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@lilchristuten75683 жыл бұрын
Sympathy and compassion are not the same thing. Sympathy is feeling pity for someone, compassion is to be moved to action by feeling pity for someone.
@branditimmer65603 жыл бұрын
I see how sympathy and empathy are very important to distinguished between; and can see where it really matters in regard to something like experiences with extra-terrestrials. To empathize with someone who has had an ET experience just makes their victimization worse. To sympathize with them and bring them to a correct, biblically based, understanding of their traumatic experience is essential to their healing.
@hollydonato10073 жыл бұрын
I’m amazed Rigney says wives are “usually” the ones who pout and manipulative a false apology. How sexist. Petulance was my Christian father’s preferred method of passive aggression that kept my mom in check.
@cathleenolney88523 жыл бұрын
It's important to note that licensed psychotherapist and psychologists from CACREP accredited schools are taught the exact opposite definitions. Empathy requires the counselor "feel with" a client without becoming enmired/enmeshed. It is like coming alongside a person in the water after a shipwreck. Empathy requires we throw them a rope and a life preserver and guide them in how to use these tools to get in the boat. Sympathy requires I get in the water and do it for them. This is the definition in the textbooks I have read while in Seminary obtaining my Master's in Clinical Mental Health Counseling.
@mitchellcochran69193 жыл бұрын
Thank you for commenting this. Was thinking the same thing.
@DrVincentChia3 жыл бұрын
www.grammarly.com/blog/empathy-sympathy/ Or refer to the 20 volumes OED (Oxford English dictionary) for definition and derivation of the words.
@cvfreeman13 жыл бұрын
Doug Wilson makes a living mischaracterizing and defining terms in a way that is supposed "opponents" do not.
@applebrown18473 жыл бұрын
I just googled it, those guys are right about the definition.
@cathleenolney88523 жыл бұрын
To all who want to argue: I'm not telling anyone what they *should* have as a definition. My point is that definitions of words mean different things to different people. If you actually care about communicating effectively with someone, it is wise to make sure you understand the definition they are using. If you merely want to feel *right* and *superior*, beat them over the head with your knowledge. They will despise you and your message (of the Gospel?), but you can feel smug with your sanctimonious self-righteousness.
@austink6413 жыл бұрын
What they’re describing as unhealthy/“unbiblical” is empathy without boundaries. Empathy is an emotional, social, and interpersonal skill we learn as young children that allows us to see things from others’ perspectives. If we can’t individuate ourselves from others, this will lead to inappropriate empathy and acting out in ways that are self harming. But it is not bad to experience empathy. Sympathy/compassion stem from the experiences empathy allows us to have.
@MrLibertyHugger3 жыл бұрын
Well said.
@NoProb4Rob3 жыл бұрын
Yet sympathy today is considered by many to be more like a distant / disconnected appearance of caring.
@themange593 жыл бұрын
@@NoProb4Rob being able to say "I have no idea what you're going through, because I've never experienced anything like that but it must be terrible" is a sympathetic statement. I doubt anyone would bemoan someone saying this.
@Leadeshipcoach2 жыл бұрын
Best response thus far. I think the problem here is they are defining empathy as it is being used today ( given their examples) rather than how it was originally defined and used historically . The problem as I see it is that they did not clearly explain that by the words “sin of empathy” they are referring to how empathy is defined and used today by many. I would not have used the words “sin of empathy” without further clarification and explanation; actually I would not have used the words “sin of empathy” at all as it could lead to misunderstanding- as it has done. I think they were trying to illuminate a point and problem as they see it. I think the problem created is not being clear that they are speaking about empathy as it is being used today- I get that by listening to them…. but they needed to clarify that rather than taking today’s use of “empathy” by many and using that to say “this is the difference between empathy and sympathy, and empathy is wrong/a sin”. Someone once said that “the danger and illusion of communication is that because we use the same words we think we mean the same thing-”
@gwendolynheinen66772 жыл бұрын
well said yes!
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
Doug & Joe are missing a key point: a person can empathize with another person's emotions while not agreeing with that second person's positions or decisions. Empathy is about connecting with another person's emotions because, as we are all humans, we all draw from the same array of human emotions, even though our personal situations differ. Empathy is not about taking on that person's perspective - that would be "identification" not empathy. Empathy is about connecting with other people's emotions, relating to them on the level of feeling, in order to better understand them. Empathy is important for any positions that seek to provide support (pastors, therapists, social workers, etc.) so that the person they are helping sees/hears that someone understands what their pain or sorrow can feel like, to an extent. Because we've all felt pain or sorrow. Or joy or anger or fear or contentment, etc. Compassion is the essence of both sympathy and empathy. I fear that in their efforts to be anti-woke, Doug & Joe are purposely missing this crucial point. Further, "sympathy" does not mean you are holding out a hand to a person in the mire, hoping to pull them out. The word for that is literally "help". Rather, sympathy is seeing that person in the mire and saying that you feel sorry for their situation. Empathy would be saying that they can understand the overwhelming feeling that person is having, sinking in mire. Empathy does not mean jumping into the mire with them because being empathetic does not mean a person is taking on that person's identity - it means that they understand that feeling of being overwhelmed because they've been overwhelmed too. That said, neither empathy nor sympathy alone are appropriate for this person in the mire because then no one is being pulled out of that mire. Help is what is required. That was a real fail as an analogy.
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
@@thepunygiant Yep, that two years comment caught my eye. Mainly because it does contextually put this video right in the middle of the ridiculous culture war that continues on to this day - a war in which both sides seek to create new definitions of words like empathy and racism. Ironic to me, since truly understanding and enacting the concept of empathy means rejecting two-sides binaries and instead embracing human commonalities. One would think two pastors would be on board with that. Particularly as the goal of empathy aligns completely with Jesus' teachings.
@themange593 жыл бұрын
Thank you for this comment
@melfuz3 жыл бұрын
Yes! I agree. Great comment.
@danielmann54273 жыл бұрын
Well if the scriptures are not your standard than you can say anything. Empathy is not biblical. It doesn't exist. Did you not listen to the beginning?
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
@@danielmann5427 Why exactly do you think Jesus wept? Please consider how the word "empathy" is used today - and how it describes the way Scripture maintains we should be treating others. Doug & Joe are creating a new definition of empathy to further their callow points. Do you honestly think Jesus would be against a person using the word empathy to describe treating people the way that God intended? This is only something that Doug & Joe care about. "Empathy" may not be a biblical word, but there are many words used today that are not in the Bible. The ancient word "sumpatheia" means "with feeling" and the ancient word "empatheia" means "in feeling". There is not a lot of difference between those two words, when they were originally used. But words and their meanings may change over time. This does not mean "empathy" is now a sin! Please don't buy into the straw man nonsense that this video is selling.
@jimdee98013 жыл бұрын
I did a frustrated KZbin search and stumbled on this
@DAce-vu5ct2 жыл бұрын
You're rapidly becoming my favorite voice in the reformed church, I am not reformed but there's simply something about every lesson that's so incredibly Pastoral and deeply thought out.... Thank you Rev. Wilson, you're A sword 🗡️ of the kingdom cutting away at bad ideas
@DAce-vu5ct2 жыл бұрын
@@JW-tg1nn apparently everyone is.
@DAce-vu5ct2 жыл бұрын
@@JW-tg1nn there's a lot he teaches it's very beneficial and then there's his baptism stance which is nonsensical
@YESHUAISTWL Жыл бұрын
I'm curious about what your thoughts are on Wilson's positive views on sexism.
@orgullosamentemexicana952 Жыл бұрын
As a Mental Health professional who works with therapist, psychiatrists and psychologists and as a Christian woman, I can see the importance of understanding this distinction. Thank you! Pastor Doug you never disappoint! You are a treasure to the body of Christ!
@tonythelibrarian3 жыл бұрын
What concerns me the most is not the changing of the meaning of empathy to suit the position of the proponents. Nor is it the danger of Christians only offering "thoughts and prayers" and disengaging with the lost and hurting. But the framing of empathy as sin because Jesus had empathy and under this statement empathy is sinful the authors, perhaps unintentionally are saying Jesus sinned.
