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"Even the darkness will not be
dark to You; the night will shine like the day, for darkness is as
light to You." Psalm 139:12
I find it
ironic and even somewhat humorous that while many Christians eagerly
throw around the popular cliche, "What Would Jesus Do?" they are also
the ones who so readily condemn their Gothic brothers and sisters. Why
are Goths such common targets?
The answer is the same reason Communism has been able to brainwash
billions. If you feed people lies consistently for long enough, they
will start to believe them, no matter how ridiculous they know it is.
If one keeps telling one's self that the color black is evil, that
introverts, poets, intellectuals, etc. are "strange," and that
Christians have to be smiley fluffy bunnies all the time, then that's
what you'll end up believing.
But the ironic and humorous part of this situation is that Christ, the
Head of the Christians who so easily cast judgment, possesses many of
the same qualities that Goths are condemned for displaying.
Let me clarify something
before we proceed any further into this discussion. The point of this
article is not to declare that Jesus is a Goth or that the Gothic
mindset is the only right mindset just because Jesus presented a
few Gothic qualities. The point of this article is to demonstrate
that there is nothing sinful about the way a Christian Goth thinks or
acts, since Jesus Christ Himself showed Gothic qualities once in a
while.
I apologize in advance if
this article offends anyone. I do not intend to belittle or exclude
any other believer. I simply wish to put an end to the discrimination
that goes on against other saints who think differently than the
majority of Christians.
But let us turn our attention back to Christ, the author of our faith.
"What kind of Gothic qualities did He display," you ask?
Just as Goths are today
rejected by their society, so Jesus was a social outcast as well.
There was no place for Him in the culture of the day.
Not many people wanted to accept or love Christ, no matter how
"popular" He seemed from the stories we heard in Sunday School. The
Bible says that Christ was not handsome at all (Isaiah
53:2). Not only that, but Christ was
one of the lowest on the social ladder... He was born in a barn to an
unwed peasant woman. Imagine the shame He and Mary must have endured
when the neighbors found out that Jesus was an "illegitimate" child
(of course, He wasn't, but it must have seemed that way). To add to it
all, Jesus was a Nazarene, raised in the city of Nazareth. Nazareth
was a military town, and known for its rough crudeness--its drunkards
and prostitutes and sinners. Nathanael expressed this sentiment in
John 1:46 when he exclaimed "Nazareth! Can anything good come from
there?"
However, most importantly, Jesus was a social outcast because of the
way He thought and reasoned. The same reason why Goths
are generally outcasts of society.
Christ introduced ideas to
His people that did not fit into the box they had created for
themselves. The ideas in His Beatitudes, such as anger being just as
bad as murder, lust being just as bad as adultery, His calls to
self-sacrifice, loving enemies, and doing your good deeds in secret,
were so revolutionary that people didn't know what to do with Him.
Christ directly contradicted the religious authorities, preaching that
having faith in God was more important than following the Jewish Law (Matt
9:13-14), thereby isolating himself
from the established religion of the nation. He also taught that a
believer's true family is the family of other disciples (Matthew
12:46-50), so being isolated from His
own mother and siblings. And then He claimed to be the Messiah, the
Son of God, and even God Himself (Jn
8:58, 10:33, Matt 16:16-18) setting
Himself up for the ultimate rejection from all mankind. Christ was
ostracized by about every facet of society that existed.
Another quality that most
people usually associate with Goths is that they are "strange" and
"shocking" in their thoughts and behavior. However, Gothic Christians
also share these qualities with Jesus Himself. There existed friction
between the accepted norms of the day and the teachings of our Lord.
The things He preached directly challenged the authorities and the
stereotypes that people had set up, and were considered radical.
Yes, we are to submit to the established authority and follow their
laws (insofar as they do not go against God's laws), but that does not
mean the popular ideologies put forth by our government and our rulers
should be blindly accepted without question. In fact, the Bible
encourages us to challenge our leaders and see if what they say is in
line with what God says. The Bereans were called "noble" for
questioning Paul's doctrines and seeing if what he said was actually
true (Acts
17:11).
Jesus did this as well, challenging the religious authorities. There
was always tension between our Master and the Pharisees, as the
teachers of the law would constantly accuse and condemn Jesus of
something, and then Christ would turn around and examine their beliefs
in light of the Scriptures (Matthew
9:14; 9:34; 12:2; 23). Jesus even
vehemently rebuked the authorities on occasion! So you see, the Goth
is more similar to Christ than it appears at first glance.
And just as Christian Goths,
by their diversity, are constantly challenging stereotypes (false
expectations that society places on an entire group of people of how
those people will think/act), so Jesus challenged the stereotypes that
plagued the people of His lifetime. There are false notions that all
Goths are druggies, promiscuous, addicted to RPG's, or suicidal, when
that is really not the case.
