Sunday, August 19, 2012

Forgiveness - How Love Wins (part 4 of 5)

Sometimes it takes a song, a poem, a letter, or a video to reach the coldest of the cold.  Sometimes a song can touch that part of a person's heart where mere words fall deaf.  If you struggle with forgiveness it helps to remind ourselves that which was done for us.  He does not think it too great a price to pay, He does not think it is to late for love to win. 

"Above all, keep fervent in your love for one another, because love covers a multitude of sins." 
1Peter4:8


'This is How Love Wins' by Steven Curtis Chapman

Wednesday, August 15, 2012

Forgiveness - How Love Wins (part 3 of 5)


“Forgiveness is an act of the will, and the will can function regardless of the temperature of the heart.”  Corrie Ten Boom

Have you ever noticed that those who have committed horrible acts of betrayal eventually come around to saying one thing about those whom they betrayed?  “They just need to forgive and move on…” Of course if they honestly felt like helping the wounded along in the process they would admit to their sin, repent of it, and do whatever is necessary to make amends, but therein lies the rub, the reason for them making the statement is driven more by their own desire to absolve themselves of any responsibility, to pretend that there was no harm, no foul.  However selfish and self-serving the reason for making the statement, they nevertheless are correct, but for the wrong reasons. 

To them and if you were to admit it, to yourself; forgiveness always seems so easy, when we need it and so hard when we need to give it.  So how do we do the impossible, forgive those who are not sorry for the harm they have caused?  How do we forgive when we don't feel like it? 

It begins with a decision, a decision to pursue forgiveness.  How do we translate the decision to forgive into a change of heart?  We forgive by faith, out of obedience. Since forgiveness goes against our nature, we must forgive by faith, whether we feel like it or not. We must trust God to do the work in us that needs to be done so that the forgiveness will be complete.

I believe God honors our commitment to obey Him and our desire to please Him when we choose to forgive. However it does not happen overnight, sometimes the journey to forgiveness may take years, but we must persist in our commitment to honor Him by forgiving those who do not deserve it.  In His time He will complete the work He has begun in us.  We must continue to forgive (our job) by faith, until the work of forgiveness (His job) is done in our hearts.

“And I am certain that God, who began the good work within you, will continue his work until it is finally finished on the day when Christ Jesus returns.”  Philippians 1:6   

Forgiveness is not saying that what the person did against you is okay, it is releasing to God that which is reserved for God.  If as a Christian you accept that God is your heavenly father, how does a father respond when one of his children deliberately hurts another of his children?  He does not overlook it.  He acts with mercy to the injured and with justice to the guilty; always tempered with love.  What someone has done against you is one thing, however if you take the bait of unforgiveness, your decision will cause much more damage then they were ever able to.  

Your father wants you to forgive, because the decision to not forgive is the decision to hate; to hate another created in the same image as you were, to hate someone that God loves.  Every moment you hold on to that hate, it acts like a drug slowly poisoning your soul.  You cannot praise God and curse another made in His image, one is fundamentally opposed against the other.  Hate or love, only one can win.

God commands you to forgive, to give you life, a future, hope.  Forgiveness is an act of faith; it is the ultimate submission of your will to God’s will. To choose to forgive makes your heart more like His.   Forgiveness is how love wins. 

Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Forgiveness - How Love Wins (part 2 of 5)


Bear with each other and forgive whatever grievances you may have against one another. Forgive as the Lord forgave you  Colossians 3:13

Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, "Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother when he sins against me? Up to seven times?" Jesus answered, "I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.  Matthew 18:21-22

Do not judge, and you will not be judged. Do not condemn, and you will not be condemned. Forgive, and you will be forgiven.  Luke 6:37

For if you forgive men when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you. But if you do not forgive men their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.  Matthew 6:14-16

And when you stand praying, if you hold anything against anyone, forgive him, so that your Father in heaven may forgive you your sins.  Mark 11:25

Jesus is very clear … Forgive…  However He does not tell us how to do so.   He gives to us the impossible mandate, something that we are incapable of doing on our own.   A command that leaves us twisted and turning knowing what He expects of us being pitted against our own desires for retribution, or at the very least, vindication.   I believe that is precisely the point, that as we make the decision to pursue forgiveness, we are naturally drawn closer to Him.  Anyone who has ever pursued the act of forgiving quickly realizes that we can not, it goes against our very nature; that the act of forgiveness is in fact a divine act, one that we are only capable of achieving with the help of God.  Thus we begin a new series on the command to forgive. 

How does a person know if he has forgiven?   It is when you have crossed over that bridge, where you no longer feel rage over the circumstances, in it’s place you feel sorrow.  The anger at the individual who has caused you such pain and suffering is replaced with a genuine emotion of feeling sorry for them.  When finally, you have nothing left to say about it all.

Writing how you know that you have forgiven is the easy part, the journey to that point, however is hard.  It’s filled with emotional upheaval, anguish, self-doubt, insecurity, and any number of false ideas.  The journey of forgiveness itself, is frequently sabotaged by ourselves before we begin.  The road towards forgiveness must begin with ‘accountability’.  As you pass through the junction of accountability there are three paths that exit the far side of it, only one of which can show you the way to forgiveness.  Some, choose the path of denial, of justification; you know who they are, it is your co-worker who blames his wife for his infidelity, the neighbor who only backed into your car because you parked in his blind spot, the employee who takes home a few items from work, because his boss doesn’t pay him enough, or the woman at church who only gossiped about you because everyone else was. 

Then there are those who choose the path of self blame,  of blaming themselves for the actions of others, the woman who tells her best friend that it is her fault that her husband is having an affair,  the neighbor who apologizes for parking where his neighbor  could back into him, the manager who thinks that if he were a better manager then his employees wouldn’t take things from the company, or the member of your church who smiles and says that it her fault that people gossip about her, because she deserves it.  

Finally there are the few, the very, very few who know that to honestly forgive someone you must first know precisely what it is that you are forgiving; you must face the truth.  Those who tell the adulteress husband that she was not there when he made the decision to betray his family, the neighbor who informs his neighbor that it was not his car that was moving when it was hit, the employer who lets an employee go because they accepted the position knowing what the benefits and requirements were, and lastly the member of your church who confronts those gossiping with a gentle reminder to read James 3

It is only when you are honest with and about yourself as well as those whom you seek to forgive that you can begin the journey.  Genuine forgiveness does not deny anger, it does not excuse evil, and it does not tolerate or smother it. Genuine forgiveness begins when we look evil full in the face, call it what it is, let it’s horror shock, stun and enrage us, only then are we capable of beginning the road to forgiving it.  


Thursday, August 2, 2012

Forgiveness - How Love Wins (part 1 of 5)

Forgiveness is not something you choose to do because of who someone is, or because they have earned it; rather it is what you choose to do in spite of who they are.  Because they can never earn it; and neither can you.

"Forgiveness is the remission of sins.  For it is by this that what has been lost, and was found, is saved from being lost again" 1  "Forgiveness is the answer to the child's dream of a miracle by which what is broken is made whole again, what is soiled is made clean again" 2 

1. Saint Augustine 2. Dag Hammarskjold

Forgiveness by Mathew West