@bryanjacobs14233 жыл бұрын
Just because some people take "empathy" too far doesn't mean empathy in every case is a sin. You could've instead called this "The Sin of Too Much Empathy". Surely you don't believe that trying to understand someone else's thoughts and experiences is sinful! But in most people's minds, that's what empathy refers to. It's imprudent to label "empathy" as a sin, because in many people's minds it refers to something that is truly virtuous. This episode created controversy because it redefines "empathy" in order to label it a sin, which causes confusion for those who are still using the default definition.
@dankxng3 жыл бұрын
Yeah, you wouldn't want to have too much empathy would you?! Empathy is defined as the dictionary as "the ability to understand and share the feelings of another." Could you imagine someone having too much of that?! Like if God were to give up his omnipotence, omnipresence, and omniscience in order to leave as a human so that he could understand and share every feeling and temptation humanity faces?! Wouldn't that be so wild?!
@TheRealMonnie3 жыл бұрын
@@dankxng so the point, I think, is you get lost in empathy. If you really feel their emotion, you are stuck right where they are. I think they're saying you should stand back so you can determine truth first, before you get emotionally entangled.
@dankxng3 жыл бұрын
@@TheRealMonnie So we should not have the heart that Paul writes we should have in 1 Corinthians 9 striving to be all things for all people, we should not emulate Romans 12:15 by rejoicing with those who rejoice and weeping with those who weep in order to not "really feel their emotion" otherwise we well become too "emotionally entangled," nor should we be like Jesus in 11:33-35 and feel the emotions of those around us? Interesting. So your version of Christ is not in step with Scripture? That's wild, my dude!
@ImmyT893 жыл бұрын
@@dankxng wow that went past you so fast.. huh...
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
@@dankxng Perfect analogy, thank you!
@IntuitMachine3 жыл бұрын
The golden rule "“Do unto others as you would have them do unto you”" is exactly what empathy is. So let's not redefine empathy to mean something entirely different from what it is commonly understood to be.
@CanonPress3 жыл бұрын
Says who?
@jdblanch11723 жыл бұрын
Well Jesus said the golden rule thing...but to answer the question you are actually asking (who says empathy is personified by the golden rule?) that would be...hmm it says Jesus again. Jesus had empathy for everyone, I would list examples, but someone beat me to it (they call it the new testament). A short list of Jesus showing empathy for those not in his tribe would be the woman at the well, the Roman centurion, and literally his entire life. To use your sympathy is standing on the shoreline analogy...Jesus dove right into humanity he did not stay on the shore.
@javierreyes6233 жыл бұрын
@@CanonPress The Logos Himself in action. 😂
@iancampbell14943 жыл бұрын
That’s not how society defines empathy at all.
@themange593 жыл бұрын
@@iancampbell1494 well they define it wrong. Or you're making that up. What we as Christians shouldn't do is throw out the whole thing and call it a sin. Now that gay people can get married, which is against the biblical definition, meaning society changed the definition. Does that mean we call marriage a sin?
@ew83113 жыл бұрын
This is a redefinition of empathy, and either confuses or pushes people away. Empathy is rooted in our biology. The problem is if that empathy isn’t tethered to anything outside of the person (I.e. scripture, truth) or the person emphasizing loses their sense of self.
@ew83113 жыл бұрын
Theory of mind requires empathy. They are describing codependency and calling it empathy. They are asking to be misunderstood.
@nopark12733 жыл бұрын
Very well put 🙌🏽
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
Not necessarily A redefinition but the definition of how it's being used practically in critical race Theory
@odanemcdonald98742 жыл бұрын
Exactly, it's rooted into our biology. Our bodies. Our flesh. Hence why standing back and thinking about the real meanings of he word as they have been passed down from the Greek are needed. What's sym and what's em? What's pathos? Do people still use the words based on the meaning that has been handed down to them in a straight line from the Greeks? With and in Suffering Yes Hence the need to rise above our carnal biology, and seek after the virtuous thing. Suffering WITH, rather than suffering IN. We should only be IN our Creator and Messiah. But we're commanded to be WITH our neighbour
@bodvarson19339 ай бұрын
You either didn't understand them, or didn't listen to the video.
@ImmyT893 жыл бұрын
My definition of Empathy is simply putting yourself in one's shoes. You don't have to feel the same way, like be depressed or angry towards the person who wronged your friend. For example, you can still empathize with someone who lost a parent even if you haven't experience it. You simply need to imagine how it feels to lose a parent. Most times its hard to even empathize when you don't share the same experience, this is where 'sympathy' is more applicable. You can at least try to imagine how your friend feels though. You can empathize if if you actually lost a parent. Get it? Compassion on the other hand is simply empathy/sympathy + action (a desire to help). Empathy is NOT a sin brothers and sisters. Too much empathy IS, i guess.
@Justheory11b3 жыл бұрын
Empathy/sympathy and compassion needs to be balanced with Truth and responsibility. I can sympathize with an addict, addiction is powerful, but I must balance it with the understanding that only the addict can overcome the addiction. Sympathy alone isn't enough.
@tayh.62353 жыл бұрын
@@Justheory11b exactly. That's why temperance (moderation) is a fruit of the spirit.
@notloki33772 жыл бұрын
thankfully, there already is a definition of empathy, so you don't need to make one. it's a measurable biological trait. it involves self sacrifice. it evolved out of the mother-infant pair bond. (i know evolution is a hot topic around here, but you can see evolution more easily than you can see genesis 1:1, so i'll take it as part of what is created.) every trait has its problems. one problem with empathy is self-sacrifice at the expense of yourself, to the point where you can no longer self-sacrifice. your self is exhausted. another problem with empathy is the tendency to overreact to competition, and to oversimplify problems. a baby cannot rationalize, and since empathy is specifically biologically tailored towards care of those who cannot help themselves, empathy is irrational by definition. you cannot tell a baby to grow the hell up and feed itsself. when the baby complains, it requires aid. there is no valid argument, there is no conversation to be had. it does not take much of a stretch to see that this trait is a catastrophe when it manifests in relationships with adult men. in fact, many men bond in ways which are socially accepted forms of abuse, from sports, to first person shooter video games. men bond over unempathic activity, more often than not. empathy is not a sin in and of itsself. it is a tool, a projectile, designed to strike certain targets truly. sin is derived from an old greek archery term, to miss the mark is to sin. it is a sin to use the wrong tool for the right job. the right job for empathy is caregiving. when empathy is used for politics, it is a sin. communism ran on empathy, and it ran into mass graves. it is the instinct to care of the mother bear that gets you eaten. i rest my case.
@ImmyT892 жыл бұрын
Definition of empathy from per the dictionary: 1: the action of understanding, being aware of, being sensitive to, and vicariously experiencing the feelings, thoughts, and experience of another of either the past or present without having the feelings, thoughts, and experience fully communicated in an objectively explicit manner also : the capacity for this 2: the imaginative projection of a subjective state into an object so that the object appears to be infused with it Does my definition not fit the description?
@notloki33772 жыл бұрын
@@ImmyT89 look up the research done on the big 5 personality traits. when people say words which are related to empathy, they are referring to a human-universal psychological construct, which can be obtained by averaging linguistic constants across various cultures and languages. the dictionary is not necessarily the most definitive source for the true nature of things, especially because recently the dictionary has been changed by political activists.
@jessysmit87443 жыл бұрын
One of the best talks I have ever heard on being a Christian man, husband and citizen. Biblical wisdom in "plain talk" that even a man listening while working in his shop can understand, apply and teach. Thank you guys.
@hudsonensz28583 жыл бұрын
It strikes me that this entire conversation is built around a clear equivocation of what empathy means, and most likely it appears that they are guilty of the etymological fallacy. A lot of what they say is true, but no one defines empathy as they have, not even secular academics. So it's a long conversation based on an incorrect definition. It's not really helpful, and the claim "empathy is sinful" actually should mean "empathy that excludes God from the conversation, dehumanizes the other person, assumes the individual is faultless, blameless and completely honest, has their own reality in their head, and acts as an uncritical advocate for that person while sinning with them without offering any help or way out based on their owne experience, is sinful Well yes. Obviously. No one disagrees with that.
