Several weeks ago, I opened my Instagram feed and noticed some weird activity on a video I had posted many months earlier. Forty-six thousand likes! Have I been hacked? As I clicked on the post, I realized that a fifteen-second video I had made of our neighborhood’s summer block party had unexpectedly gone viral. Wow! This is cool.
The video wasn’t anything special. Just a quick pan of the street from my front porch. Neighbors gathered around folding tables we had set up in the street and kids roamed in packs like happy wild animals. It was my attempt to share a glimpse of our neighborhood magic, and I wrote a quick caption with tips and encouragement to help others engage their neighbors too.
With over two million views, this was obviously striking a chord with people. Again, my first reaction was, “How cool!”
Except it wasn’t all cool.
Most of the comments rolling in were from complete strangers. Some of them were encouraging, but as the video went viral, the comments became anonymous and cutting. For the next several days I had to be really vigilant to delete spammy comments like “DM me and I’ll send you $3,000 tomorrow!” and biting comments like “Must be nice to live in an all-white neighborhood.” My gut reaction was to spew back defensively that my husband is the first Filipino homeowners association president the neighborhood has had and that my Asian kids are the ones on the scooters there to the left. I want to point out Ms. Christina, who goes to the Asian market and brings us special candies and tiger balm every week.
But as I scrolled through nasty comments and messages about our neighborhood, our race, our demographic, and all the unimportant and untrue things being assumed as fact on a post that was meant to stir up kindness, I realized I had to decide how I wanted to treat this dumpster fire.
I could defend myself and add fuel to the blaze. Or I could take a beat and let my pause extinguish the flames.
It seems like more and more, anytime we open our phones and computers, we see someone’s extreme opinions about the latest hot topic — which appears to be almost everything. What a time to be alive, when you can communicate your inner thoughts to pretty much anyone with the click of a Send button!
Chances are you’ve also experienced this phenomenon of the unfiltered response.
I miss not being anxious about relational stress as we approach yet another election year, yet another global health issue, yet another this side versus that side. And before I can even formulate language to describe this anxiety, my body responds for me: I wear my shoulders as earmuffs. My breath quickens. I wince. My brow furrows, blood rushes to my cheeks, and my stomach hurts. If you watch the news, have social media, or talk to a neighbor, you probably know what I mean.
I close the computer and think about it all day. And “it” isn’t just my video gone viral. It’s all the backhanded comments and jumping to false assumptions. It’s the tearing down and creating us-versus-them categories for every possible issue. It’s using our words as weapons and calling it normal. It’s all of it.
I can’t help but think, I wish she hadn’t mentioned that. I wish he hadn’t said it in that way. They make me so mad. Why are people like this? Why can’t we just stop treating each other like this?
And let me say, when I’m about to actively run into an argument after reading Cousin Fred’s entire comments section in his latest fire-breathing post, I instead take a deep breath and consume truth that comes from a living and active God. A God who loves me but isn’t afraid to ask me to check my perspective.
So I pray, I am the problem. Forgive me, Lord, for wanting to murder this person with my words, for believing I am more worthy of Your gift of grace than he is. Give me the supernatural power to love someone I think of as my enemy. I can’t do this on my own.
As believers, we should be people marked not by fear, hatred, or murderous words but by peace. We should desire unity instead of actively seeking out division with our words. We should have the markings of self-control and love, not unbridled tongues that have the power to set the world on fire (see James 3:5–6). I don’t know if I really believed that until the last couple of years, but haven’t we all witnessed the destruction caused by our tongues and how they hold the power of life and death?
We each have personal accounts of our own fractured relationships and devastating losses. But lest this all start to feel a bit depressing, we actually do have great hope. Jesus tells us, “I have said these things to you, that in me you may have peace. In the world you will have tribulation. But take heart; I have overcome the world” (John 16:33 ESV).
Hear Jesus speaking it to you: “In Me you may have peace. Take heart.” Notice how your body responds to the truth. It’s quite different from scrolling through a social media feed. Maybe, if you’re like me, your shoulders come down and your breath slows. As the words of Scripture settle into my heart, I can see things more clearly: We are too quick to scroll conversations and comment threads and assume we are the only ones who know the correct path. But God is our Good Shepherd. He actively searches to bring us back to Himself, reorient our hearts toward Him, and give us the peace of His guidance, care, and protection — even from ourselves.
We are not on our own when we face difficult circumstances and interactions or when we have to navigate complex relationships and complicated feelings. When we see ourselves and others with the right perspective, we remember that our words, whether written in a comment or spoken out loud, have the power to attest to a better word: God is our only hope in this world. And what good news that it doesn’t rest on our human shoulders!
