Friday, January 29, 2021

GOD'S GRACE - MERCY #5--- FORGIVENESS #1

 Understanding God's Grace #5


Forgiveness #1





PART OF THE CHARACTER OF GOD




From the book "Swindoll's Ultimate Book of Illustrations and

Quotes"


A CARTOON in the New Yorker magazine showed an exasperated father

saying to his prodigal son, "This is the fourth time we've killed

the fatted calf." God does that over and over in our lifetime.

Bruce Larson, Setting Men Free

......



A SUCCESSFUL IRISH BOXER was converted and became a preacher. He

happened to be in a new town setting up his evangelistic tent

when a couple of tough thugs noticed what he was doing. Knowing

nothing of his background, they made a few insulting remarks. The

Irishman merely turned and looked at them. Pressing his luck, one

of the bullies took a swing and struck a glancing blow on one

side of the ex-boxer's face. He shook it off and said nothing as

he stuck out his jaw. The fellow took another glancing blow on

the other side. At that point the preacher swiftly took off his

coat, rolled up his sleeves, and announced," The Lord gave me no

further instructions." Whop!


J. Vernon McGee, Matthew

......



Beginning Anew (Also titled in some poetry books "A New Leaf")


He came to my desk with quivering lip; 

The lesson was done ...

"Have you a new leaf for me, dear teacher? I have spoiled this

one!"

I took his leaf, all soiled and blotted, 

And gave him a new one, all unspotted; 

Then into his tired heart I smiled: "Do better now, my child!"


I went to the throne with trembling heart; The day was done.

"Have you a new day for me, dear Master? I have spoiled this

one!"

He took my day, all soiled and blotted, 

And gave me a new one, all unspotted; 

"then into my tired heart He smiled: "Do better now, my child!"


Kathleen Wheeler, quoted in John R. Rice, "Poems That Preach"

......



JOHN D. ROCKEFELLER built the great Standard Oil empire. Not

surprisingly, Rockefeller was a man who demanded high performance

from his company executives. One day, one of those executives

made a two million dollar mistake.

Word of the man's enormous error quickly spread throughout the

executive offices, and the other men began to make themselves

scarce. Afraid of Rockefeller's reaction, they didn't even want

to cross his path.

One man didn't have any choice, however, since he had an

appointment with the boss. So he straightened his shoulders and

tightened his belt and walked into Rockefeller's office.

As he approached the oil monarch's desk, Rockefeller looked up

from the piece of paper on which he was writing.

"I guess you've heard about the two million dollar mistake our

friend made," he said abruptly.

"Yes," the executive said, expecting Rockefeller to explode.

"Well, I've been sitting here listing all of our friend's good

qualities on this sheet of paper, and I've discovered that in the

past he has made us many more times the amount he lost for us

today by his one mistake. His good points far outweigh this one

human error. So I think we ought to forgive him, don't you?"


Dale Galloway, "You Can Win with Love"

......



WE ARE MOST LIKE BEASTS when we kill. We are most like men when

we judge. We are most like God when we forgive.


William Arthur Ward, "Thoughts of a Christian Optimist"

......



FORGIVENESS is surrendering my right to hurt you for hurting me.


Archibald Hart, quoted in James Dobson, "Love Must Be Tough"

......



THERE'S A GREAT MINISTRY In our generation. It's called Prison

Fellowship, directed by Chuck Colson. After his time behind bars,

he realized the awful lifestyle that's facing the criminal who

now is out, pardoned, and trying to get his or her life back

together. I found these words in one of Colson's pieces of

literature: "Nothing is more Christian than forgiveness ...

demonstrating trust in one who has fallen."

......



IT IS A WONDERFUL THING to see a prodigal return and to applaud

it. I know a pastor who went through the horrors of public

discipline of a brother in their church and it was dreadful. In

fact, it made the news. Many of us heard about the discipline of

this well-known Christian who had shipwrecked. And that brother

walked away from God for several years. Finally he turned around

and came back. He wrote a letter of apology ultimately. He said,

"You were right. I was in sin. You put your finger on it. 