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
I agree that no one defines empathy as us however they act as if empathy is this similar to the way feminism is defined versus how it is
@jameslkiii3 жыл бұрын
"No one disagrees", so only you are allowed to use rhetorical devices. How convenient.
@7EiamJ73 жыл бұрын
Just discovered Mr Wilson and so glad I did. Love your enthusiasm for speaking to all sides and the patience you show is staggering. I used to be an ardent atheist but didn't like the arrogance that I started noticing from people like Dawkins. So much more to religion then I thought. Not quite a believer in the one true God but getting closer. I particularly liked your analogy of learning a language and that if you want to believe then you have to expose yourself to it more. And that's what I'm doing.
@bassistguy133 жыл бұрын
I’m not sure of the relevance of the above shared video in reply to your comment. But I am praying fervently for you, my friend, that this crazy algorithm of KZbin points you to more informative brothers like Douglas Wilson. If you are philosophically inclined I would recommend RC Sproul or, despite some serious controversy postmortem, Ravi Zacharias. I enjoy the conviction and common sense of Voddie Bauchaum as well (though I may have misspelled his last name..).
@bassistguy133 жыл бұрын
You can email me at wstevens1313@gmail.com if there is any questions or other sources I could maybe send your way, or if you just want to chat through some stuff!
@7EiamJ73 жыл бұрын
@@bassistguy13 cheers for the suggestions. Had heard and watched Ravi. Never heard of the allegations until now am shocked. Will check out the others.
@johnjaso3853 жыл бұрын
@@bassistguy13 how can you still recommend Ravi? Ravi was my favorite apologist to listen to. His way of explaining Truth was like no other in my opinion. However, i was duped. I plan to never listen to another video and throw all his books in the garbage. I still love Ravi, and hope he was or is a genuine convert who fell into sin like we all can as believers. But I don’t know if he was truly a believer?
@bassistguy133 жыл бұрын
@@johnjaso385 I don't know, I am a believer and struggle with sanctification every day. I have not fallen into the particular sin that Ravi had, but I recognize the wretchedness that the Lord is constantly putting to death in me. I think Zacharias has made some wonderful contributions to the apologetics community, and while abusing his clout and power to seek inappropriate sexual relationships is a sin, I also believe it is a sin possible of forgiveness in Christ. I never found myself in a position of worshipping the man in the past; perhaps this is why I was sad for him and his family but not crushed by the allegations? I recognize the fallibility of man in all things, can take the good from his life and pray for forgiveness in the bad.
@rufinoty69583 жыл бұрын
If I get it right, in empathy reason acquiesces to emotion, whereas, in sympathy reason shepherds emotion.
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
Rather, empathy understands emotions while sympathy evokes only one emotion: sorrow. Reason should shepherd both.
@rufinoty69583 жыл бұрын
, @@markmonday1242 what I sated is what I understand from the discussion. so from what you said, empathy is intuitive, whereas sympathy is cognitive.
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
@@rufinoty6958 Ah, I should have been clear that I was debating the point made in the discussion, not you. Per their discussion, I think you are correct - that is exactly what they are saying. As far as cognitive vs. intuitive... I'd say that the sympathy is actually intuitive (spontaneous, not requiring conscious thought) and that empathy is both cognitive (ability to recognize another's emotional state) and affective (ability to share those feelings).
@rufinoty69583 жыл бұрын
@@markmonday1242 Why then is this discussion titled, The Sin of Empathy? You sound in favor of empathy over sympathy. The panelists of this discussion are in favor of sympathy. By standard or criteria is this question resolved? In what perspective is this to be understood? This is like taking a point in the continuum between empathy and sympathy without really resolving which is what.
@markmonday12423 жыл бұрын
@@rufinoty6958 I think the discussion is so titled because it is easy clickbait - attacking a humanistic and liberal strategy and mislabelling it as "a sin" in order to score an obscure semantical point, and clicks, when no such point need have been made in the first place. Further, Doug & Joe speak against scripture and the character of Jesus when they label empathy a sin - surely Jesus was the most empathetic of all. They construct a work-around to what scripture says and what has been established as the character of Jesus by ascribing a new definition to the word empathy. This is a typical strategy for both the right and the left: creating new definitions of old words to further their own political rhetoric. As far as my own perspective goes, I am strongly in favor of both empathy and sympathy; although personally, I would prefer that someone be empathetic to my emotions than sympathetic, because the latter can feel condescending. But to say one is opposed to the other is to engage in reductive, binary thinking. And to be against empathy, or sympathy, is to be against the ideals espoused by Christ and the New Testament.
@amortonr8283 жыл бұрын
Commenting for the algorithm.
@Entrailss3 жыл бұрын
Same
@cordsman3 жыл бұрын
Same
@ezassegai47933 жыл бұрын
good idea
@josephroberts66423 жыл бұрын
Same
@angelr90963 жыл бұрын
Hi Algorithm! :D
@DiMOOSE13 жыл бұрын
Galatians 6:2 King James Version 2 Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ. One does not have to compromise ethics to empathize.
@1snavarro3 жыл бұрын
Daniel Goldman's book on emotional intelligence (EQ) states that one of the pillars of EQ is empathy... would you substitute empathy with compassion or sympathy? Because it seems to me that the main driver behind being more empathetic is being a better leader and increasing EQ when dealing with people.
@travis66943 жыл бұрын
Empathy is feeling exactly what people go through, sympathy is feeling sadness or bad about it. Empathy is deeper rooted and seems mor spiritual because you are almost weeping with them in your heart because you know eviscerating what it feels like in the moment.
@michaelrodgers15453 жыл бұрын
If you can get 9mins in, you’ll push past the title of this and understand what they are talking about. Phenomenal job.
@ew83113 жыл бұрын
They’re not describing empathy. They’re describing codependency. Terms are important.
@michaelrodgers15453 жыл бұрын
@@ew8311 I don’t see how they are describing codependency. Empathy and codependency are very different things. I could see how overly empathetic people could easily find them selves in codependent relationships. Please explain what you mean, I would love to hear your thoughts.
@Repentee3 жыл бұрын
I did somewhat struggle with the definitions in the beginning as I think arguments can be made for entering into suffering, but as they hashed out the discussion I could and can completely agree with the positions taken.
@michaelrodgers15453 жыл бұрын
@@Repentee I agree but I hope @E W, puts in their two cents; I am genuinely interested in their opinion.
@susiet21509 ай бұрын
@@ew8311co-dependency or enablement…sorta the same things?
@DJW1959Aus3 жыл бұрын
People without empathy are sociopaths. Are you (rampant man) a sociopath? A sociopath is a term used to describe someone who has antisocial personality disorder (ASPD). People with ASPD can't understand others' feelings. The point of empathy is being able to understand others feeling.
@CanonPress3 жыл бұрын
Thanks for weighing in DJW1959Aus
@ajoflow3 жыл бұрын
I'm so glad to see other biblical Christians seeing through this and speaking up.
@rebekahguilder6023 жыл бұрын
I find it interesting and telling that Pastor Doug Wilson went immediately to an example of someone lying about sexual abuse. Like honestly does that happen so often. I would think more often you would have to curtail your empathy when dealing with regular interpersonal misunderstandings. Sexual abuse is pretty clear cut and I don't think a lot of people lie about that and fabricate it.
@yesorno17683 жыл бұрын
40 % of rape alligation are false. There are also mother that divorced their husband and course the kids to lie about sexual abuse it’s called “the silver bullet”. Because they will have full custody.
@rebekahguilder6023 жыл бұрын
@@yesorno1768 of course that happend BUT men lie too. I personally know women that were raped and a man that was falsely accused of rape. I also personally know women who were abused, adults who were sexually abused by their fathers as children and men who were falsely acccused during divorse proceedings, however these cases are the minority. I wouldn't assume someone was lying because lying about it is much more rare than the actual occurence.
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
@@rebekahguilder602 your first argument was doesn't really happen that often and they showed that known lies are at 40% now your argument is changed to well men lie too. My questions going to be how many of that 40% were ever punished?
