Tuesday, November 20, 2007

Forgiveness

Hey guys, as pastor James spoke on this topic 2 weeks ago, I read this article today. I believe God is trying to telling us something... Hehe...

Whenever there is a sermon on forgiveness, I use to think that this message is not for me because I never hate people.. No one has offended me so great that it causes unforgiveness. Haha.. but it is really more than hating people. I believe every now and then, we experience getting hurt or hurting people by our careless words or jokes.. So we need to release it to God so that it wouldn't develop into unforgiveness and then bitterness.

This is the article:

“Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.” (Ephesians 4:32 NIV)

Fellowship without forgiveness is impossible.

As believers, we’re called “to settle our relationships with each other.” (2 Corinthians 5:18 MSG) We need to consistently forgive others and receive forgiveness from others, or we’ll “give up in despair.” (2 Corinthians 2:7 CEV)
Whenever we’re hurt by someone, we have a choice to make: Will we focus on retaliation or resolution?

The Bible speaks candidly about settling the score: “Make sure that nobody pays back wrong for wrong, but always try to be kind to each other and to everyone else.” (1 Thessalonians 5:15 NIV)

In God’s economy, it’s not enough to say we won’t seek revenge; we’re to press into the very heart of forgiveness, forgiving each other, just as Christ forgave us. (Ephesians 4:32 NIV)
The Bible is very clear that forgiveness is not optional for the Christ-follower. God sets this high standard because he knows how much is at stake in your life: Bitterness and unforgiveness are a cancer that eventually will destroy you from the inside out. Forgiveness is the scalpel that removes the tumor.

This doesn’t mean you’ll always be able to immediately forgive and be done with it. As you become more and more Christ-like, that will become possible, but for now you may have to work at forgiving someone who has hurt you in a particularly painful way. In other words, you may forgive this person but soon begin to feel a root of unforgiveness growing in your heart.
When this occurs, you can go to King Jesus and ask him to help you with this cycle. He will help you release the offender, and the Holy Spirit will guide you in your effort.

A major point here is that forgiveness is a choice you can make. The power of God, working within you, means you no longer have to remain a slave to unforgiveness or bitterness.
In Colossians, the Apostle Paul provides the basis and motivation for forgiveness: “You must make allowance for each other's faults and forgive the person who offends you. Remember, the Lord forgave you, so you must forgive others.” (Colossians 3:13 NLT, italics added). When we remember the price Jesus paid to forgive us, how can we not forgive? (Romans 5:8)

2 comments:

::sklc:: said...

Forgiveness is a big issue with most people. Clearly seen during ER sessions when people have to deal with all that bitterness in their lives. Oh yes! I still have my old notes from Mike Constantine's message on forgiveness. Forgiving someone does not mean you have to immediately restore all privileges to the person until trust is rebuilt, and also it means that the person who is being forgiven (which could be us, sometimes) should make all effort to regain that trust.

Anonymous said...

Came across this and thought it was pretty interesting: "Forgivness doesn't mean forgetting to remember, but remembering to forget".

Hence, it is really a choice - remember to forget, remember to make allowance for each other's fault and forgive the person who offends as the Lord also forgave you.