Don't Believe Everything You ThinkIhe Atụ
The next cognitive distortion we want to look at can be called “black-and-white thinking” (it is also known as “dichotomous thinking” and “all-or-nothing thinking”). This distortion involves categorizing things, situations, and people as either entirely good or entirely bad when in reality almost everything and everyone is a mix of good and bad. For example, someone who feels dissatisfied with their social status at school may think, “There is nothing good about this school,” when maybe that school does have some redeeming qualities, like good teachers or an easy commute. Black-and-white thinking makes it hard to see how good qualities can coexist with bad ones.
Similar to overgeneralizing, black-and-white thinking prevents us from finding the good in hard situations, because it encourages us to see things as either entirely good or entirely bad. It also prevents us from addressing issues that exist in an otherwise good relationship or situation: either someone or something is completely perfect, or otherwise completely worthless—good or evil.
You can easily see how this distortion could lead to chaos in our relationships and society. Otherwise, healthy marriages or romantic relationships might get trashed because they didn’t seem “perfect,” instead of the couple working through their issues. Generally, functional organizations and institutions might get treated as irredeemable, because of the idea that if something isn’t entirely good, it’s entirely bad.
Some people believe that Christianity teaches black-and-white thinking, or that seeing things in black-and-white terms always represents a kind of moral clarity. In Jesus’ parables, he taught about a clear separation between sheep and goats, wheat and weeds, and between eternal life and death. But these stories do not fully capture the depth and dynamism of how God interacts with us.
The Bible teaches that human beings have been made in the image of God, which means we have incredible worth and dignity. It also teaches that the image of God in us has been effaced and partially covered up because of our sins. As such, we are all a mix of good and bad—“glorious ruins,” as Francis Schaeffer once put it.
On yet another level, God doesn’t leave us like that. In Jesus, God pursues us to redeem and restore us so that we can be who He created us to be. In an all-or-nothing, black-and-white religion or worldview, the only option would have been to destroy us because we were not perfect—but God sees something good buried underneath our sin, which He wants to redeem.
Just because someone or something has an imperfection doesn’t mean they’re entirely bad. And on the flip side, just because someone or something has some good qualities doesn’t mean they’re completely perfect. Moving past “black-and-white thinking” means learning to see people and the world as a whole in a more nuanced way.
Okwu Chukwu
Banyere Atụmatụ Ihe Ọgụgụ A
Sometimes we are warned not to believe everything we read. Other times we are warned not to believe everything we hear. With AI-generated images, we are learning not to believe everything we see. But we aren’t reminded nearly as often to question our own thought processes—to remember not to believe everything we think. In this short devotional, our goal is to help you learn to recognize distorted and harmful patterns of thinking in your own life, lean into Biblical wisdom to disrupt these patterns and equip and empower you to share these strategies with others.
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