Forgiveness – an introduction

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I remember studying biblical theology in my younger years.  At that time the machinations of scholars were often portrayed as unfinished (of course they were – they were just dipping their feet in the water of discourse with other academics so you didn’t want to proclaim the “truth” without first checking it out with your peers). 

The title for books included the following – “an introduction”.  So, here is an introduction on forgiveness.

The Christian viewpoint is strong on forgiveness.  In fact, so strong, that if you don’t forgive you will not be forgiven.

Below I have outlined in my own language some definitions of forgiveness that I have run across.  I’m not sure I agree with them all.  After all, this is just “an introduction”!

Some initial thoughts on defining forgiveness:

Give totally – as though your loss was actually not a loss – you gave it to the other freely.

Give as though nothing has happened – consider things to be as they were before, as though the most recent incident had not happened.

Don’t take offense – refuse to take account.  Actually pre-omit the sin perpetrated against you before it happens.

Don’t receive what is given – instead of wearing a velcro suit attracting offenses, you wear a teflon suit that sheds offenses.

Don’t judge in the first place – there are no offenses where there is no wrong.

Your thoughts?

Dwelling on the street

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We all have a place we live.  Homelessness is not without a dwelling place.

We may not call it home.  We may not call it comfortable.  We may not even call it good.

Our real response to homelessness is based in a desire for human dignity.  Dignity is about sensing a greatness within each person that cannot be denied.  We degrade dignity when we shame others – expecting them to live within our standards.  A person degrades their own dignity when their own standard is not reached.

Let’s throw into this mix a far greater standard.  Let’s consider that there is a God who fixes a standard for humans.  To be like God would be the greatest goal – for surely a created being fashioned after God would be at their best, their most glorious, when they are most like God.

With that in mind – a person can be homeless and live with dignity.  A society can be oppressed and live with dignity. 

When we seek to live up to the glory that is God’s. 

Just a thought for the day!

Life is More Than Ethical Culture

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Yesterday stirred up in me a return to research on A.B. Simpson, founder of the Christian and Missionary Alliance.  Here is an interesting excerpt from his magazine “Living Truths” (a magazine that ran for a few years in the early 1900’s).

Practical righteousness is a fruit of life, but it is not life, and to cultivate it apart from union with Christ and the indwelling of the Holy Spirit is just as unsatisfactory as it would be to try to cleanse a foul river by putting disinfectants into the body of the river rather than the fountain head.

Morality may exist without life, but life cannot exist without morality.  There is a good deal of reform abroad today without spiritual power, just as we fear there is a good deal of religion without righteousness.  Both are wrong.

Living Truths, Vol 7, No. 3, March 1907, p. 122.

In memory of Valerie Jill Baker–July 1, 1953–May 17, 2012

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Five years have passed since the passing of my wife, Jill. 

Columbarium plaque - Jill 2012

I constantly remember.

Her laugh and love of life

Her music from the heart

Her love for family and friends

Her food for body and soul

Her love for me

I sometimes forget.

How quickly life passes

How grief is seasonally adjusted

How friends are precious

How God’s love is huge

How heaven is just around the corner