Likewise, by Christ's very nature, He is a challenge to stereotypes.
First of all, the fact that He was a Nazarene, as stated before, was
mind-boggling. Nazarenes were known to tough, crude, thieving
trouble-makers. Yet, this man was so harmless that He would not break
even a bruised reed or snuff out a smoldering wick (Isaiah
42:3).
Also, the Jews back then had a strong sense of supremacy over other
peoples, since God had chosen them as His people. Gentiles (non-Jews)
were usually discriminated against and thought of as unclean or lesser
persons. But Jesus, displaying His acceptance for all mankind
regardless of race, declared that it was a Gentile who had the
greatest faith in all of Israel (Matthew
8:5-13). He also praised a Canaanite
woman's faith (Matthew
15:22,28) while lamenting over the
Jews' lack thereof. Jesus even used a Samaritan, one of the Jews'
greatest rivals, as the hero in one of His parables (Luke
10:30-37).
And while even Christ's disciples wanted to shoo children away, Christ
asked them to let the little children come to Him. In fact, He
declared that the children are the greatest in the Kingdom of Heaven (Matthew
18:2-3,10), as opposed to the common
stereotype that children were obnoxious or unimportant.
Another one of the big stereotypes haunting the society of ancient
Israel was the notion that the more wealth you had, the better your
standing with God was. The Pharisees and religious leaders were some
of the wealthiest figures in that culture, and they were the most
'religious' as well. So when Christ declared to the contrary, that
money and possessions actually inhibit a good standing with God (Matthew
19:24), many of His followers were at
a loss. It was a complete paradigm shift.
So you see, just as Christian Goths are known for constantly
outstepping stereotypes, so was Christ. And He was hated just as much
then as Goths are today.
Finally, Jesus was also a
radical, whether we like to accept it or not. His teachings were quite
extreme. He taught that only a few will enter the Kingdom of God, and
that the path of righteousness is narrow (Matthew
7:13-14), that in the Kingdom, the
least will be the greatest and the greatest will be the least (Luke
9:48), and that the Kingdom of Heaven
is actually near (Matthew
4:17).
Again, Jesus was a radical in that He was so zealous for God. He drove
the thieves and swindlers out of the temple with a whip (John
2:15) and publically rebuked the
pillars of society (Matthew
23). The Bible even says that His
zeal "consumed" Him (Psalm
69:9). If that is not radical, I do
not know what is.
Another quality that can be
associated with Christian Goths is that they are in touch with
reality. They are not afraid to look at how things really are, no
matter how painful or disturbing that reality might be. They would
rather be hurt by the truth than be entertained by a lie.
Jesus tore down peoples' masks and saw their hearts, their most inner
motives. He was in no way naive as to what people thought of Him.
Passages like
Luke 2:35, Matthew 9:4, Mark 2:8, Luke 5:22, and
Matthew 23:27 attest to this.
And Jesus wasn't afraid to tell it like it is. He didn't sugar coat
His message or water it down. He saw reality for what it was and told
the truth, even when the truth wasn't pretty. In Matthew 23:27, He saw
right through the Pharisees' religious charade, exposing their true
motives. He aptly called them white washed tombs--they look nice on
the outside, but inside are only full of death and decay. In John
6:60-61, even the disciples began to grumble against Christ's
offensive preaching. "On hearing [Christ's teaching], many of His
disciples said, 'This is hard teaching. Who can accept it?' Aware that
His disciples were grumbling about this, Jesus said to them, 'Does
this offend you?. . . The words I have spoken to you are spirit and
they are life. Yet there are some of you who do not believe.'" Jesus
was not just a cozy little bearded man who gave hugs and talked about
"love" all the time. Much of his teaching was harsh, but at least it
was in touch with the real world.
Goths are known for their
love of literature, poetry, artwork, music, and the like. And Christ
was an artist and a poet as well. His eloquent parables were the
epitomy of perfect speaking and literature. Who else could craft such
serious and meaningful messages so artistically in such a way that
only true wisdom could discern their meanings?
And just as Goths are known for their love of classic writers such as
Edgar Allan Poe, Mary Shelley, Bram Stoker and the like, so Christ was
able to read and understand the classic literature of His day (the
Jewish scriptures) better than anyone else. He was able to appreciate
the message and the poetry of the Word of God without reading the
Spark Notes.
Though the term "tolerance"
is misused a lot in today's Western culture as accepting everyone
else's viewpoints as being true without question, the phrase can still
be used to refer to the tolerance of natural differences in other
people. Christ tolerated and accepted the untouchables of the earth.
The situation of 2000 years ago was a highly patriarchal culture. Men
were valued over women, a female's testimony in court was worth only
half that of a male's, and sometimes, men were not even allowed to
associate with certain women.
