Jesusy Growth, Kingdom Uncaged

Sometimes you have to be firm to be loving

21 Comments 29 June 2011

Sometimes you have to be firm to be loving

The older gentleman standing before me in line at the supermarket fumed. Livid about the price of strawberries and an apparent discrepancy in what the store advertised and what he was charged, he spewed venom on the girl who checked him out. Then he grabbed her and made her walk with him to the strawberry section to show her how wrong she was. Oddly, she willingly followed. While I waited.

The man returned with the shame-faced girl, waving the sign at her and hollering. I felt terrible for the girl, but I was also a little annoyed that all my groceries were on the conveyor belt and this conflict didn’t seem to want to end.

Finally, as a manager came near, I firmly told the man, “Sir, I’m sorry you’re having a conflict, but can you please take this to the manager here and have her settle it? There are people waiting in line.”

He scowled. Later, my daughter Julia said she thought he would punch me. “Mom, if he punched you, I’d punch him back for you.” But then she admitted, “That man scared me.”

Back to the story. I looked at the checker in that moment and our eyes locked. “Thank you,” she said. “That man scared me. I can’t thank you enough for rescuing me from him.”

Her eyes, her fear, her sadness plunged me back to another memory back in France when I was in the middle of a heated exchange where one woman berated and ridiculed a friend of ours. Something rose up within me in that moment. Firmly, but clearly I said, “You are not allowed to treat him that way.”

Someone pulled me aside after that exchange and confronted me. “Mary,” the man said, “you are reactionary. You need to control yourself.”

At first I apologized. But after thinking about it and praying, I realized I had nothing to apologize for. Someone had to intervene when a bully abused. If I hadn’t who would? And who would stand up for the victim? If Jesus were there, wouldn’t He help the victimized?

I hope I did the right thing, both for the checker and for my friend. Sometimes it’s hard to know. Because we’re conditioned to think love is ooey gooey, and touchy feely. Always kind and gentle and sweet. I would argue that sometimes love looks pretty darn tough and even borders on mean, in the case of protecting the innocent. Sometimes love looks an awful lot like a firm voice and drawing a line in the sand and saying, “Sorry, but you’re not allowed to talk that way to that person.” It’s the right thing to do.

Q4u:

When was the last time you intervened when a bully tried to hurt or yell at someone? What happened? How did you feel afterward?

Be Sociable, Share!

Related posts:

  1. Every people-loving Christian should read this book!
  2. Review: Loving Soren

Be Sociable, Share!
  • Hannah Hill

    Great article! Being a gentle person should be motivated by genuine love. Genuine love means you’re willing to do whatever it takes to protect the object of your love. So true gentleness always has a counterpart of firmness, even fierceness on occasion. If someone is gentle without that capacity for firmness, it’s not gentleness at all. It’s just wimpiness. (said in the most gentle way I know how) :-)

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Very well stated, Hannah. Your thoughts would make a good article or blog post.

  • http://the123blog.com Marcia (123 blog)

    I’m afraid I have a bit of a big mouth so that person is usually me. :)

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Ah yes. The other side of the coin is that we all have to learn not to bully! (me included)

  • http://www.writeontheknows.wordpress.com writeontheknows

    You did the right thing both times. People don’t understand tough love or healthy boundaries sometimes. So glad you are a person of courage! You go, girl!

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Thanks so much.

  • http://moxiemandie.com moxiemandie

    I love this. I’m an ooey-gooey lover and need help standing up, even for myself sometimes(often). It IS ok to stand up & correct for justice. SO thankful that God is just & that he takes care of us & loves us, no matter how firm or soft that love may be.

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Sometimes it’s hard to realize that God loves us too and that to stand up for ourselves is valuing who God made!

      • http://moxiemandie.com moxiemandie

        SO true!!

  • Mary Hampton

    I wish the manager had some to her to take the customer off her hands. I worked for the ‘unemployment office’ in the years before internet filing when everyone had to come to the office in person. Obviously we got our share of irate/obnoxious people. As state employees we were obligated to provide service to everyone who came through our doors, but I so appreciated that our office management wouldn’t allow the patrons to abuse the staff in any manner. We all appreciated that we could count on our supervisor to come to the counter if he heard voices raised to notify the customer that while we did need to serve them, we didn’t not have to suffer insults, threats or profanity and they were welcome to return when they could be civil. 

