The Fruit of the Spirit: Kindness
I wanted to be the nicest person in the world.
That鈥檚 what I told my high school youth group when we went around the room and named the superlative we鈥檇 like to be true of us. I wanted those I interacted with鈥攑articularly friends in my public high school鈥攖o know their value as ones made in the image of God, and I believed that being nice was actually a powerful way to communicate that.
Some seventeen years later, I鈥檓 not sure the 鈥渨orld鈥檚 nicest鈥 award will go to me; I can think of several current coworkers鈥攏ot to mention friends, family members, and former coworkers鈥攚ho鈥檇 win it first. But being nice to others has remained a high value for me throughout the years.
The Kindness We Crave
To be clear, I鈥檓 not talking about the 鈥渘ice鈥 that avoids conflict at all costs. Or the 鈥渘ice鈥 that is all sweetness and light externally but bitter and cold internally. Or the 鈥渟ay you鈥檙e sorry鈥 forced-to-be 鈥渘ice.鈥
I mean the 鈥渘ice,鈥 which, precisely defined, is kindness. A genuine compassion and respect for the humanity of others that moves us to act and speak in ways that build them up and care for them well.
Every person needs that kind of nice. We might not recognize the need if our 鈥渒indness quotient鈥 is regularly being met as we receive love from people in our lives. But if you鈥檝e ever been in a place where you know no one or鈥攅ven worse鈥攚here you鈥檙e seen by those around you as an enemy, you know how strong that craving for kindness can be. We become almost desperate for a helpful word, a compassionate smile, a gentle touch.
Why? Kindness communicates, I see you. I see your pain. And I believe that you are worthy of love. It鈥檚 an acknowledgment of our common humanity and the universal struggle that comes with living in a post-Fall world, where hard things wreak havoc in our lives all the time. It鈥檚 a gift we give to others and a gift we鈥檙e meant to receive from others as well.
The Kindness of God
Kindness is not just something we鈥檙e supposed to show others, though. Several years after I announced my desire to become the nicest person in the world, I became the meanest I鈥檝e ever been鈥攖o myself.
Though I鈥檝e been a high perfectionist my whole life, in my twenties that drive became much worse, resulting in incredibly harsh self-judgment. I pushed myself constantly in every area but could still only see all the ways I didn鈥檛 measure up. There was no room for kindness, because (I assumed) kindness to myself would not bring perfection; it would only make me lazy, undisciplined, and careless. 
And then I experienced the kindness of God.
I鈥檝e always thought God was kind, of course. He had, after all, placed so many wonderful people in my life鈥攑eople who regularly showed me kindness and love beyond anything I deserved.
But what I really believed was that he was always disappointed with me because I never measured up.
In a prayer time with a friend, I finally asked God what he thought of me, internally cringing inside. I expected a tired 鈥渨hat should I do with you?鈥 sigh. What I experienced was a glimpse of his delight in me and an assurance that he knows and loves me to my core.
In other words, I experienced deep kindness.
And his deep and unexpected kindness began to slowly change the way I treated myself. Skipping a day at the gym became a gift of rest to my tired body instead of an act of sloth. Missing my aunt鈥檚 birthday became an invitation to experience grace instead of the cause of excessive guilt about what a bad niece I was. Enjoying a yummy dessert with friends became an invitation to celebrate instead of a lack of self-discipline.
Somewhere along the way I had lost sight of my own humanity, viewing myself instead as something that could be perfectly controlled until it was more like a machine than a person. But through God鈥檚 kindness, I began to see myself as someone鈥攅ven someone valuable who was worthy of compassion.
That change had another surprising result: it made being kind to others not something I needed to try to do perfectly, but something I could trust God to help me do. His work in me鈥攏ot my own striving鈥攊ncreased my capacity to care for others better and show the kindness of God to them.
Becoming Kinder
Of course, the truth we all know is that even though we鈥檙e made in the image of an incredibly kind God, we can be incredibly 尘别补苍鈥especially to those we love the most. How does that happen? How do we lose the capacity to see someone else鈥檚 humanity and care about their pain?
There are three main culprits in my life:
1. Tiredness. Being physically or emotionally tired means I鈥檓 less likely to put in the extra energy kindness requires.
2. Busyness. Running from one thing to the next leaves me no margin to see鈥攎uch less help鈥攖hose around me.
3. Pride. Thinking I know best keeps me from listening to others or God, and my heart grows cold.
The antidotes to numbers one and two are practical: making sleep a priority and saying yes to fewer things so that I have more margin in my life.
But the only antidote to the state of my own selfish heart is continuing to regularly sit with God and both experience his great kindness toward me and gain deeper insight into his great love for those around me. Three practices in particular help me become kinder.
1. Time in God鈥檚 Word. When, for example, I鈥檓 tempted to stereotype or judge someone at the grocery store who happened to cut in line, verses about the value of others make me check my assumptions and give them the benefit of the doubt.
2. Confession. Admitting to God my blindness over my White privilege makes me more patient with and a better listener to others who are in a different place in their own ethnic journey.
3. Obedience to God鈥檚 rules. Every time I choose to remember a coworker鈥檚 pain, for example, and respond to them with kindness instead of impatience when they鈥檝e exasperated me, I root myself more deeply in the values of the kingdom of God, which makes obedience a little easier the next time.
Continuing in Kindness
So even though I鈥檓 not the nicest person in the world yet, it鈥檚 okay. I firmly believe no act of kindness is ever wasted. Those acts change me and communicate Christ鈥檚 love to others鈥攁 truth God continually reminds me of. Because every time I go to God expecting rolled eyes or anger or disappointment or judgment or impatience, what I receive鈥every time鈥攊s kindness. Kindness from the God 鈥渨ho did not spare his own Son, but gave him up for us all鈥 (Romans 8:32). And that act of kindness is still changing everything.
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