However, Jesus Christ accepted the sinner woman who came to see Him
while having dinner at a Pharisee's house, while the Pharisee
considered himself too high and mighty to be near to the repentant
woman (Luke
7:38-39,50). He interacted with the
Samaritan woman, who being not only a female, was also a Gentile (John
4:9). This was one of the biggest
taboos that He could have crossed.
Jesus saw no difference between the spiritual worth of a man and
woman, or between a Jew and Gentile. In fact, the Son of God chose to
live among Gentiles (Matthew
4:13) and even praised the faith of
the Gentiles who trusted in God (Matthew
5:24-28).
Jesus hung around with people whom society considered unacceptable. He
went personally to the sick, the demon-possessed, the prostitutes,
sinners, and tax-collectors (Matthew
8:1-4, 14-17, 28-34, 9:1-7, 10-13; Luke 15:1).
Jesus Christ was also, for
lack of a better phrase, "not afraid of the dark." He did not shrink
from death, darkness, or the unknown, and He even chose quite morbid
illustrations to get across His points. He did not chicken out when
the time came for Him to descend from His heavenly paradise to the
hellish earthly realms. He gave up His comfort, faced persecution,
torture, and death on a cross--the most excruciatingly painful form of
execution ever invented by mankind.
In His speech, Christ often utilized disturbing illustrations to
explain His messages. In Matthew 18:8-9, Christ commanded that if your
eye causes you to sin, you are to gouge it out, and if your hand
causes you to sin, you are to chop it off (Matthew
18:8-9).
The images portrayed in His parables were very morbid at times. He
compared a hypocrite who condemns his brother for a small sin while
having even more sin himself with one who has a plank of wood run
through his eye socket (Luke
6:41).
At the last supper, Jesus bid His disciples to see the bread He broke
as His crushed body, and the wine He drank as His spilled blood (Matthew
14:22-24).
It was not uncommon for Jesus' sermons to talk about gruesome details
(Matthew
22:13; 24:9,28, etc.)
Just because a thought is "disturbing" does not mean it is evil.
Christ's mindset shared a lot in common with the modern-day Goth's. We
should not be so quick to condemn the Gothic subculture as being
contrary to Christ and scriptural teaching, when in fact, it is very
much in line with the truth.
Finally, Goths are like Jesus
in that Christ based His opinions of people on who they were, not on
how they looked or appeared.
While many churches would call the police on a dirty, scraggly
homeless person or a hardcore metal Goth if they were to walk into the
sanctuary during the Sunday service, Christ looked at people for who
they truly were. He saw that many of those who were dressed in the
finest clothes and who were the cleanest on the outside, were actually
the most corrupt on the inside. And He saw that many of those who were
considered the lowest scum of the earth, were actually some of the
most righteous people on the inside.
The story of the rich man and the beggar in Luke 16:19-23 is a perfect
example of this. Jesus could see that the luxurious man dressed in
fine linen was actually one of the worst people, as opposed to the
dirty beggar whose sores were licked by dogs.
While most would be irritated by a mass of people following them
around, Christ looked on the masses that followed Him as a flock of
sheep in need of a shepherd (Matthew
9:36).
In His parables, Christ honored the repentant publican. To Him, the
humbled sinner who turned from His ways was a better person than the
righteous man who looked down on everyone else (Luke
18:9-14).
Christ, without drawing judgments on people He didn't truly know,
accepted and loved the prostitute who repented and yet was rejected by
everyone else (Luke
7:38-39,50) and the repentant thief
on the cross (Luke
23:40-43).
In like manner, Christian
Goths are known for their accepting personalities. Gothic Christians
are the modern social equivalents of Christ, who "eat with sinners."
We do not shun those that society shuns. We do not accept rumors or
hearsay. We base our opinions of people on what we know about them
personally. Christ was very Gothic in this respect.
So the point of this article
is to show that perhaps, before we begin condemning others, we should
examine what we really have against that person and ask ourself, "What
does the Bible say about this?"
Instead of being so quick to judge other Christians, let us be a
little more open-minded and see if their lifestyle holds up to the
scrutiny of God's Word.
If, after a thorough and sincerely open examination of Gothicism, you
still find Christian Goths as "heretical," "backslidden," or not
worthy of fellowship, then that will be your own opinion, and God will
be our Judge. However, I hope that after reading the scripture verses
I have outlined in this article, you will believe otherwise.
There is nothing wrong with the mindset or attitude of a Christian
Goth, and Christ Himself has given support to this by His own
lifestyle. Therefore, we, as Christians, should definitely be more
respectful and acceptant of those who claim to be Christian Goths,
since, as Christ stated, the family of God is our true family.
Once again, I am sorry if I have offended anyone. I only ask that you
take this into consideration in the future.
Love in the blood of Christ,
Your brother,
~iNvErTeD
gOtH~
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