I rebelled and I rejected. But I want you to know, I see the wrong

of my actions and I've come back."

You know what the church did? They had a party - this same church

that had disciplined him. They bought him a sport coat and a new

pair of shoes. They put a gold ring on his finger. And they served 

him prime rib. It was an evening of praise as this brother was 

brought back into fellowship. And that also made the news.

There's not enough of that kind of news.

......



ONCE PRESIDENT LINCOLN was asked how he was going to treat the

rebellious Southerners when they had finally been defeated and

returned to the Union of the United States. The questioner

expected that Lincoln would take a dire vengeance, but he

answered, "I will treat them as if they had never been away."    


William Barclay, "The Gospel of Luke"

......



From the book "750 Engaging Illustrations"


In "Restoring Your Spiritual Passion," Gordon MacDonald writes:


One memory that burns deep within is that of a plane flight on

which I was headed toward a meeting that would determine a major

decision in my ministry. I knew I was in desperate need of a

spiritual passion that would provide wisdom and submission to

God's purposes. But the passion was missing because I was steeped

in resentment toward a colleague.

For days I had tried everything to rid myself of vindictive

thoughts toward that person. But, try as I might, I would even

wake in the night, thinking of ways to subtly get back at him. I

wanted to embarrass him for what he had done, to damage his

credibility before his peers. My resentment was beginning to

dominate me, and on that plane trip I came to a realization of

how bad things really were....

As the plane entered the landing pattern, I found myself crying

silently to God for power both to forgive and to experience

liberation from my poisoned spirit. Suddenly it was as if an

invisible knife cut a hole in my chest, and I literally felt a

thick substance oozing from within. Moments later I felt as if

I'd been flushed out. I'd lost negative spiritual weight, the

kind I needed to lose: I was free. I fairly bounced off that

plane and soon entered a meeting that did in fact change the

entire direction of my life.

Spiritual passion cannot coexist with resentments. The Scriptures

are clear. The unforgiving spirit saps the energy that causes

Christian growth and effectiveness.



Anger, Prayer, Resentment, Thoughts Matt. 6:12; Eph. 4:30-32

......



Richard Hoefler's book "Will Daylight Come?" includes a homey

illustration of how sin enslaves and forgiveness frees.


A little boy visiting his grandparents was given his first

slingshot. He practiced in the woods, but he could never hit his

target.

As he came back to Grandma's backyard, he spied her pet duck. On

an impulse he took aim and let fly. The stone hit, and the duck

fell dead.

The boy panicked. Desperately he hid the dead duck in the

woodpile, only to look up and see his sister watching. Sally had

seen it all, but she said nothing.

After lunch that day, Grandma said, "Sally, let's wash the

dishes."

But Sally said, "Johnny told me he wanted to help in the kitchen

today. Didn't you, Johnny?" And she whispered to him, "Remember

the duck!" So Johnny did the dishes.

Later Grandpa asked if the children wanted to go fishing. Grandma

said, "I'm sorry, but I need Sally to help make supper." Sally

smiled and said, "That's all taken care of Johnny wants to do

it." Again she whispered, "Remember the duck." Johnny stayed

while Sally went fishing.

After several days of Johnny doing both his chores and Sally's,

finally he couldn't stand it. He confessed to Grandma that he'd

killed the duck.

"I know, Johnny," she said, giving him a hug. "I was standing at

the window and saw the whole thing. Because I love you, I forgave

you. I wondered how long you would let Sally make a slave of

you."


Confession, Bondage

......



In an article in "Guideposts," Corrie ten Boom told of not being

able to forget a wrong that had been done to her. She had

forgiven the person, but she kept rehashing the incident and so,

couldn't sleep. Finally Corrie cried out to God for help in

putting the problem to rest. She writes:


His help came in the form of a kindly Lutheran pastor to whom I

confessed my failure after two sleepless weeks. "Up in that

church tower," he said, nodding out the window, "is a bell which

is rung by pulling on a rope. But you know what? After the sexton

lets go of the rope the bell keeps on swinging. First 'ding,'

then 'dong.' Slower and slower until there's a final dung and it

stops. I believe the same thing is true of forgiveness. When we

forgive, we take our hand off the rope. But if we've been tugging

at our grievances for a long time, we mustn't be surprised if the

old angry thoughts keep coming for a while. They're just the

ding-dongs of the old bell slowing down."

