Absolute Transparency
I’ve always had the philosophy that a pastor has to share everything about himself. There’s nothing that can be hidden.
My philosophy came to a test recently when I realized that in the message I was giving, it would be helpful for me to share that I’ve been diagnosed with attachment disorder. I’ve also been diagnosed with ADD, and I shared that as well, but that didn’t feel like such a big deal. But saying I have attachment disorder felt like it was a bigger bomb to drop. I don’t know, I would just want my pastor to be a healthy person, and a person who has attachment disorder doesn’t sound healthy to me.
So I debated whether to share it, for about a minute. And then I decided, as I always do, that I had no choice, I had to share it. Why? Because if I don’t share everything about me, then people aren’t really following me, they’re following an image of me that I project. And if there was something I shared that led people to no longer be willing to follow me, then they shouldn’t be following me anyway.
If I hide my attachment disorder from you, you’re not following Vince, because Vince is a guy with attachment disorder. And if share it and you decide not to follow me, well you shouldn’t be following me.
It’s not the most convenient philosophy to have – when you’re the person who is doing the sharing, and it’s often stuff you’d rather not share – but it’s right. And right wins over convenient.
and that Paul guy in the New Testament? He says to boast about our weaknesses…so i think we’re on the right track! God gave us those handicaps as gifts…wierd gifts but it works for me too!
Thanks for sharing this Vince. We like to talk about being “Authentic” but rarely do we actually follow through with it. You are an exception to this – thank-you.