@rebekahguilder6023 жыл бұрын
@@grantarmbruster6591 I'm not sure where that 40% is coming from. I would need to see the study. That number seems high to me. And when you say 40% lie, to whom? The courts, their counselors? My point initial point still stands: I find it telling that was the example Pastor Wilson used. I think a more prevalence example of why you can't immediately be empathetic would be couseling a couplw or even just one spouse in a situation when they both think their perspective is 100% reflective of the truth. This happens all of the time, hence the saying every story has two sides.
@rebekahguilder6023 жыл бұрын
@@grantarmbruster6591 and to be clear, I think that there should be some sort of punishment for when people lie in divorce proceedings to gain an advantage. I don't know how that would look practically but to lie and try to distroy another person for your own benefit is abhorrent.
@selfishvirtue289 ай бұрын
I am grateful for this interview!
@joshkenobiwan3 жыл бұрын
EMPATHY IS NOT A SIN
@mrich210872 жыл бұрын
Being empathetic at times I suppose is not a sin. But always being empathetic all the time is most likely a sin. The culture says you have to always be empathetic but only for people who aren’t white and aren’t male. That is also racist and sexist, which is also a sinful and ultimately the actual problem.
@jdblanch11723 жыл бұрын
So I "love" the redefinition of empathy here - where you separate out the core of empathy (feeling with someone) assign it to sympathy and then brutalize whatever is left. Very reminiscent of John Piper's redefinition of complimentarianism. Empathy is relating to another person (I would say this is very much "feeling with"). Jesus is the architect of empathy, being himself devine he took on flesh to relate and restore humanity. Grace comes from empathy. Mercy comes from sympathy. Both are necessary.
@arthursok31633 жыл бұрын
“For we do not have a High Priest who cannot sympathize with our weaknesses, but was in all points tempted as we are, yet without sin.” Hebrews 4:15 Christ could not empathize in our weaknesses because He did not sin.
@travis66943 жыл бұрын
But he did empathize with the temptation.
@arthursok31633 жыл бұрын
Didn’t even sin in His heart .
@danielmann54273 жыл бұрын
@@travis6694 empathy - is in not with
@travis66943 жыл бұрын
@@danielmann5427 okay
@KelKat83 жыл бұрын
In the fight between good vs evil, this is message is Evil! Compassion and empathy are good. How have you strayed so far?
@Katiegirlluv3 жыл бұрын
He's a false teacher
@bman52573 жыл бұрын
I assume you just read the title and made your comment.
@KelKat83 жыл бұрын
@@bman5257 You can assume whatever you want... these guys are evil, judgemental, asses who are leading the weak-minded astray with their word-salad, re-definition of the English language to give people permission to be terrible to other people.
@bman52573 жыл бұрын
It seems to me that they made the proper distinctions and clarifications to render the message that people have permission to be terrible to others to be a gross straw man and uncharitable to dismiss their argument as one made by evil and judgmental people.
@wk18103 жыл бұрын
59:57 "find an external enemy" yep, and that would be the church. I'm praying for a revival first, but expecting a wholesale persecution of the church from w/in her own ranks. The religious had Jesus put to death, the religious killed the prophets, and throughout the centuries the religious persecuted the church. Matthew 10:36 "a man's enemies will be those of his own household".
@cross-eyedmary66193 жыл бұрын
What's the fancy theological term for when people are too lazy to think so they go to ridiculous extremes? Is it the same as for when people want over-simplistic rules and laws, so that they can avoid being actually engaged in Truth seeking on a regular basis?
@nshenk053 жыл бұрын
Pastor Wilson and Dr. Rigney talk about the bible as footnotes or talk about authors who talk about the Bible, but really they are only using rhetoric not the Bible. Say what you will about John Piper, but he brings Scripture exegesis into every conversation and so this falls into a category as to what happens after a leader with vision leaves, Scripture is sidelined and a political or "tribal" discussion takes presidence in order to defend an idiology.
@mrs.stocky24453 жыл бұрын
I found this conversation to be fantastically supported and so well laid out. Wonderful episode. As the wife of a Christian man and the mother of a young boy who we are raising according to the Bible, I find myself listening to things like Man Rampant because I value the views and insights they provide. Thank you for speaking the truth in love and being strong men. Christian women really do want to see strong Christian men, both as husbands and as our brothers in our communities.
@greg73843 жыл бұрын
The speakers are making a case against a particular understanding of the word "empathy". I'm missing the rationale for how it is that the word "empathy" is by definition a bad word. I've not heard of this way of defining the term before in such an exclusive way.
@wpiofm3 жыл бұрын
Kook alert. "Smart" people being clowns. Sympathy is extending a courtesy. Empathy extends emotion. Jesus wept: empathy. Sorry you got a speeding ticket: sympathy. It has to be the last days: calling good words evil.
@MrLibertyHugger3 жыл бұрын
I agree. He trying to chang the word to fit his definition that fits with his argument. Though I agree with his argument for “unhealthy” empathy I found it annoying listening trying to restrict the word’s meaning as though he is lobbying to change the Webster’s dictionary.
@umbrellatreefilms33743 жыл бұрын
"Rejoice with those who rejoice, weep with those who weep." Romans 12:15 As Christians, we are certainly called to use discretion and wisdom. We are also called to engage with others on an emotional level, when appropriate.
@TruthSetFree-zm1ep3 жыл бұрын
Can you say Pompous?! Definitely are in the last days man definitely are!
@jamersbazuka80553 жыл бұрын
It's much less about the word proper, and much more about cultural trends and naming them and distinguishing them from Scripture.
@garysweeten51963 жыл бұрын
They define Empathy and Sympathy the opposite of how I learned it. Joe defined it without a biblical reference. I am not saying he has none but I want to hear it.
@danpilgrim17853 жыл бұрын
Probably because there’s no Biblical passages they can use to justify their argument. Jesus empathised with people otherwise he . Empathy is not saying sin is ok, so they’re twisting meanings to suit their views.
@TheThunderkatana3 жыл бұрын
@@danpilgrim1785 the question is, did Jesus really empathize with us? He most certainly sympathized for us. Hebrews 4:15 [15] For we do not have a high priest who is unable to sympathize with our weaknesses, but one who in every respect has been tempted as we are, yet without sin. But the Bible never teaches that Jesus empathized with us. He was without sin, and therefore could not empathize with our sin. With that said, I do agree this whole discussion is arguing semantics and there is more nuance and presuppositions we are dealing with
@danpilgrim17853 жыл бұрын
@@TheThunderkatana not as far as I know. Empathy’s dictionary description is “someone who understands the feelings of others”. Jesus understood why people were angry, upset or resistant of God. Jesus went out to the pariahs shunned by society who would feel lost and angry as a result. Like the parable of the prodigal son or lost sheep, still going out of his way to bring that person back into the light. Empathy isn’t saying sin is ok, it’s being a listening ear and counsellor. They’re swapping the dictionary definition of both words around as far as I can tell?! Which makes it super confusing semantics. Empathy is walking is someone else’a shoes and understanding why they feel a certain way. Sympathy is feeling sorry for someone. If you want to evangelise and convert someone, it helps to understand where they’re coming from.
@krisdee_rn3 жыл бұрын
They're making empathy automatically toxic, which it isn't. Empathy is being able to feel/understand how someone feels without experiencing it. Sympathy is sharing the feelings.
@garysweeten51963 жыл бұрын
I wrote a dissertation that partially researched Empathy and other relational ideas in scripture. The Fruit of the Spirit covers the waterfront of relational interactions that include empathy and sympathy and compassion. Scripture also fosters the idea that anger is included in the imago Dei since God/ Jesus had anger as well as gentleness. Jesus and all humans are multidimensional so I will never indicate it is wrong to listen carefully and understand others’ emotions.
@Joyfortoday252 жыл бұрын
I myself being highly empathetic find it more of a curse mostly. My fallen nature revels in distortion and I need to remember this. What good does it really do within the Kingdom to be able to “feel” what others feel? These are broken feelings we all deal with day in and day out, some in varying degrees. The greatest enemy of an empath is a narcissist because we can be taken advantage of, I know from experience. But we were once ALL enemies of God until Jesus came. LORD please deliver me from myself.