And so it proved to be. There were a few more midnight

reverberations, a couple of dings when the subject came up in my

conversations. But the force - which was my willingness in the

matter - had gone out of them. They came less and less often and

at last stopped altogether. And so I discovered another secret of

forgiveness: we can trust God not only above our emotions, but

also above our thoughts.

......



In his book, "Lee: The Last Years," Charles Bracelen Flood

reports that after the Civil War, Robert E. Lee visited a

Kentucky lady who took him to the remains of a grand old tree in

front of her house. There she bitterly cried that its limbs and

trunk had been destroyed by Federal Artillery fire. She looked to

Lee for a word condemning the North or at least sympathizing with

her loss.

After a brief silence, Lee said, "Cut it down, my dear Madam, and

forget it."

It is better to forgive the injustices of the past than to allow

them to remain, let bitterness take root, and poison the rest of

our life.


Bitterness, Injustice

......



Senator Mark Hatfield recounts the following history:


James Garfield was a lay preacher and principal of his

denominational college. They say he was ambidextrous and could

simultaneously write Greek with one hand and Latin with the

other. In 1880, he was elected president of the United States,

but after only six months in office, he was shot in the back with

a revolver. He never lost consciousness. At the hospital, the

doctor probed the wound with his little finger to seek the

bullet. He couldn't find it, so he tried a silver-tipped probe.

Still he couldn't locate the bullet.

They took Garfield back to Washington, D.C. Despite the summer

heat, they tried to keep him comfortable. He was growing very

weak. Teams of doctors tried to locate the bullet, probing the

wound over and over. In desperation they asked Alexander Graham

Bell, who was working on a little device called the telephone, to

see if he could locate the metal inside the president's body. He

came, he sought, and he too failed.

The president hung on through July, through August, but in

September he finally died - not from the wound but from

infection. The repeated probing, which the physicians thought

would help the man, eventually killed him.


So it is with people who dwell too long on their sin and refuse

to release it to God.


Sin, Christ's Work

......



In 1982 would-be assassin John Hinckley shot President Ronald

Reagan. Reagan underwent surgery and recovered, and through the

entire ordeal Reagan's daughter Patti Davis saw God at work. In

"Angels Don't Die" she writes:


I give endless prayers of thanks to whatever angels circled my

father, because a Devastator bullet, which miraculously had not

exploded, was found a quarter inch from his heart, the following

day my father said he knew his physical healing was directly

dependent on his ability to forgive John Hinckley. By showing me

that forgiveness is the key to everything, including physical

health and healing, he gave me an example of Christ-like

thinking.


The same grace of God that protects and heals us also calls us to

forgive those who hurt us the most.


Christlikeness, Grace, Mercy, Protection, Providence Matt. 6:12.

......



Jimmy Carter ran for president of the United States against

Ronald Reagan in 1980. According to David Wallis in the New York

Times Magazine, prior to a televised debate between the two

candidates, columnist George Will came upon Carter's debate notes

and sneaked them to the Reagan camp. Many pundits felt that

Reagan won that debate, and he went on to win the election.

Carter did not forget what George Will had done to him.

In a 1997 interview with Wallis, Carter said:


I was teaching forgiveness one day in Sunday school, and I tried

to go through my memory about people for whom I had a resentment.

George Will was one of those people, so I wrote him a note. I

asked myself, What do we have in common, and I had known that he

had written a book about baseball, which I had refused to read. I

went to a bookstore and found a remaindered copy. Paid a dollar

for it. So I wrote him a note and told him the facts: that I had

a feeling of resentment toward him, that I had found his book

delightful and I hoped that we would be permanently reconciled.

He wrote me back a nice, humorous note. He said his only regret

was that I didn't pay full price for his book.


