2. The Engine of Shame

Christianity

A historic steam locomotive positioned on a logging site with large logs in the foreground.
A two-part essay on shame:

In my previous essay on guilt and shame, I discussed their nature and differences, their impact on personal and social life, and their centrality to much of our individual unhappiness and communal dysfunction. If shame is the common thread of the human condition — fraught with pain, suffering, and evil — it must be mastered and overcome if we are to bring a measure of joy to life and peace to our spirits and social interactions.

Shame is the most private of personal emotions, thriving in our souls’ dark, secluded lairs. It is the secret never told, the fears never revealed, the dread of exposure and abandonment, our harshest judge and most merciless prosecutor. Yet, like the Wizard of Oz, the man behind the curtain is far less intimidating than his booming voice in our subconscious mind.

The power of shame is the secret; its antidotes are transparency and grace. Shame thrives in the dark recesses of the mind, where its accusations are amplified by repetition without external reference. Shame becomes self-verifying as each new negative thought or emotion reinforces the theme of our rejection and worthlessness. This vicious cycle may only be broken by allowing the light of openness, trust, and honesty.

The barriers to this liberating openness are fear and mistrust: fear that revealing our darkest selves will lead to rejection, pain, and humiliation, and a lack of trust that sharing such darkness will be used against us to our detriment. This anxiety and distrust locks us into a self-imposed prison from which there is seemingly no escape. Our only recourse becomes the adaptive but destructive defenses of withdrawal, self-attack, avoidance, or aggression.

The most dangerous infections in medicine occur in a closed space. As the bacteria grow, they generate increasing pressure, which drives deadly toxins into the bloodstream. The infection can only be treated and health restored by uncovering and draining the abscess. And so it is with shame: we must take that which is most painful and most toxic and release it, lest we become even more emotionally and spiritually sick.

How do we go about such a process? It should not be done lightly, as the world remains dangerous and sometimes hostile, and many cannot bear such disclosure — and who may use it against us? For this reason — this reasonable fear (amplified many times over in the echoes of our inner chambers of shame) — many will not take this step until life circumstances become so difficult or painful that they have no other choice. Hence, you will find this process first in the alcoholic at his bottom, at the therapist for intractable depression, at the counselor after divorce, and in the prodigal son seeking fellowship in a grace-based church or small group.

But we need not wait for such disasters before beginning to address shame. There are several principles to begin the journey from shame to sanity and peace. Here are a few that come to mind:

There was, the story goes, a holy man who sat by the side of the road praying and meditating. As he watched and prayed, the broken of the world passed by — the crippled, the lame, the ragged poor, the sick, the blind. In his prayer, with broken heart, he asked God, “How could such a good and loving Creator see such things and do nothing about them?”

There was a long period of silence with no answer. Then, in a soft voice, God replied: “I did do something about them: I made you.”

Our shame, our brokenness, brings us great pain and wreaks much destruction in our lives. Yet by this very means, God equips us to be His hands, heart, voice, and compassion. As such, we can find a purpose in life unmatched by anything else we might wish for or desire. Such are the ways of the God of endless surprise and limitless grace.