@AnHebrewChild2 жыл бұрын
**In all their affliction he was afflicted,** and the angel of his presence saved them: in his love and **in his pity** he redeemed them; and he bare them, and carried them all the days of old. ISA 63 For we have not an high priest which cannot be **touched with the feeling of our infirmities;** but was in all points tempted like as we are, yet without sin. HEB 4 _ "follow me, and let the dead bury their dead." - JESUS
@politereminder62843 жыл бұрын
*Rejoice with them that do rejoice, and weep with them that weep* Rom 12:15
@dantebbe Жыл бұрын
42:10 what are they talking about when they say Oedipus did not kill his mother and father? Is this a reference to Gerard?
@CanonPress Жыл бұрын
René Girard argues in Violence and the Sacred that Oedipus didn't do it.
@rafaeldesouza88393 жыл бұрын
This is too good. I recently came across Doug and I can’t get enough of his wisdom.
@biblicalbee20823 жыл бұрын
Right!??
@lancehauersperger43563 жыл бұрын
1Tim.6:19 I am doing what you are beginning, and have grown So much so quick. Welcome brother.
@culater11323 жыл бұрын
unfortunately you are deceived - this video is not wisdom, it is two men's opinions which do not conform to Christ
@rafaeldesouza88393 жыл бұрын
@@culater1132 please change my mind.
@culater11323 жыл бұрын
@@rafaeldesouza8839 hopefully, you're not being sarcastic here is one scriptural example of empathy (not just sympathy) applied to preaching the gospel 20 To the Jews I became as a Jew, in order to win Jews. To those under the law I became as one under the law (though not being myself under the law) that I might win those under the law. 21 To those outside the law I became as one outside the law (not being outside the law of God but under the law of Christ) that I might win those outside the law. 22 To the weak I became weak, that I might win the weak. I have become all things to all people, that by all means I might save some. 23 I do it all for the sake of the gospel, that I may share with them in its blessings. - 1 Corinthians 9:20-23 ESV for additional excellent discussions, look at the posts from Paul Edgar, Andrew Wallace, and Puny Giant on this thread.
@GradyRisley3 жыл бұрын
I don't want to disagree in this forum. As a minister it's not my place to step in even if I don't agree. However, from what source are you getting your definition of sympathy and empathy? Honest question not trying to be flippant or dismissive.
@lindaarendt4963 жыл бұрын
Thank you.
@cross-eyedmary66193 жыл бұрын
You should disagree with this...in any forum...especially as a minister. No matter how intelligent and cunning the speaker, we have an obligation to the TRUTH.
@GradyRisley3 жыл бұрын
@@cross-eyedmary6619 I don't know enough about the terms they are using or the lingo they utilize (as counselors). Their definition of empathy is not what I have always understood it to be. Having said that, I don't disagree with their statements, I would call what they discribe as weak willed, unprincipled or complacent. I have always understood empathy as the ability to "see another persons point of view, even though you yourself have not experienced the same thing". This is highly utilized in the Special Operations. You don't look for a suicide bomber in a stand of trees, we understand he wants to kill as many "infidels" as possible. Since we can empathize with him we look for him around groups of people, especialy ones he would consider "unclean". I do not share his sentiments and I can in no way sympathize with him but I can try and think as he does in order to help him quicklyand efficiently meet allah. Sympathy is what I would call what they are talking about but that is why I requested what and where they are getting the definitions they are using. If somebody assaults another person, most assume that means their was a physical confrontation. In the military an assault is a violent invasion. A police officer knows an assault is a threat of physical violence. I want to know their definitions.
@sandorrabe57459 ай бұрын
This makes so much more sense to me than J.Peterson's blabbing 😅
@sherristevens3052 ай бұрын
EXCELLENT EPISODE! This is extremely helpful in differentiating compassion vs. empathy! Thank you!
@cateclism3162 жыл бұрын
This discussion puts so much on the clear. The modern "social justice" ideology is almost entirely based on empathy. Don't worry about absolute standards or even God's law, but focus on "my experience" and "what offended me". Remove the offense of the Law, and all that's left is the standards of the offended party, therefore you must conform to them to atone for your "sin".
@bkdguitarist3 жыл бұрын
They’re conflating things that have nothing to do with sympathy or empathy. Rigney equates empathy with a failure to ask probing questions and understand the truth of a situation. Failure or inability to properly ask probing questions is simply a sign of a bad counselor, and has nothing to do with empathy. I’m beginning to wonder if he coined this “sin of empathy” term to be provocative and get views.
@millball3 жыл бұрын
I can't remember the last time i heard 2 men talk sense together. Thank you
@user-ov5he1vk4i3 жыл бұрын
Sense...... who decides what is sensible, you? Truth is true but it doesn’t come from self. Damn pietistic idealogs, turning Christianity into authoritarianism.
@carawadley3173 жыл бұрын
Really curious why the marketing is very much directed toward men.
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
Because men need to stand up and start leading and women need to learn in silence and submission.
@Josh-qo7yd5 ай бұрын
@@grantarmbruster6591 perfect response The question of the content being toward men is a clear indicator of what is wrong with our culture.
@mickeyt15932 жыл бұрын
God bless you Doug keep speaking church now is not the time for shrinking faith but glorious proclamation praise Jesus
@michaellie59043 жыл бұрын
Joe Rigney's The Things of the Earth is an eye opener for me. What a book! Thank you Canon Press for releasing this Man Rampant episode for free on KZbin! God bless.
@s.a30993 жыл бұрын
Yes! That book has helped me so much.
@jasonlazar35693 жыл бұрын
One minute in and he says "we are very important" and I'm already out. No one actually worth a damn declares themselves important like that.
@juliafarris96633 жыл бұрын
It was a joke
@juliafarris96633 жыл бұрын
Like, poking fun at all the talking heads who intro their videos with non-joking “I’m so important because I do this, this, and this” monologues. Douglas isn’t serious. He’s being funny.
@jasonlazar35693 жыл бұрын
@@juliafarris9663 Oh, good. That makes a lot more sense in the context of the whole video.
@dmustakasjr3 жыл бұрын
Doug does take some getting used to #TongueInCheek Listen to just about anything he says on his Plodcast and you will get it #PastorJokes
@MrMemyselfandi4153 жыл бұрын
@ 4:04 "He went to Nazareth High" BWAGAHHAAHAHAHAHAAa!! That seriously made me roll. Oh man....I love Douglas Wilson. Just the tone of his voice when he said that. Thanks for that Doug.
@jonathonray61983 жыл бұрын
In current psychological language the word he is using for empathy is identification. The idea with empathy is a partial-identification a connection with a distance, a spacious connection.
@NathanShattuckIsHere3 жыл бұрын
One of my professors in grad school called it benevolent indifference.
@jonathonray61983 жыл бұрын
@@NathanShattuckIsHere interesting. I have a different take but there is something good about that. The space leaves the option for indifference. I take his answer to be the atheistic or rational one, where Melanie Klein’s depressive position (capacity for concern) is more about recognising how small your problems are compared to the big picture of the universe (imagine looking at your life from the moon). While a more theistic (or relational) depressive position is in recognising that the pain of love can be borne (Jesus on the cross) that after the death in guilt we rise in a powerful love and newfound connection. What this means is that I can identify (partially) with others without drowning with them, but I can also go down to pretty painful and dark places confident that I will rise, confident that I am not held or consumed or defined by this pain or darkness but rather have chosen to bear this with the other because I know the one who has overcome, or I know that this can be overcome. So it is always only partial or at worst temporary and if I am operating in this space, then it is chosen freely. Jesus on cross was total identification but only for three days did it consume him, then it was dissolved in his triumph in resurrection. This was Jesus empathy for his enemies bring them into his tribe. It is begun in sympathy but it maintains the sense of self and true thought so that it is a true understanding and as such it is redemptive - and is not about anxiety or identity because you are free, can truly think, and can maintain your sense of self.