Anyone can hold a grudge. It takes character to initiate

reconciliation.


Grudges, Reconciliation, Resentment Matt. 5:23-26;18:15-35; Col.

3:13.

......



In "Running on Empty," Jill Briscoe writes:


A woman I met at a conference told me how she was sexually abused

as a small child by her father. She grew up, overcame the

emotional damage that had been done, and eventually married a

missionary. Years later, after her children were fully grown, she

received a letter from her father telling her he had become a

Christian and had asked God for forgiveness and received it. He

had, moreover, realized he had sinned dreadfully against her, and

was writing to ask for her pardon.

Feelings she didn't know were there suddenly surfaced. It wasn't

fair! He should pay for what he had done, she thought bitterly.

It was all too easy. And now he was going to be part of the

family! She was sure her home church was busy killing the

fattened calf for him and that she would be invited to the party!

She was angry, resentful....

Then she had a dream. She saw her father standing on an empty

stage. Above him appeared the hands of God holding a white robe

of righteousness. She recognized it at once, for she was wearing

one just like it! As the robe began to descend toward her father,

she woke up crying out, "No! It isn't fair! What about me?"

The only way she could finally rejoice, as her heavenly Father

pleaded with her to do, was to realize that her earthly father

was now wearing the same robe that she was. They were the same in

God's sight. It had cost his Son's life to provide both those

robes. As she began to see her father clothed with the garments

of grace, she was able to begin to rejoice.


Bitterness, Family, Grace, Mercy, Righteousness, Sexual Abuse

Matt. 18:21-35; Luke 15:11-32.

......



In August 1995 a scene occurred in Burma, now called Myanmar,

that fifty years earlier no one could ever have imagined. It

happened at the bridge over the Kwai River. During World War 2

the Japanese army had forced Allied prisoners of war from

Britain, Australia, and the Netherlands to build a railroad. The

Japanese soldiers committed many atrocities, and some sixteen

thousand Allied POWs died building what has been called "Death

Railway."

But after the war, a former Japanese army officer named Nagase

Takashi went on a personal campaign to urge his government to

admit the atrocities committed.

After many years of effort, the result of his crusade was a brief

ceremony in 1995 at the infamous bridge. On one side of the

bridge were fifty Japanese, including five war veterans, and Mr.

Takashi. Eighteen schoolteachers from Japan carried two hundred

letters written by children expressing sadness for what had

happened during the war.

At the other side of the bridge were representatives of Allied

soldiers: Two old soldiers from Britain who declared the business

of fifty years ago finished at last. A young woman from Australia

who came to deliver, posthumously, her father's forgiveness. A

son of a POW who came to do the same. And there was 73-yearold

Australian David Barrett, who said he made the pilgrimage because

he felt that to continue hating would destroy him.

The two groups began to walk the narrow planks of the black iron

bridge toward one another. When they met in the center, they

shook hands, embraced, shed tears. Yuko Ikebuchi, a

schoolteacher, handed the letters from the Japanese children to

the veterans, and in tears turned and ran without a word.

Forgiveness can transform the very place where atrocities have

occurred into something beautiful - a display of God's mercy.


Confession, Peacemakers, Reconciliation Matt. 5:9, 23-26;

18:21-35.

......



SOME  PEOPLE,  MAYBE  MOST  OF  US,  HAVE  DIFFICULTY  WITH 

RECONCILING  GOD'S  JUSTICE  IN  THIS  LIFE,  AND  GOD'S  GRANTED 

MERCY  IN  AN  AGE  THAT  IS  TO  COME.


