YOUR OUTRAGE WORKS AGAINST YOU

By Mohan Karulkar:

Sadie is an 11 year old transgender girl who is currently making news for an essay she wrote to the President in response to his inauguration speech.

Take that in for a minute. Sadie is biologically a boy, but self-identifies as a girl. She has the full support of her immediate family, and is obviously not keeping her status a secret.

And she’s 11.

The world is changing. As it does, the most disturbing trend I see isn’t the change, but the outrage that seems to accompany it. You know what it looks like; you’ve seen it on the news and you’ve seen it in your News Feed. It’s not the indignant outrage that chases Kony from around the globe, but the impotent outrage that has no clear target.

Far too often, we don’t know what else to do. When we see something we don’t like, we get outraged. We’ve forgotten how to disagree without it. We’ve decided that anything but harsh condemnation equals wholehearted support. We read headlines, not news. We choose allies, not friends.

But life is about more than what you’re for and who you’re against. Sometimes it’s about 11 year olds trying to figure out who they really are.

Unfortunately, outrage alienates. We give up our seat at the adult table when our position on something descends into outrage. No one wants to listen to what we have to say except our fiercest allies. We get shipped off to the kid’s table, with all the other outraged people, and the world continues to turn without us.

We’re caught in a cycle of being outraged at being alienated over our outrage.

We’ve got to break the cycle.  We can’t keep descending into two camps on everything, or else we are inevitably divided against ourselves. We can’t keep talking about grace if every disagreement is a war.

Think about your agenda for a minute. Has outrage, particularly outrage directed at people — liberals, conservatives, gays, Christians, Muslims, gun owners, government — gotten you anywhere? Has it made your God any bigger, your your cause any broader? If anything, it’s shrunken your agenda, and stuffed it into a little box labeled “stuff that outrages me.”

And come on. You know you’re more than that. Your beliefs and priorities and passions are more than that.  So choose to BE more than that.  Ask yourself: “Is my outrage alienating me from people who disagree?”

If you answered “yes,” then it’s time to break the cycle.

  1. Appologize today to someone you’ve alienated.
  2. Expose yourself to those who disagree with you and learn their POV (point of view).
  3. Write to us and let us know how that has changed your POV.

I know we can do better.  Let POTSC be the example to those around us!


  • Vernon Keszler

    Very well put, and I definitely agree. But what I fear is being perceived as “luke-warm.”

  • http://www.mohan37.com/ mohan37

    I understand where that concern comes from … but why should being fully-committed to something translate into anger? That squanders the committment to a cause, because the very people one is trying to reach are alienated precisely by anger.

  • Anonymous

    What kind of impact would it make if Christians far and wide apologized to the gay community on the same day; not for what they believe, but rather for their behavior? I’m suggesting just such a crazy thing. Check out my blog for moreinformation. Apology 6/25/2013
    http://brina-harwood.blogspot.com/2013/01/apologetics-all-around.html

  • Anonymous

    Speaking from the viewpoint of a bisexual Christian, few things shut me up faster than an attitude of outrage. I understand that you may view the Gospel differently than I do, and I’d LOVE to sit and have a conversation with you over our the subject. If you approach me with an attitude of “I’m right and you’re wrong, and nothing you say will change my mind,” however, I won’t waste my time talking with you. To me, that attitude seems much more Pharisee-like than Christ-like.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=100003507967305 Neal Lindberg

    More often than not our problem is not with speaking the truth, but we don’t know how to do it with love