@NathanShattuckIsHere3 жыл бұрын
@@jonathonray6198 Very much agree. Beautifully said, btw. Also, my professor used the benevolent indifference term somewhat in a tongue and cheek way but meant very much what you articulated so well above. Zooming back out to the larger theme of this video, it does seem that some kind of shift has taken place in our culture where any space withheld in empathy, any other thoughts concurrent in the person engaging empathetically that may not agree with what the person is feeling or thinking about the situation or experience are seen as threatening and labeled as unsafe and unloving. That could be what Doug Wilson and Joe Rigney may be overstating in an overreaction to here. At least to me, so much of what they say here resonates as true and very important given current cultural trends, but framing it all as a dichotomy b/w sympathy (good) and empathy (bad) doesn’t seem accurate, nor the best way to frame the fundamental problem they are trying to address.
@jonathonray61983 жыл бұрын
@@NathanShattuckIsHere yes my thoughts exactly. They are putting there finger on it, and then mislabelling it. The culture is narcissistic, and yet attempting to be emotionally enlightened, all you get is a charade. The emperor has no clothes.
@Seleslav3 жыл бұрын
Everything wrong in today's Christianity in one video?
@xXEliminatorXx993 жыл бұрын
I love listening to this
@MrLibertyHugger3 жыл бұрын
He trying to chang the word to fit his definition that fits with his argument. Though I agree with his argument for “unhealthy” empathy I found it annoying listening to him trying to restrict the word’s meaning as though he is lobbying to change the Webster’s dictionary.
@praiselujahradio-show3 жыл бұрын
The Host started off by creating a false narrative. The episode questions, whether does one have empathy. Then the Host says that the person who is hurting, is demanding empathy. You cannot suggest that. You need to speak to someone outside of your circle and/or comfort zone.
@ecthelion2052 жыл бұрын
I’ve spoken to ppl in the “I want empathy” camp. Every time sympathy is given it is taken as an insult. And if you ask questions to show that you don’t give them the baton of truth, they are upset. Why? Because empathy is demanded. The baton of truth is expected to be given to them.
@praiselujahradio-show2 жыл бұрын
@Ecthelion When it comes to those who follow Jesus... Empathy should never have to be demanded by the victim/ afflicted. After reading your reasoning, you chose not to offer empathy, I dont believe you know its definition. smh!
@ecthelion2052 жыл бұрын
@@praiselujahradio-show you have my sympathy
@luptonpete3 жыл бұрын
What the actual f*ck??? I am really sorry for the people in the churches of these "Christians", especially sorry for the wives. They do have some interesting points in here, but I got really furious when I came to the part when they talk about not apologing to you wife, just because you want to make up with her, although you didn't do anything wrong. Like, I understand their frustration when they have to do it, but that doesn't mean you shouldn't do it or that you marriage is built on a lie, as they claim. The problem in relationships is that relationships are not logical. Some people are more emotional then others. And simply by apologizing to them mean that you actually acknowledge that you hurt that person even though you didn't intent on doing so, and so the healing proces can begin. But in general, calling empathy a "sin" is complete misunderstanding of the concept (even within the boundaries of their definition) and misinterpretation of the Bible. And as I see it, they just call it sin, because it is emotional, which only shows that these guys don't understand emotions biblically. This is not Christianity, what you guys are presenting. This is exactly how the Pharisees argued and what Jesus actually criticized.
@Katiegirlluv3 жыл бұрын
They have a political agenda
@jeniferthyssen40253 жыл бұрын
They’re quick to say a woman might lie about abuse, and never consider that a husband may be so obscenely inobservant of his own assholeness that he might believe he’s done nothing wrong and yet has been a complete jerk to his wife. Men who are abusers also are rarely ever thinking they have done anything wrong. So, yeah, empower those bastards hiding around in the pews of self-righteous theological orthodoxy to become more unbearably horrid to their wives/victims and children/victims. Ugh!
@danimal1183 жыл бұрын
Empathy is just knowing the contents of the vessel from within. It's like the lamp that lights and searches the souls of men. We're going to give an account for everything because it's personal to God. Adding the extra step of agreement and affirmation of sin as a requirement of empathy is misleading. One can know another's emotions and judgments and know that they are clearly wrong. I think the anxiety over touching the unclean is what drives the assumption that empathy is sin. We are to take care lest we fall in the sin. And if someone's anxiety is going to threaten their faith or cause them to sin, they should avoid it. But they shouldn't go around teaching others how to make a sin out of what is not sinful.
@AnHebrewChild2 жыл бұрын
Amen.
@Journeytaker10111 ай бұрын
This is what I believe. I can know where a person is and truly understand their feelings, but not agree or affirm their choice to rebel against God. I use that to lead them to Christ!! They have truly conflated agreement, affirmation, and identification onto empathy.
@danimal11811 ай бұрын
@@Journeytaker101 How can we be saved if we are not known by God? And being known by God is the most personal and painful thing to God, the Cross. Clean transactions are what pharisees demand. If God demanded it, we would all be dead.
@supersmart6713 жыл бұрын
I have to think 🤔 atleast four times before I ask an apology to my wife....man this is wonderful!!!
@CuriousGeorge133 жыл бұрын
You could also reject empathy on philosophical grounds. Genuine empathy is an epistemological fantasy. We cannot actually know the experience of any other person because the only way we know anything is through our own experience, which is the lens through which all experience is filtered. Empathy is merely an elaborate fiction dressed up in the language of compassion; it proposes to identify with another's experience by conjuring up a scenario to represent something genuinely experienced by the other, but in reality it is merely a fictional account of another's circumstance as imagined by oneself (which cannot provide real knowledge of another person's actual experience unless you're omniscient like God)
@KISStheSON...3 жыл бұрын
My daughter was 4 years old when she witnessed a woman that was heavily intoxicated, the woman was sitting down across the room talking and my daughter looked over at me and said, "Mommy, that woman is dizzy in her head"...how did she know what she was feeling? Is it possible that empathy exists but you just haven't experienced it?
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
@@KISStheSON... you could be observational experience not necessarily empathy
@KISStheSON...3 жыл бұрын
@@grantarmbruster6591 It was my 4 year old daughter, not me...Empathy exists just as narcissism exists. Narcissists feel very little if anything, will empaths feel a lot. It's just a fact, nothing to divide over ;)
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
@@KISStheSON... yes, my you was a universal statement not a specific person.
@danimal1183 жыл бұрын
By the way, the description of empathy as a tribal element is not empathy at all. It is simply affirmation with or without any knowledge of what is actually happening. One can affirm without knowing anything about the contents of another's thoughts, emotions, and pursuits. One can just assume that because someone is pursuing transgenderism that the goal is clear, however it is not. Our hearts are desperately wicked and deceitful above all things, even our own intentions are often hidden from our eyes. And one's emotions and internal workings are not at the exclusion of another. When I have empathy for someone, I also have empathy for God's pursuits. We are to take care not to grieve the Holy Spirit, and it would be good for us to know why in our hearts not just our minds. The lies that ensnare those possessed by the spirit of this age are seen in respect to the love of God that is honest towards them. But this is just one level. There is a covenantal/contractual level with God which supersedes our subjective struggling and God's desire to show us mercy. God desires that we are all saved, but we have other plans... This is tragedy.
@adeoluobatayo50133 жыл бұрын
Doug is a great interviewer and very discerning, he hit the bulls eye with laser specific questions. We need more spiritually discerning men in the body of Christ.🙏🏾
@stuartewoldt15133 жыл бұрын
I am so happy i came across your channel
@megt25513 жыл бұрын
I'm so grateful that God delivered me out of this type of environment and these type of men. You have managed to twist empathy into a sin with word salad. You throw around the feminist word likes it's dirty. To hear you say as a pastor that you keep abreast of what's happening but you don't want to ....you are not interested in what's happening across the country....what are you talking about.....keeping your head in the sand....must be nice to be able to do that. It's possible to stay informed about your neighbor and see what is right and wrong, what is inhumane and what's inhumane. You can be in the world and not of the world.
@BrenanSneed3 жыл бұрын
GOD IS GOOD
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
For His mercy endureth forever.
@kimwilson25143 жыл бұрын
What a great witt combined with truth!
@blacksheep112773 жыл бұрын
This was such an eye opening and healing conversation. Thank you Lord!!
