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3 Phrases Christians Should Quit Relying On

Sometime I cringe when I listen to Christians talk (myself included).

Here are a couple of phrases it wouldn’t hurt to hear less.

1. “God doesn’t give you more than you can handle.”

When someone’s going through a rough time, it’s a struggle to say the right thing. But it is always appropriate to say nothing.

In fact, Scripture encourages people to “mourn with those who mourn” (Romans 12:15). You cannot rub the salve of magic words on someone’s hurts to make their pain go away.

If you absolutely have to say something, make sure it isn’t philosophically empty, spiritual nonsense. Telling someone that “God never gives you more than you can handle” is wrong on many levels.

It’s not biblically accurate: You’re going to have a hard time finding this little gem in the Bible (or any similar sentiment, for that matter). I am convinced that Scripture is full of people who find themselves at the end of what they can handle.

It isn’t appropriate: Even if it was true, at the point that a loved one is confiding in you about some terrible trial they’re going through, they feel they’re dealing with more than they can handle. This platitude comes off as painful and dismissive.

It’s just dumb: People go through more than they can handle all the time. Whether it’s the loss of a child or a slow death from cancer, people are going through things you can’t possibly imagine. Would you tell Jewish prisoners at Buchenwald that “God doesn’t give you more than you can handle”?

2. “God told me.”

There’s no question in my mind that God speaks to us. What I do question is how accurately we receive it. After spending many years leading worship in a Pentecostal church, I am convinced that much of what we attribute to God is our own internal dialogue.

There are many problems with saying, “God told me … ”:

It prohibits conversation: What can you say when someone says something silly and emboldens it with “God told me”? Are you supposed to respond with, “No, he didn’t.” Attributing things to God is one of the largest conversation killers imaginable—the ultimate trump card.