WHEN  GOD  RULED  ANCIENT  ISRAEL  HE  HAD  MANY  LAWS  FOR  THEM 

WHICH  INCLUDED  THE  DEATH  PENALTY  FOR  CERTAIN  CRIMES,  IF 

THE  INDIVIDUAL  WAS  NOT  FULLY  REPENTANT (DAVID  WAS  FULLY 

REPENTANT  OVER  COMMITTING  ADULTERY  AND  PLANNED  MURDER

[PSA.51]  AND  SO  WAS  PARDONED  FROM  THE  DEATH  PENALTY,  AS 

WE  SEE  IN  2 SAMUEL 11 AND 12).  YES  UNDER  THE  LAWS  OF  GOD 

FOR  THIS  PHYSICAL  LIFE  CERTAIN  CRIMES  SHOULD  CARRY  THE 

DEATH  PENALTY (WE  HERE  IN  CANADA  THINK  WE  ARE  SO 

MODERNLY  MORAL  THAT  WE  HAVE  ABOLISHED  THE  DEATH  PENALTY 

FOR  ALL AND  EVERY  CRIME). 

WE  CAN  INDEED  LOOK  BACK  ON  HISTORY  AND  SEE  MANY 

HORRIBLE  AND  DISGUSTING  SINS  THAT  HAVE  BEEN  DONE  BY  A 

PERSON  OR  PERSONS  -  WE  CAN  THINK  OF  THE  SINS  OF  HITLER 

AND  HIS  CLONES  DURING  WORLD  WAR  2.


THEN  WE  FIND  IN  GOD'S  WORD  THAT  MOST  PEOPLE  FROM  THE 

TIME  OF  ADAM  AND  EVE,  HAVE  BEEN  SPIRITUALLY  BLINDED, 

DECEIVED,  LEFT  TO  THEIR  OWN  DARKENED  MIND  AND  THE 

INFLUENCE  OF  SATAN  AND  THE  DEMONS.  SOME  IN  SUCH  A  STATE 

HAVE  DONE  GREAT  AND  HORRIFIC  SINS  UPON  OTHER  HUMAN 

BEINGS.  YET  THERE  WILL  COME  AN  AGE  CALLED  "THE  GREAT 

WHITE  THRONE  JUDGMENT"  -  REVELATION  20  -  A  TIME  WHEN 

THE  HUMANLY  DECEIVED,  GOOD,  BAD,  AND  UGLY,  WILL  BE 

RAISED  TO  PHYSICAL  LIFE  AGAIN,  AND  HAVE  THE  BIBLE  OPENED 

TO  THEM,  ALSO  THE  BOOK  OF  LIFE,  AND  BE  GIVEN  A  CHANCE 

TO  REPENT  AND  FIND  SALVATION  THROUGH  CHRIST  JESUS.


YES  HITLER,  TO  NAME  ONE,  WILL  BE  THERE  IN  THAT  AGE, 

AND  YES  HE  WILL  BE  GRANTED  SPIRITUAL  SIGHT  AND  THE 

OPPORTUNITY  TO  REPENT  AND  ACCEPT  JESUS  CHRIST  AS  HIS 

PERSONAL  SAVIOR,  AN  OPPORTUNITY  TO  BE  FORGIVEN.


IT  IS  WRITTEN  IN  THE  NEW  TESTAMENT,  THAT  GOD  WISHES, 

DESIRES  THAT  NONE  SHOULD  PERISH  BUT  THAT  ALL  COME  TO 

REPENTANCE.  IT  IS  HUMBLING  AND  ALSO  MIND-BLOWING  TO  TRY 

TO  UNDERSTAND  THE  DEPTH,  THE  LOVE,  THE  CHARACTER  OF  THE 

GOD  OF  THIS  UNIVERSE,  BEING  WILLING  TO  EXTEND  HIS  HAND 

OF  FORGIVENESS  TO  ALL  AND  EVERYONE,  INCLUDING  PEOPLE  LIKE 

HITLER.


IT  IS  HARD  SOMETIMES  FOR  THE  PRESENT  HUMAN  MIND  TO 

UNDERSTAND  THE  DEPTHS  OF  THE  CHARACTER  OF  GOD.  WE  TRY 

EVEN  IF  AT  TIMES  WE  LOOK  THROUGH  A  GLASS  DARKLY,  BUT 

ONE  DAY  WE  SHALL  KNOW  FULLY  EVEN  AS  WE  ARE  KNOWN.


Keith Hunt -  a  day  before  the  Great  Feast  of  Tabernacles  2012.  


To be continued 


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