Forgiveness is a tricky issue for many. For good reason most of the time.
Many desire to be forgiven and aren’t. Others seek to forgive but can’t because
those they wish to forgive don’t seek to be forgiven, because they don’t see
their wrong. And many people are simply not willing to forgive.
But now to the main thrust of this article:
Forgiveness
was given to us for us to give.
Forgiveness
is a power. Firstly, as we give it. It is for giving. It is a gift
that Christians practice with fervour and joy, expansively offering a grace
they only too well receive from God. It is a gift any wise person gives for
those they truly love.
Secondly,
forgiveness is for receiving. The giver is not unaware of the power
for grace that lay in their hands. When we receive it, we are forgiven. It
is given for us.
When we receive it, it is given for our betterment, for our gain, for our
release and for our freedom. The fetters are broken because grace was given for us. Whatever we were held by no
longer holds us. Forgiveness, the gift given for us to be free again, is the greatest
gift we could receive, because it meant the world to us for peace-sake.
Thirdly,
forgiveness is for the seeking. This takes giving into another
direction of grace entirely. When we make ourselves vulnerable enough that we
put the brittle relationship before ourselves, when we jettison our selfish goals,
and are able to see the log in our own eye, we throw ourselves before the
judgement of another person’s mercy. That is giving for them.
It aligns with the truth: I did wrong and they need to be restored because what
I did damaged them. I account for the harm I’ve done. And then I have the
awesome opportunity of seeing God’s Spirit at work as my telling on myself
literally revives their soul. Forgiveness in the seeking is for giving another
person an opportunity to experience rare justice.
Fourthly,
forgiveness is for the seeing. We must see its need and necessity.
We see it is for giving. In seeing that, we make the connection that life is
more about giving than getting. That it is better to give than receive (Acts
20:35).
If we can
break past the trap that we must be fed before we’re able to feed others, joy
can at last be our possession.
When we
see that forgiveness is for giving, we see that forgiveness is a generosity issue. We see that it’s not for
withholding. We see and therefore accept it is an honour we have to bestow on others.
And when we enter the practice of forgiveness we become conduits for God’s
grace to flourish in others’ lives.
Those who
willingly and even lavishly forgive, possess a heart after the God who forgave
them more than they could ever repay.
~
Forgiveness
is not some passive art of ‘I forgive them from afar’, as if we could pretend
we’ve forgiven when we haven’t. It’s for giving people in an actual
transaction, where courageous generosity communicates the desire for
reconciliation and restoration of the relationship. That’s real Christian love.
Forgiveness
is the costliest activity of discipleship, the pinnacle of humility, the
godliest act of interaction. Such an act of rectifying kindness is power to
remove strongholds that have existed generationally.
Forgiveness
gives for someone to receive something they’re not expecting to receive.
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