Why Your Scars Are
Beautiful to God
By Belinda Elliott
CBN.com Daily Life Producer
CBN.com –
“Bad things happen to good
people.” We hear it all the time. We know that it is
true. Yet, when the “bad thing” happens to us, we
somehow often seem to be caught off guard. The deep
hurts that we experience in life can plague us for years
to come.
Author and speaker Sharon Jaynes knows
this well. For years, she carried around wounds from her
past without even realizing it. Jaynes grew up in a home
filled with fighting and violence. Her father was an
alcoholic, and his drunken rages left her crouching
under her covers at night trying to shut out the sounds
of her parents arguing.
At age 12, Jaynes met a Christian
woman in her neighborhood and began spending time with
her. Although her family attended church every week, she
had never seen a relationship with Jesus modeled in her
home. Through her new friendship with her neighbor, she
saw more than just religious rituals like her family
performed on Sundays. She learned how to have a
relationship with Jesus, and she accepted Christ two
years later. Within five years both of her parents also
came to know Christ. Her story seemed to have a
fairy-tale ending.
However, the years of fighting and
violence at home left her very insecure. Among her
deep-rooted insecurities was the belief that she was
ugly and unloved.
“Even though I became a Christian, I
still had those wounds,” Jaynes explains. “And I carried
them around with me well into my 30s.”
Jaynes began to feel like something
was missing from her life. As she attempted to discover
what it was, she sensed God telling her to let go of her
past hurts. That’s when she began the process of healing
– a process that she calls “turning the wounds into
scars.”
“There is a big difference between a
wound and a scar,” Jaynes says. “Because a scar says,
‘I’ve been healed, and this is my story.’”
In her book, Your Scars Are
Beautiful to God, Jaynes encourages readers to
embrace their scars and allow God to use them in the
lives of others. She says God prompted her to write the
book after reading the familiar Scripture passage about
the resurrection of Christ.
“When Jesus appeared to His disciples,
they did not recognize Him when He walked in the room
until He showed them His scars. Once they saw His scars,
then they knew who He was,” Jaynes says. “And as I was
reading that I felt like God was saying to me, ‘that is
still how people know Jesus today.’”
Jesus could have healed His scars and
come back without them. Instead, He chose to keep them.
Jaynes believes that is because He had a message for us.
Our scars are important, and He wants to use them.
When Bad Things Happen
We will probably never understand some
of the things that happen to us in life. When approached
with the question of why God allows pain in our lives,
Jaynes says she usually refers to something she once
heard Dr. James Dobson say. “He said that for us to try
to understand God’s ways is like an amoeba trying to
understand how the human body works. We just can’t do
it,” Jaynes says. “And that is something that we have to
come to grips with.”
It is during our times of struggle
that we find out what we really believe about God. A
tragedy in our lives often leads us to a crisis of
belief, Jaynes says. “I think that it’s very easy to
believe in God when life is good,” she says. “But when
life is not good, then that’s when we really decide if
we believe it.”
She tells the story of Wendy, a young
woman who was raped. “She was very angry at God because
she had been a good girl,” Jaynes explains, “and she
thought that if you were good, then bad things would not
happen.” Wendy was left with a choice to make.
In the midst of her pain, Wendy had to
decide between three options:
God was not powerful enough to
stop what happened;
God was powerful enough, but simply didn’t care
enough to stop what happened; or
God allowed it to happen and He has some greater
purpose behind it.
After struggling for several years,
Wendy decided God must have a purpose for what she
endured, and she chose to release her pain to Him and
trust Him with the outcome. It is a choice we all face
when troubles hit our lives.
Choose to Be Healed
Each of us can be healed, Jaynes says,
but first we must answer a question. She recalls the
story in John 5 of Jesus healing a man who had lived as
an invalid for 38 years. Before He healed him, Jesus
asked the man, “Do you want to get well?”
Perhaps the reason Jesus asked this,
Jaynes says, is because the man’s life would drastically
change once he was healed. He would have to learn to
walk and get a job, among other things. Our lives, too,
will change when we allow Jesus to heal our wounds.
“I think we can be so comfortable with
that wound that it almost becomes who we think we are,”
Jaynes says. “‘I am a rape victim.’ ‘I am a woman who
has been abused.’ ‘I had an abortion, and that’s who I
am.’ We can become very comfortable in that and to let
go of it and be healed is scary. You take on a whole new
life.”
Healing, Jaynes points out, also
involves choices about forgiveness. If our wounds are
from poor choices that we made, we must ask God to
forgive us and accept that His death on the cross is
enough to pay for our sins. Then we need to release the
guilt and shame that we have felt.
Healing often involves forgiving
others as well. “I think that many people believe
forgiveness means that we are saying that what they did
is okay,” Jaynes explains. “It’s not okay. What it is
saying is that I’m not going to let that control me any
longer. I’m giving it to God.”
Until a hurting person accepts God’s
forgiveness, forgives themselves, and forgives the
person who hurt them, Jaynes says, healing can never
take place.
Show Your Scars
Once we are healed, the way we allow
God to use our scars is by sharing them with others. Too
often, Jaynes says, we hide our past hurts from people
around us either because we are ashamed or because we
fear rejection. Carrying these burdens around –
something Jaynes compares to the dust cloud that follows
Pigpen around in the Peanuts comic strip -- can limit
the ways in which God is able to use us.
“I lost a child a long time ago,”
Jaynes says, “and when that happened I didn’t want to
talk to anybody except someone who had gone through the
same thing I had. I think that is how most people feel
when they have gone through a struggle.”
Perhaps the increase in the number of
people seeking help from secular support groups supports
this idea.
“People are going anywhere and
everywhere to find someone who has struggled with the
same thing they have struggled with,” Jaynes says, “and
it’s a little heartbreaking to think that they are
having to go outside the church.”
One reason people are afraid to show
their scars is because they feel that their past will
disqualify them for ministry. Jaynes believes that this
doesn’t happen in churches as often as one may think.
And if it does ever happen to anyone, she says, they
should seriously reconsider their connection with that
body of believers.
“If we are at a place where we share
that struggle and people do not rejoice with us and with
God for restoring our lives, then we need to go
somewhere else,” Jaynes says.
Churches should seek to create safe
places, such as Sunday school or small groups, where
members can tell their stories. When that happens,
Jaynes says, congregations will see a lot of healing
take place.
Beauty From Ashes
Often, if we allow Him to, God will
use our deepest hurt to develop our greatest ministry.
The reason our scars can be beautiful, she says, is
because God gives us opportunities to invest in other
people because of the struggles we’ve gone through
ourselves.
For this reason, we should not despair
when we experience painful circumstances. Rather, we
should look for how God may want to use those
circumstances.
Jaynes says, “I’ve learned over the
years to stop saying, ‘Why did this happen to me?’
Instead, I say to God, ‘Okay, what now?’ This is a
shattered dream, now what do I do with it? Where do I go
from here?”
If we allow God to replace our wounds
with scars, and we are willing to use them to help
others, He will redeem even our most painful
experiences.
As Jaynes writes in her book,
Satan wants to use our past to
paralyze us. God wants to use our past to propel us. The
choice is ours.
Want to read more? Order your copy of
Your Scars Are Beautiful to God
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