Text: 2 Corinthians 2:5-11
Key Verse: “If you forgive
anyone, I also forgive him. And what I have forgiven – if there was anything to
forgive – I have forgiven in the sight of Christ for your sake” (2 Corinthians
2:10).
Paul expresses no hard feelings
or recriminations nor exhibits an I-can-forgive, but-I-can't-forget attitude.
We often hear people speak about forgiveness in this way, and this attitude
reveals a lack of understanding of what forgiveness is. Forgiveness, basically,
is a promise that you make to three different individuals. This is true always,
in every case of forgiveness.
First, it is a promise that you
make to the individual who has offended you and now has repented, in which you
are saying to him or her, I will not let my attitude toward you be governed any
longer by this offense. It has been put aside. My treatment of you from here on
will be as though this has never happened. It is a promise you make never to
bring it up again. In marriage many problems go on for years because couples
tend to go back and dig up the past, which is an indication that it has never
been forgiven. Some mates don't get hysterical; they get historical! That is
the problem, and that creates a problem.
Second, it is a promise not to
pass it on to anybody else. When a matter is forgiven, it is to be forgotten.
Now it may be that everyone knows about the matter, because, as in this case in
Corinth, it had been told to the whole church. But what it means is that nobody
brings up the issue again or holds it over a forgiven person's head or reminds
him or her of it every time any further difficulty occurs. It is a promise to
drop the matter, leave it in the past, and never bring it up to anybody again.
Third, and probably most
important, it is a promise to yourself that when your memory goes back to it,
as it will occasionally, you are not going to allow it to seize hold of your
heart and make you angry all over again. The minute it comes back to mind, you
put it aside as something that belongs to the past. You are not going to dwell
on it. It is a promise, therefore, to repeat your act of forgiveness, no matter
how often the memory comes up. That is what forgiveness is; and Paul is ready
to do this.
The reason, of course, is because
he himself has been forgiven. People tell me sometimes, I just can't forgive in
this case. The person has admitted her wrongdoing and has asked me to forgive
her, but I just can't do it. It hurt me too much. It is a revelation to me that
the person who has been wronged has never realized how much he has been
forgiven already. The basis for Christian forgiveness is always, Be kind and
compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God
forgave you (Ephesians 4:32).
== Culled from Ray Stedman’s
Ministry | www.raystedman.org
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