@DrPhilGoode3 жыл бұрын
I guess I learned another definition of empathy today. My definition of empathy, is a HUGE foundation of my Christian faith, and is probably the most important quality I want my children to see in me. Empathy is viewing life from another’s perspective. Putting yourself in someone else’s shoes. I’m not sure the Lord has taught me thankfulness, and shown me His grace any more, than when I’m empathetic. Empathy forces me to shamefully admit that it’s NOT all about me. The vast majority of the time, the individual isn’t aware I’m even being empathetic. The opposite of this practice is not sympathy. The opposite is me living for and worrying about myself. So, where am I misguided? Honestly, I’m not looking for an argument. But if I’m wrong I need to know. Thanks.
@DrPhilGoode2 жыл бұрын
@@JW-tg1nn “out Pharisee” 🤣
@DrPhilGoode2 жыл бұрын
@@JW-tg1nn thank you for your feedback. I meant to include this earlier but got tickled with the out Pharisee comment.
@AnHebrewChild2 жыл бұрын
Your definition is a good one. And describes a godly virtue. I like a lot of Doug's content but, imho, this one just added to the "noise." Ah well, they can't all be zingers.
@DrPhilGoode2 жыл бұрын
@@AnHebrewChild unfortunately, when I hear the ones that are just noise, I wonder how genuine were the the ones that I agreed with. I guess only thing I can do is NEVER listen to him again and tell everybody else to do the same. Okay, maybe that’s too far 🤣🤣.
@AnHebrewChild2 жыл бұрын
@@DrPhilGoode actually, I was being polite (perhaps over-polite) in what I said. A wise man once said, "A little leaven leaveneth the whole lump" Increasingly I steer clear of "celebrity pastors." Jesus is our pastor, "and all [we] are brethren." This talk here missed the mark big big time.
@davidbell99693 жыл бұрын
Rom 15:1 We then that are strong ought to bear the infirmities of the weak, and not to please ourselves. Rom 15:2 Let every one of us please his neighbour for his good to edification. Rom 15:3 For even Christ pleased not himself; but, as it is written, The reproaches of them that reproached thee fell on me. Gal 6:1 Brethren, if a man be overtaken in a fault, ye which are spiritual, restore such an one in the spirit of meekness; considering thyself, lest thou also be tempted. Gal 6:2 Bear ye one another's burdens, and so fulfil the law of Christ. Gal 6:3 For if a man think himself to be something, when he is nothing, he deceiveth himself. Gal 6:4 But let every man prove his own work, and then shall he have rejoicing in himself alone, and not in another. Gal 6:5 For every man shall bear his own burden.
@markkorpics89643 жыл бұрын
I've enjoyed listening to this episode again. The claim, of the sin of empathy, is well qualified, explained, and worked through. They are definitely parts where, to paraphrase Voddie, "if I can't say amen, I ought to say ouch."
@Brother_Brian7 ай бұрын
This is great. Soaking it in.
@jeffrohm7763 жыл бұрын
While I get what you are after here, I think taking one piece of empathy just because that could be "sinful" if you somehow seem to join in or affirm someone in their sins, still sounds like a redefinition of the whole thing. If it's a more modern term than sympathy, does that mean it's more problematic? You can be sympathetic and be sinful in ways just the same. I just don't see this as super clear or helpful for people focused on the term first as an emotion, like anger for instance, that is not sinful itself, but in practice it's how you respond. I love Doctrine and Truth as well and tend to lean more to the "Reformed" or "Calvinist" worldview. Like anything, the danger to me is extreme Orthodoxy with diminishing Orthopraxy can be the temptation on this side -- just as the extreme Orthopraxy can be on the other side.
@Blackgrass13 жыл бұрын
That divide between sympathy and empathy is plumb ludicrous and to say the latter is sin, downright preposterous.
@Parks179-h3 жыл бұрын
Tell us how you really feel. Lol
@wpiofm3 жыл бұрын
Dead on. Best comment of all and more useful than the video.
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
Please explain.
@Blackgrass13 жыл бұрын
@@grantarmbruster6591 In a nutshell: In 24:44 they agree over a definition on empathy that makes it sound more like a pathological disturbance (and it can be!) than a crucial social tool. It's a frantic attempt to absolutize for the sake of discourse. By the way, he did something similar at 22:15 with "truth is a person".
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
@@Blackgrass1 I think that they explained that they want to define it as it's used not as the dictionary definition. And yes empathy is being used culturally in this way as a weapon against the church and it's believers. Just like redefining love or marriage or tolerance and acceptance.
@JeremyMarrone2 жыл бұрын
Great discussion…. Thank you.
@ToFishTeacher10 ай бұрын
I wish i could ask a question! Part of this discussion contradicts itself. Job and the elderly married person say not to apologize unless you're actually wrong. But isn't that basis upon which the polarized opinion holders stand?
@MarieMackayBooksАй бұрын
9:25 What you lose with empathy, is 'you lose contact with truth.' Stated as a fact, even though its not-thats just a personal failing. I can sink in the quicksand with them, gain a greater understanding than i would with simply sympathy, then return to myself and still maintain bounderies that respect us both. I do it all the time with friends and family and so do many of the people I interact with. Sure, lets have a discussion about people who can't distinguish that difference, or cant do that, (extreme ideologies of all kinds stuggle with this) but its literally not complicated. This is a lot of pretzeling 😂
@benf7253 жыл бұрын
Great talk helped put into perspective as a husband I don’t put my wife or myself. ie (doing what’s comfortable) first but Christ! Then my wife and family, am I doing and thinking rightfully before Christ? Or just taking the side of loved one without checking if they are right in actions before God?
@mmik96833 жыл бұрын
An hour long discussion that hinges on the redefinition of a word? Hmm interesting. I don't even know how "well maybe she's lying" managed to be your first example. How about this: "I was raped and my pastor thought I was lying" "That happened to me too, I know how hard that is." There, empathy is easy, stop with the weird rape apologetics.
@CanonPress3 жыл бұрын
Humans lie sometimes.
@anthy30623 жыл бұрын
Yes, it’s very revealing and explains why there are so many examples of 21st century churches covering up abuse. It’s shameful. Don’t go to your pastor for help. We have police for that.
@crystalgeorgestudios2 жыл бұрын
This is such a ridiculous conversation from beginning to end. You are both teaching falsehood. The scripture is full of empathy from the command to mourn with those who mourn to Jesus challenging the Pharisees who were going to stone a sinning woman to cast the stones if they had no sin. Hebrews says that Christ is our high priest who perfectly understands what we are going through because he was tempted in every way as a human being. By your own definition of entering fully in - that is empathy. And Hebrews says without sin. Beyond that - anyone who has even a rudimentary understanding of the professional standards of counseling and psychology and sociology would be able to pick this apart in 5 minutes. Nice mentions of “blacks”. Racism. Me too women and casting doubt on women with stories of abuse who come looking for help are to be judged by the two of you instead of helped. You both would be better served by reading Ezekiel 34 about how God judges those who shepherd his sheep poorly instead of sitting around talking nonsense and teaching scripture incorrectly.
@anavasiltcova13245 ай бұрын
God Bless you
@setaside778 ай бұрын
Something they touched on in the beginning but didn't unpack too well; is the idea of jumping in with both feet, even if all the facts being presented are true, and all the emotions are justified; if you become depressed because they are depressed or enraged because they are enraged, then someone needs to now save you both from your depression or rage.
@nopark12733 жыл бұрын
I’ve seen it stated in this thread that the message title is communicating is: facts don’t care about your feelings. That statement is far more political than it is Biblical. In John 11 Jesus comes to both Martha and then Mary. They essentially say the same thing to him: had you been here my brother would not be dead. Jesus says to Martha “I am the resurrection and the life.” And to Mary, he weeps. Christians need both truth and tears. Jesus cares about how we feel, even if we are misguided (also read the entire book of job).
