“People love conspiracy
theories.” Neil Armstrong
Just
recently a Reddit user posted an unsubstantiated theory that the furniture company,
Wayfair is involved in child sex trafficking, suggesting certain products on
its website may actually be representing children for sale. The
conspiracy theory went viral.
The
user posted a screengrab of Wayfair’s website showing armoires that cost five
figures with human names for the products, which led them to speculate that the
pricey cabinets were, in fact, people for sale. But there was no truth to the accusation.
The products in question are industrial grade cabinets accurately priced. Still
Wayfair temporarily removed the products from their site to rename them and provide
more in-depth descriptions and photos that accurately depict them, clarifying the
price point.
Horribly, Adolph Hitler was right, ““If you tell a big enough lie and
tell it frequently enough, it will be believed.” I wonder how much time and
money Wayfair has had to spend to kill that lie. But Wayfair is not alone. Most
companies and leaders know what it is to be slandered and lies about them to be
accepted without question.
With the easy access to social media and the gravity of the COVID-19 pandemic,
the current crisis is ripe for conspiracy theories. Roughly one-third of
Americans believe that the COVID-19 outbreak was intentionally planned by
people in power. 71% say they’ve heard at least “a little” about a conspiracy
theory that the coronavirus outbreak was intentionally planned by powerful
people, including 19% who say they have heard “a lot” about this. Most conspiracy
theories share a common premise: A powerful group of elite individuals are
withholding or distorting the truth. Only the elites know the truth and everyone
else believes a lie.
It
hasn’t helped that the virus is new and medical responses are continually changing
and developing. As a result, there have been contradictory approaches and
information (and misinformation). Then, it originated in a repressive country
without any freedom of information or freedom of the press. It’s a recipe ripe for
paranoia and wild speculation.
Yet,
the Lord Jesus said, “I am the way, the truth and the life” (John
14:6). Ephesians 4:25 commands us, “Therefore, having put away falsehood,
let each one of you speak the truth with his neighbor, for we are members one
of another.” 1 Thessalonians 5:21 admonishes us to “test everything;
hold fast what is good.”
So,
do I believe that there are conspiracies or plots? It’s possible BUT
I don’t know and neither do you. We don’t have proof, nor are most of us in a
place where we’ll ever be able to confirm a conspiracy. And if it is actually taking
place, what will we be able to do about it other than build a cabin in the north
woods and hide out for the remainder of our days?
What
is unequivocally true is that Christians are to be people of truth, who live in
truth, think on truth, and share the truth! Too often the people of truth are the
most susceptible to being consumed by conspiracy theories. As the people of truth,
we seem to easily slip into a bottomless rabbit hole of conspiracy theories. Yet,
it hurts us and it hinders what God has called us to do – share His truth. Sharing
unsubstantiated rumors undermine our message of absolute truth that determines
one’s eternal destiny.
Isn’t it also possible that many sincere people who may differ in their
worldview from us are being slandered? Scripture teaches that slander is a serious
sin and that God hates slander (Prov. 6:16, 19). James calls it demonic
behavior (James 3:15-16). Engaging in slander is scandalous.
Yet,
many Christians share hearsay. You can hardly glance at social media without
seeing a Christian (often a pastor or Christian leader) posting claims that they
can’t possibly know to be true. They’re not Washington insiders or international
authorities. They’re merely spreading what they learned from what is too often not
a credible source.
We
must remember that our Enemy is the “father of lies” (Jn 8:44). Soon after
Satan entered the Garden (Genesis 3), he spread the first conspiracy theory,
convincing Eve that the most powerful of “conspirators”—the Creator God was secretly
trying to keep the first humans from having their eyes opened in a way that
would make them “like God, knowing good and evil.” Eve became the first
in a long line to believe powerful forces were secretly conspiring and withholding
secret information.
Instead of thinking about what we’re unsure of, Scripture commands us: “Finally,
brothers, whatever is true, whatever is honorable, whatever is just, whatever
is pure, whatever is lovely, whatever is commendable, if there is any
excellence, if there is anything worthy of praise, think about these things”
(Phil. 4:8). There are serious consequences when we ruminate on conspiracy theories
instead of what we know is true.
We
soak our souls in fear. COVID-19 is a serious virus. When we focus on
what’s rumor and can’t substantiate those claims, we increase our own anxiety
and that of those who listen to us. One of the most repeated commands in Scripture
is that we are not to live in fear (2 Tim. 1:7).
We
open ourselves up to anger and rage. When we feel helpless and that we
have little control, we easily succumb to a very dangerous emotion – rage.
Fear can quickly morph into anger because it provides an object: they are
to blame, they caused this, they deserve
retribution. There is nearly always some target that we can use as a scapegoat.
We
drown in doubt. The darkest day this world has ever known was when our
Lord was crucified. Three days later, Jesus rose from the grave. But for those three
days His disciples were drowning in doubt. Like that first Easter God confronts
our fears with His presence. God is “with us” (Ps. 23:4). He has “called you by
name” (Isa. 43:1), and nothing can separate us from our Heavenly Father and His
great love for us” (Rom. 8:35-39).
We
hurt our witness. The gospel already seems too wonderful to be true. That
God loved us and sacrificed His Son to pay for our sin, that salvation is a
free gift and we can be forgiven by accepting God’s gift of salvation. It’s unbelievable!
When we spread theories we can’t substantiate, it hurts our gospel witness. Not
only that, but we’re distracted. We become “conspiracy theory evangelists” when
God has called us to share His message of hope and forgiveness.
This
world is terrified and has great difficulty with truth, yet we’re called to be
God’s people of truth. During this season of isolation, fear, and uncertainty,
let’s determine to be intentional about leaning into God, His truth, and
engaging others. It’s a real remedy for hurting hearts. Our world needs God’s truth.
Let’s determine to share that!
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