Categories
Relationships

Repentance & Forgiveness – Two Great Needs

We have a desperate need for repentance & forgiveness. We have a great need for repentance of our own failures and a great need to forgive others of their mistakes against us.
the words "I am sorry and I forgive you" to express the ideas of repentance and forgiveness
We have a forgiving God — A God who knew of our great failures and great sins and yet loved us in spite of our unrighteousness because of who He is. Our great need for forgiveness required Jesus to serve as the atoning sacrifice for our failures. However, Jesus stated that He didn’t come for those who trusted in their own righteousness, but for those who were able to acknowledge their failures before a Holy & Righteous God. For us to receive forgiveness we must be people of repentance.

King David was called a man after God’s own heart. Was that because he was always a righteous man? No. David became involved in some pretty unsavory stuff – adultery, deceit, premeditated murder. But I like this statement about David’s heart from Jonathan & Lisa Moore:
“David was a man after God’s own heart not because he never failed, but because he never failed to repent.”

Repentance is not the only reason David was called a man after God’s heart, but I do believe it is a significant part of it. We need to be willing to do the same before our Holy God – never failing to repent. Our society disagrees and tells us that no one has a right to tell us that something we are doing is wrong. But God takes a different point of view. His character and His word provide us with a clear definition of right and wrong. And when we find ourselves on the wrong side of God-honoring behavior, we must never fail to repent if we want to remain in fellowship with God. And thankfully, graciously, God is always always ready to forgive and restore us back to a right relationship with Him.

That brings us to our second need. If we have a loving God who is so willing to forgive us, then why do we so often hold back forgiveness from others. We get angry and upset with others for so many different reasons, sometimes rightfully so. But it doesn’t change the fact that we are still called to offer forgiveness. God calls us to be people of love, but what is unforgiveness?

“When boiled down to its essence, unforgiveness is hatred” (John R. Rice).

‘But they hurt me so badly…’ ‘They angered me so much…’ ‘They talked behind my back…’ ‘They slapped me in the face…’ But whatever they did, it is in the past. And forgiveness isn’t so much about the past as it is the future. “When you forgive, you in no way change the past – but you sure do change the future” (Bernard Meltzer). By holding out forgiveness to those who have mistreated us, we open up the possibility of reconciliation and unity for the future. And the reconciling God of heaven has given us the ministry of reconciliation.

Never fail to repent. And always be willing to offer forgiveness.

Categories
Prayer

A Powerful Prayer for Today

a relief sculpture of a person prayingR.A.Torrey: We are too busy to pray, and so we are too busy to have power. We have a great deal of activity, but we accomplish little …many services but few conversions….

I ran across this prayer during my reading and thought it was excellent. I hope you won’t just read it, but that you will pray it for yourself and for your church this morning…

“God, give us tears for our sins. Forgive us for being so shallow in prayer, …so content amid perishing neighbors, so empty of passion and earnestness in all our conversation. Restore to us the childlike joy of our salvation. …Cause us to hold to the cross with fear and trembling as our hope-filled…tree of life. Grant us nothing, absolutely nothing, the way the world views it. May Christ be all in all.
…Oh God, place [within us] passionate prayer, poverty of spirit, hunger for God, rigorous study of holy things, white-hot devotion to Jesus Christ, utter indifference to all material gain, and unremitting labor to rescue the perishing, perfect the saints, and glorify our sovereign Lord.
Humble us, O God, under Your mighty hand, and let us rise…as witnesses and partakers of the sufferings of Christ. In His awesome name. Amen.”
(from John Piper in Brothers, We are not Professionals)

What else would you add to a prayer that we should all be praying today?

— brian rushing

Categories
Relationships

The Breach

breach (defined): a tear, rupture, gap, or rift.

a serious crack, or breach, in a concrete wallEver had a breach in a relationship?
Ever had a friendship that was torn or ruptured?

In almost every long-lasting, human relationship there will come a time when we find ourselves at odds with the other person, and we will encounter a breach. The question is what will we do, once the breach has occurred? Too often I don’t want to be the one to reconcile the relationship, especially if they were the ones who started the breach. (And of course, in our eyes, they always are the ones most at fault – it couldn’t have been my fault, right?)

“No Christian ever has a right to sever any relationship with anybody out of anger…or even injustice.”

Two missionaries to the Appalachian mountain people, Alice and David, are having a discussion about a breach. So often I find myself with the attitude of David instead of the attitude of Alice.

“Miss Alice’s voice was mild. “I’m not passing any judgment on the rightness or wrongness of any part of it. All I want to point out is that there’s now a breach between Ozias and you, so it’s up to you to take the first step towards righting it.”
“Why me? He’s the one who was wrong.”
“David, I’ve been back here in the Cove a little longer than you. One of the worst evils around here is nursing grudges, sometimes for years. Retaliating evil for evil is considered a virtue, the mark of strong character. Here with this Ozias situation, you’ve got a ready-made chance to demonstrate a better way: the strength of forgiveness.”
“I fail to see how my forgiving Ozias for being a lazy bum would demonstrate anything to him and the other men except weakness?
“David, no Christian ever has a right to sever any relationship with anybody out of anger, [wounded pride], or even injustice, no matter how much he disapproves of someone’s actions. It’s our place to demonstrate reconciliation – not judgment or revenge or retaliation. That’s God’s business, not ours.”

Alice is right. God has given us the ministry of reconciliation. Yet, our own hurt pride and anger over the injustice done to us keeps us from demonstrating the strength of forgiveness. We are glad we have received forgiveness from God after continuously offending Him, but we are slow to give it to others. Why are we who are Christians so slow to repair the breach even if we didn’t cause it?

Her voice grew softer. “Beware the chasms in thy life, David. Sooner or later [you might] fall down in the chasm thyself.”

Are there any breached relationships that you need to start repairing?
For those who have repaired a breach, any advice on how you started?

(Quotes from the book “Christy” by Catherine Marshall)