@iancampbell14943 жыл бұрын
Sure but too much is indeed a problem in fact employing empathy in the manner which is commonly utilized in our progressive and or woke society is absolutely counter productive. Facts don’t care about your feelings which is absolutely true, furthermore, of course we should share feelings with others, but those feelings are valid only if their based in absolute truth, why should we validate feelings which are based off of sin or blatant mistruths? Validating someone’s feelings indefinitely destroys Gods truth because it places within the individual an exceptional amount of power, power which they use to manipulate and turn truth to their whim and to fit their own narrative and those who validated those feelings irrelevant of the basis of those feelings are equally guilty because to empathize with feelings that are based in falsehoods is to, in a way, claim those falsehoods to be valid in and of themselves. We bolster validity in our omissions just as well as our submissions, that is the key issue here. Furthermore, it doesn’t always matter how the professional world uses and defines a word, what matters is how pop culture defines the word because that’s is the most likely way a common person is relating to that word, in this case empathy. Psychologists are indeed taught a variant definition of empathy then that which Doug is claiming, but majority society doesn’t claim that definition in common use, therefore this talk using this definition is warranted and needed. There are a plethora of Christians who are caught in the trap of validating anti truth in the name of empathy, in fact entire congregations base their existence on that very act.
@kcstewart6713 жыл бұрын
I hate to ask this, but... Is the droop in Wilson's eyelids and slight squishiness in his enunciation just a matter of aging, or is it the liquid in his glass? I pray it is the former.
@lwearj0rts3 жыл бұрын
This hit me hard and was really excellent. I am so encouraged when men of God talk this way and help people like me see the Gospel even clearer. Keep spreading the good news, brothers!
@TomTom-ub9jh3 жыл бұрын
Conversations like this are why I'm not a Protestant anymore. There is no "sin of empathy." Empathy is what we are called to as Christians, or at least it used to be before we became a Prosperity seminar, a Trump sign and a bowl of Chicken Soup.
@CanonPress3 жыл бұрын
Would love to hear more of what you think about the arguments made in the episode! Cheers!
@TomTom-ub9jh3 жыл бұрын
@@CanonPress I think it sounds like secular psychology, given a very thin religious veneer. Where, exactly, in Scripture is empathy defined as elevating a suffering person above God, which is the same as calling empathy a form of idolatry? Are there specific Scriptural admonitions against caring too much, which most of us would call empathy, and do they outnumber or otherwise trump the numerous Scriptural calls to compassion at expense of one's own interest and well being, which also entails empathy? Does Scripture call it a sin to be overly compassionate?
@TomTom-ub9jh3 жыл бұрын
When Christ came to the home of Lazarus, who lay dead, He wept. Of course, as a man, He was sad over the death of his friend, as well as sympathetic towards the sisters and family of Lazarus. But the people around Him who mourned Lazarus were feeling a despair that Christ could not entirely share. They thought Lazarus was dead and gone. Christ knew he had come to the house to bring him back from the dead. For Him, as the man Jesus (wholly human as well as wholly God,) to fully appreciate the suffering of Lazarus' loved ones, He must have been able to step outside of Himself, His own knowledge and His own emotions and step, as it were, into the emotions of the people around Him. To feel their suffering as they felt it, to understand the situation from a knowledge more limited than His own, to genuinely cry with them and for them. Does this not demonstrate our Lord's empathy? Why would I not want to emulate that? Why would it be sinful for me to do so?
@iw93383 жыл бұрын
Yes, empathy can be dangerous. You can get sucked in & worn out.
@one2three1233 жыл бұрын
37:32 you're welcome
@MrJonrob12343 жыл бұрын
Taking the initial definition of empathy given at the beginning; was not Christ empathetic in his coming to earth to save us? There are some very intriguing concepts in here and I’d love to finish. I’ve made it half way through and will certainly finish later.
@dekka213l3 жыл бұрын
Excellent and masterful!!! What do I need to read to expand on your shared ideas?????
@CanonPress3 жыл бұрын
Check out the links in the description!
@Lightwait3213 жыл бұрын
Against Empathy by Paul Bloom was pretty good and is in this vein of thought
@kimwilson25143 жыл бұрын
Started watching just because of the name!
@RagingOwlbear3 жыл бұрын
This is a garbage straw man using a purposefully crap definition of empathy. You can have empathy for a drug abuser without doing drugs. You can have empathy for a person suffering a major loss without inflicting that loss upon yourself. The whole show set up on a totally garbage metaphor. These guys have no idea what they’re talking about.
@wk18103 жыл бұрын
Sympathy requires a person to take personal responsibility for their actions/choices while helping them navigate their pain to heal from it and move forward, or make restitution for it if they've hurt others. Empathy absolves them of personal responsibility while validating their pain and keeping them shackled to it and making others the enemy. Proverbs 18:13 "He who answers a matter before he hears it, it is folly and a shame unto him" check out the facts before giving an answer. Reacting is taking immediate offense. Responding is considering what you want to do with the information/situation presented to you (weighing the pros and cons of your actions/response).
@andy_in_taiwan3 жыл бұрын
Is empathy, when tethered to truth, still empathy? or is it sympathy?
@tayh.62353 жыл бұрын
Seventeen minutes in and so far, what they want therapists to do is what any good therapist would do. Obviously there are loads of bad therapists, but challenging the client is commonly understood to be the therapists role.
@ruchit8762 Жыл бұрын
Please can anyone tell who is Mr. Friedman and any book of his being referred?
@ruchit8762 Жыл бұрын
ok I got this today, answering my own question and parking this info. for any others it's Edwin H Friedman its mentioned in the video but I had missed it earlier
@susiet21509 ай бұрын
Joe Rigney is making sense to me.
@jackjones36573 жыл бұрын
"Were called to grieve for others but not lose ourselves in the grief." Biblical empathy does not place the object of empathy above God, yet so many in modern churches do precisely that, e.g. "Critical race theory."
@cross-eyedmary66193 жыл бұрын
Critical race theory is FAKE empathy. At best, it is misinformed or misused empathy. This whole argument is basically a concession of the realm of caring and empathy to the secular world. This is a lie from the Enemy.
@youbloodybloodworktimejasper3 жыл бұрын
Oh this is exactly what I needed to hear
@cross-eyedmary66193 жыл бұрын
You spelled wanted wrong.
@youbloodybloodworktimejasper3 жыл бұрын
@@cross-eyedmary6619 Why the random hate?
@grantarmbruster65913 жыл бұрын
@@youbloodybloodworktimejasper don't mind cross-eyed Mary she has been imbued with the power to read minds and to see people's intentions ironically what she accuses of lot of people of doing
@BrenanSneed3 жыл бұрын
needed this
@bradhackworth51093 жыл бұрын
I don't always agree with what Doug Wilson says, but this was rather excellent, and I thank the Lord for men like him.
@josephjohnston74993 жыл бұрын
This is an excellent discussion. Thanks so much for your desire to be balanced in your appreciation of dynamics of healing from a Reformed perspective. As a Christian who for over 30 years and who utilizes Bowen Systems theory; the one whose shoulders upon whom Edwin Friedman stands to articulate his view on empathy, one important point needs to be made. Empathy a human characteristic in itself is neither good or bad. It’s relative benefit or liability lies in how it is implemented. In Bowen theory one major way of understanding when a characteristic is not useful is whether it’s expression is organized out of the state of fusion or differentiation. If empathy is expressed out of a fused state, it’s sinful. If it’s expressed out of a differentiated state it’s helpful and appropriate.
@duncescotus23423 жыл бұрын
I first heard a preaching against "empathy" in the mid 90s from an Afrikaner self-proclaimed Revivalist named well never mind, its not important. What he said was basically true if I tortured the argument into shape, that empathy and sympathy are different. Pity, or feeling bad for someone isn't necessarily the same as helping them up. Got that. So astute. Fast forward, the Calvinists still think this dichotomy that they're making is enlightening. It's not what St. Paul says, that's for damn sure. You need to have empathy, sympathy, and every form of feeling, as Christ did. That Afrikaner was a sullen, dysfunctional man who had been abused by his father, his Apartheid ridden country, and their Dutch-Deformed inheritance. Sorry, I just don't have much empathy for the guy.
@AnHebrewChild2 жыл бұрын
:D I like this comment. It made me chuckle, and say amen. Cheers