Love and Respect Takes Two Good Forgivers by Dr. Emerson Eggerichs
Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you. — Colossians 3:13
Ruth
Graham, whose marriage to Billy lasted over sixty happy, God-glorifying
years, was often heard to say, “A good marriage is made of two good
forgivers.” Her comment, while true for every marriage, applies
especially to a Love & Respect couple,
because forgiveness is the ultimate strategy for halting the Crazy
Cycle or, better yet, for preventing it from getting started. A
paraphrase of today’s verse says it all: forgive each other as Christ
forgave you.
We
know we should forgive, but between the knowing and the doing there can
be a big gap. And when you are sitting on the unforgiving side of that
gap, you can pay a price. Jesus warned His followers of how big that
price can be when He taught, “But if you do not forgive others their
sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.” (Matthew 6:15).
Was
Jesus saying that unforgiveness could cost you your salvation? No, but
it can disrupt your fellowship and favor with the Lord. God does not
damn us for unforgiveness, but He does enact discipline. My wife and I
learned this early in our marriage, when a typical morning scene would
find us in an angry spat, neither one willing to forgive or ask
forgiveness. Still smoldering, I would leave for my office at the church
to work on my sermon for the coming Sunday. But when I sat down to pray
and read the Scriptures, the heavens would not open. God seemed to have
something on His mind. I heard no audible voice, but He spoke quite
clearly nonetheless: If you do not forgive Sarah and seek her
forgiveness, I cannot allow My Spirit to touch your spirit. Things will
not be right until you call her and reconcile.
More
often than not, I would reach for the phone to make that call and it
would ring first. It would be Sarah, wanting to reconcile because she
had been getting exactly the same message from the Lord!
Our
spats were usually small stuff—two young married people butting heads
over very little. Our conflicts were nothing compared to what some
couples go through due to adultery, abuse, or desertion. But whether the
matter is major or minor, the path to forgiveness is to realize that
the issue that prompts your need to forgive isn’t primarily about your
relationship to your spouse; it’s about your relationship to God.
Suppose
Sarah is 100 percent guilty in wronging me. Her guilt cannot justify my
unforgiving heart. I can remain unforgiving of Sarah as long as I wish.
While I lick my wounds, I can argue with God and explain my “right” to
be unforgiving. But God’s spiritual law stands firm: if I don’t forgive,
I remain in a place where God’s forgiveness will not go because sin
blocks our fellowship.
Do
you remember the scene where Peter comes to Jesus, wanting to know how
many times he must forgive? He gives an estimate that he hopes will
impress Jesus: seven times. That was twice what the law required, but
Jesus simply replies, “Not seven times, but seventy-seven times”
(Matthew 18:22 NIV). His hyperbole makes the message clear to every
couple — forgive indefinitely.
Granted,
right about here you may be asking, okay, Emerson, to be right with
God, does forgiving mean just letting the same hurtful, unloving, or
disrespectful stuff go by over and over without ever talking about it?
No, not at all, but that’s part II of our study of forgiveness (see chapter 27).
For now, focus on the fact that your Love & Respect marriage does
take two good forgivers. You make allowance for each other’s faults as
you forgive as many times as it takes. And you both forgive for one
simple but profound reason: because you know Christ has forgiven you!
Prayer:
Thank God for forgiving you through the sacrifice of His Son. Ask Him
for the wisdom and courage to forgive each other seventy times or as
many times as it takes. (Also consider bringing up people whom you need
to forgive at work, at church, or in other situations, because these
issues could be affecting how you treat your spouse or children.)
Action:
practice “quick forgiveness” next week no matter what the offense.
Don’t let “little things” fester. Pick up that phone and make that call.
* * *
Your Turn
We
know Scripture teaches us to forgive and make allowances for each
other’s faults (Colossians 3:13), but we can give good reasons (to
ourselves) why we can’t forgive (at least not right away). Which of
these sounds like you?
“I don’t deserve to be treated this way! This is unfair!”
“I can’t let my spouse off the hook for this. Justice must be served!”
“I have a right to feel this way. Jesus understands what I go through.”
Other: ________
Why don’t any of the above cut it with Jesus? (See Matthew 6:15.)
How often must you forgive each other? Isn’t there some kind of standard? (See Matthew 18:21.)
Many
of us battle a tendency to be too quick to take offense. Use the Action
item and talk about practicing “quick forgiveness” instead.
You're invited to leave your answers and comments on our blog. We'd love to hear from you! ~ Devotionals Daily
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