.

I'm confident that Paul is right and that the church is the best and most natural place for these people and their families to joyfully co-exist with others. But I'm confident that I've done a lousy job of proving him right.

Comments (12) »


1. Mike Reynolds
June 6, 2007
12:29 PM

A great and convicting article, Tim. Isn’t this just another kind of prejudice that we practice, but one we don’t talk about as often as the racial form?

We live in a world of performance-based acceptance, where the externals are judged and normalcy is the standard. God’s acceptance of us is also based on performance, but unlike the world His judgment is internally focused, upon the heart, and His standard is not average or normal, but perfection. Our own performance thus earns His condemnation. Christ’s substitutionary performance, on the other hand, in His life and death, earns us God’s acceptance. And He accepts us all who put faith in Christ, and extends love to all, no matter who they are, what they’ve done, or how they look.


2. Maria
June 6, 2007
1:11 PM

Hummm, just what I needed today… I have a “friend” that I’ve been trying to “help” without really getting close to her, because she’s so different than the norm and takes so much of my time and can be annoying… . I believe after reading this, I’ll actually try to really be her friend and not just try to appease my conscience by spending time with her every now and then. Thanks much! God is using you!


3. Ann Addison
June 6, 2007
3:03 PM

I think sometimes we misuse the word pity. I think it should be used in a context of true mercy. “I saw that the woman was hungry. I pitied her and gave her some food.” I think we use the word too loosely, when we apply it to feelings of sorrow or contrasting their wont with my abundance, usually accompanied by my feelings of arrogance. You did well in pointing us to authentic pity accompanied by mercy.


4. Nath @ Reformed Geek
June 6, 2007
9:23 PM

A very convicting post Tim. Thanks for being so candid as well.


5. DrLiz
June 6, 2007
11:22 PM

If I had to guess, not being anything of an expert, but based on what you’ve written, this kid sounds like he had Asperger’s Syndrome (high functioning form of autism). Of course, probably wasn’t diagnosed back then.

You’re motives weren’t great, and the parents of the disabled (my nephew has Asperger’s, among other things) probably don’t want their kid to be someone’s project. However, I bet this kid’s parents still appreciated your invitations to have their son spend the afternoon with your family. If we all wait to do something until our motives are perfectly pure, I’m guessing no one would ever do anything.


6. carissa
June 7, 2007
12:09 AM

what a good post! thank you for writing this. for whatever reason it has really resonated with me and i feel God’s hand in that for sure. i’m not sure if i even have any people like in my life right now, but i know i have had and will have.

i also agree with drliz’s comment - if i waited until i had pure motives i’m sure i’d never do anything at all. still, i love that this post was about having the right heart.


7. dorin
June 7, 2007
8:43 AM

Thanks for this post Tim. It makes me to remember my childhood identifying similar behaviors in me as a child. But unfortunately I’m realizing that the same habit is well developed and refined in the grown man that I am today. Isn’t it that with some brothers in Christ I am talking or just spending time because I have to not because I enjoy to? Doing that like a duty not from my heart? Man, how much I need Christ…


8. Wonkyhead
June 7, 2007
9:46 AM

I read somewhere that pity is an emotion that limits action, whereas compassion encourages it. I do believe the two are very different. I know when I’ve merely pitied someone; I also know when the love of God has filled me for compassion for them. Not the same thing at all.

As the mother of two profoundly handicapped (and two normal) children (now adults), who never received any help at all from any church I ever attended (whether an offer to babysit so I could enjoy the service, or even go grocery shopping in peace), it is my opinion that the church has been very remiss in this area. Parents of special needs children (especially single parents, as I was at the time) and the children themselves are not carrying some sort of disability contagion; to my knowledge autism and mental retardation are not spread by coughing or sneezing, but it sure seemed as though people were under that impression at times! I needed practical help; sure, it was nice to hear that people were praying for me, but it would also have been nice to hear someone say “I’ll babysit on Wednesday night so you can go to church - and you know what? Go out to eat afterward with a friend! Enjoy yourself!” Never, ever happened.

Pity - keep it. Compassion - especially of the sort Jesus exhibited - we all need it.


9. Lana G!
June 7, 2007
9:48 AM

Shot through the heart! Convicting Post. Thank you.


10. Richard
June 7, 2007
9:54 AM

My 22 year daughter old daughter acts “oddly.” She has been recently diagnosed as schizophrenic. I’m reluctant to let anyone in our Reformed church know because of some random comments by others that those with mental illnesses are somehow not fully Christian or, worse, are demon possessed. And this is in a REFORMED church. We need some serious teaching on this subject. Thanks, Tim.


11. Hans
June 7, 2007
10:51 AM

Our church has a ministry called Special Friends that my wife and I are a part of. About every 4-6 weeks we have a Respite night where families can drop off their special needs children and their siblings for an evening of games and stories while the parents go off and do what ever they like. Respite is open to the community and is a very effective outreach to the unchurched. Special Friends volunteers are also available to augment the regular child care during the church’s worship services. This ministry is such a blessing to the parents of special needs children as well as to us volunteers! It is a very much needed ministry.


12. Bill Burns
June 8, 2007
6:28 PM

We’ve been fortunate, and yet our experience mirrors somewhat that of Wonkyhead above, too. My wife and I have two kids of our own, our firstborn, a 17yr old daughter who was born with Down Syndrome, and our 12yr old son, who we suspect, as he exhibits the classic symptoms, of (good eye, Dr. Liz!) Asperger Syndrome. He’s otherwise bright and capable, but exhibits almost no insight into how others perceive his behaviour, which is further affected by explicitly-diagnosed, and severe ADHD. We also have have two “foster kids,” both young adults 18 & 23yrs old, both of whom are special needs (CP, non-ambulatory, severly retarded, diapers, feeding tubes, seizures, etc.). They are numbers 5 & 6 of the handicapped kids we’ve served in this way.

We also have, since before being married, both worked as group home parents/staff and or worked in the special needs caregiving field for decades now.

In most of our church experience, we’ve rarely rec’d any respite care like someone coming over to take care of the kids, who isn’t family, or a close friend, until this year when we were blessed to join our new church, a PCA fellowship.

I stayed home this past March while Beck and my 12yr old decided to take a trip to Japan, just for the experience. When we started chatting with folks about it, just excitedly talking about the impending trip after church shortly before, one of the elders’ wives stepped up to the plate quickly, volunteering to take care of the kids, even the diapering bit! We were delighted, and blessed!

We’re not special people. We just have special needs.

You can do this. You can serve this population, who ARE in your midst. We’re not bitter about it. We realize folks are just spooked by it, mostly. It’s a natural reaction to the brokenness. It’s not a rational, but it IS to be expected. We just pray for folks to step out and do what doesn’t come naturally, but only through the power and grace of a good and loving God.


Post Your Comment Here »