Ask yourself: Where am I tempted to use my words to tear down or divide instead of to build up and bring peace?
By Jami Nato, excerpted from Come Sit with Me
Hey friends, if you resonated with Jami’s story, or if you are dealing with relational tension of any kind, you’re going to want to get a copy of Come Sit with Me. In addition to Jami’s words, you’ll find 25 other (in)courage writers going first with their own faith wrestling and hope wrangling.
Come Sit With Me is available wherever books are sold, and we’d love to send you the introduction and the first two chapters for FREE! Sign up here.
Plus, listen to a bonus episode of the (in)courage podcast to hear Jami read her whole chapter, “Will You Be a Flamethrower or a Fire Extinguisher in the Dumpster Fire of Internet Comments?” Listen here.
Leave a Comment
Kathy says
This really hit home for me. My daughter and I were discussing this the other day. What ever happened to respect for another person’s opinion whether we agree or not?
John 16:33 is one of my favorites. It makes me smile.
Peggie says
Jami, since we see the whole world is in chaos (And that does not shock our Heavenly Father)
I embrace this amazing truth: “FOR HE HIMSELF IS OUR PEACE …” [Ephesians 2:14 NIV]
Debby Plummer says
This is so, so spot on. We’ve all read so much hurtful that just makes the world seem worse. To actively try to be salt and light, to pause before replying and confess our own reactions to God, asking for His prespective – treasure!!
Judy Allen says
Amen!
Kathy F says
I needed this today! Thank You!
Dawn Ferguson-Little says
We can all say things with our words that can hurt people and be quick to write something on Facebook or Twitter or Instagram or Watts app etc. Then regret we said anything as we say thing to quickly at times. We can afterwards we said that on the website on line or even texts to people on our phone or emails. Once it said we can’t take it back. So this where I wouldn’t have Facebook or Twitter or Instagram or Watts app etc about me. Or anything to do with them. As once wrote on them the whole world see them and knows your business. If you said something you regret about someone the world gets to see it. Plus you hurt that person feeling. Would you like them to say it about you. Would God want you to say it about them. It is a form of Gossip. That is wrong in God’s eyes. I had a friend even though alot older than me now in glory. Who said this good advice to me. Bidden or not Bidden God is watching. That means God see and hears what you do and say about people. Would God want you to say it about anyone. Even if they have done wrong to you. Or said something about you. You have to do what God would want you do even if they are not saved that is not want to retaliate and say anything bad about them or do something bad to them because they done it to you. God would want you to pray for them. Even if you heard Gossip about them. Not to pass it on. It nothing good to say. Say nothing my friend in Glory today said. You just pray for them and that is what God would want you to do. We read about what God wants us to do with our word in James Chapter 3 to do with the Tongue. We have to make peace even when the world can be your enemy. People say things about you that are not nice. We have to show them the love of Jesus no matter what. As they might not be saved. Should we are different and love them no matter what. Tell them I still love you no matter what you think of me. As lots of people in Jesus day when on earth didn’t love him. Today they still don’t. But he still loved them when on earth no matter what and still does today. That what he was all about we are to do the same. Love today’s reading. Love Dawn Ferguson-Little Enniskillen Co.Fermanagh N.Ireland xx
Kathy Francescon says
Dear Dawn, I always love reading your posts! And all the way from Ireland! That is so awesome! You are full of such wisdom and I can tell you are so devoted to God! You are a blessing to me and I am sure to so many others! I am replying to you from East Tennessee, USA! Blessings from across the ocean! Keep up the good work you are doing sharing your words of wisdom and your obvious deep love for our Father God! A sister in Christ! Sending love and hugs your way!
Michele says
As always, I love you!! Keep letting His light shine through you!
Beth Williams says
Kathi,
Our world is in turmoil. So much hatred being spewed over computers. It amazes me that people can have contempt for others simply based on race or color. We don’t take the time to talk with others & really get to know them. Most simply hide behind a computer screen & spit out hatred based on their opinions or beliefs. Christians need to act as Jesus would loving everybody regardless. We need to remind ourselves that our hope isn’t in this world but God alone!! The Bible has a lot to say about taming the tongue. James 3:6, 8-10 The tongue also is a fire, a world of evil among the parts of the body. It corrupts the whole body, sets the whole course of one’s life on fire, and is itself set on fire by hell. but no human being can tame the tongue. It is a restless evil, full of deadly poison. With the tongue we praise our Lord and Father, and with it we curse human beings, who have been made in God’s likeness. 10 Out of the same mouth come praise and cursing. My brothers and sisters, this should not be.
Blessings 🙂