    Honestly, I’m sitting here with flushed cheeks as I remember an incident just yesterday. Granted, one of the parties involved was my 5 year old, who no doubt was not completely innocent in the exchange as I could see from across the courtyard that words were flying on both sides. But when a girl twice his age and twice his size actually gave him a big shove and the other parent was completely oblivious (and I was afraid of how it might escalate), I marched over, looked her in the eye and firmly told her to keep her hands to herself. We have a family policy that it doesn’t matter what someone says to you (those offenses are dealt with separately), but it’s not okay to follow up any kind of insult or frustration by pushing, hitting, etc. 
    There’s always a degree of hesitation when the situation involves correcting someone else’s child, but I hope others will correct my kids in a like manner. And sometimes those kids don’t have ANYone correcting them ever, so they need to be told that it’s not okay.

    Thankfully, most of the ‘bullying’ I encounter is of the minor playground sort, but it’s not beyond me to take up for someone else who needs it when the situation warrants, what with my “overdeveloped sense of justice” and all!

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      That’s great that one of your managers took up for you!

      How icky about the playground incident!

  • Robin Lawrimore

    Love it.  Godly boundaries are just that – boundaries.  And we are called to stand up for those who “can’t speak for themselves” even if their silence is temporarily gagged by fear.  Way to go, Mary!

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      That’s true. Sometimes folks are gagged by fear. Good point.

  • http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=1434296811 Yvonne Olson

    Correct me, LORD, but only with justice — not in your anger, lest you reduce me to nothing. — Jeremiah 10:24

    What a coincidence. This scripture was in my inbox this morning. Rebuking out of anger is one thing, but correcting out of justice is another. We should never allow someone to be belittled and bullied. You did the right thing by asking him to move on. I used to be a cashier, and I know first hand that we must be nice to the customer, but that doesn’t mean we have to allow them to tear us down in front of the whole store. Mercy triumphs over judgement. I usually end up praying for them in the end. “Father forgive them, for they no not what they do.”

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Loved this: Rebuking out of anger is one thing, but correcting out of justice is another.

      Thanks for the scripture too.

  • Pat Stockett Johnston

    Working on the chapter on love in my fruit of the Spirit book, I realize how this story of a standing up to a bully shows another side of love. You may find  yourself being quoted.

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      Feel free!

  • Amber S K

    Of course you did the right thing. People shouldn’t be allowed to treat service people like dogs just because they are there to “serve.” Also, the person that says you were “reactionary” makes my spidey sense tingle a bit. I’ve noticed an unwillingness by some men to allow women to stand up for themselves without editorializing on their role in society. Recently a fellow skeptic was told by a much older male that she was acting in a way the would make people not like her very much because she wasn’t putting up with bad treatment. Really? Is it our role in society to play nice and be liked regardless of the way we’re treated? You keep standing up for those that can’t stand up for themselves, Mary and so will I. Anyone who doesn’t like it can…well this is a family web page. They can just not like it!

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      One thing that helps me in these situations is knowing that God is a God of justice.

  • Renee717

    I love this story Mary!  I hope I am as brave as you are!

    • http://www.marydemuth.com Mary DeMuth

      I’m sure you are.

Free ebook!

Live uncaged ebook

Sign up for Mary's free monthly ezine and receive the 95-page ebook Live Uncaged!

--
--

About Mary

Mary DeMuth

I love Jesus, my family, and my life. Jesus has helped me live uncaged, and for that I'm eternally grateful. In that place of thanks, I write books and blogs and whatnot.

Buy my books at Amazon.
Find my books at Barnes & Noble.
Browse my books at CBD.com.

Latest Books:

Beautiful Battle click to purchase

The quarryman's wife click to purchase

The Uncaged (sweet!) Sponsors:

Purchase Books in Amazing Places!

© 2012 Mary DeMuth.

Site by Author Media.