A Prescription for Inner Healing

January 9, 2013

“And forgive us our debts, as we forgive our debtors.”  (Matthew 6:12)

The greatest obstacle to inner healing is un-forgiveness.  Those who work in ministries of healing claim that the lack of forgiveness on the part of a victim that has been terribly violated can retard their own inner healing.

Can you see why Jesus instructed His disciples to pray every day: “Forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors?”  The original language has it, “As we have already forgiven our debtors.”  Do you think Jesus knew how important it is to our inner healing that we should forgive those who sin against us?

Some are bothered by the way Jesus offers commentary on this petition in the disciple’s Prayer.  He commented that if we do not forgive we are not forgiven.  It almost sounds as if we are forgiven because we forgive.  He defuses their confusion with a parable that is recorded in Chapter Eighteen of Matthew.  A man is forgiven a very large debt in the millions of dollars.  He does not have to go into debtor’s prison and see his wife and family sold into slavery.

But on the way home he meets a man who owes him twenty dollars.  He grabs him by the throat and orders him to pay him every cent or he will have him put into debtor’s prison.  Both events are observed and told to the one who forgave him the large debt.  He is recalled and his forgiveness is revoked.  Jesus comments on that story, that if we from our hearts do not forgive, we are not forgiven.

The point is that if we are a forgiven person we will be a forgiving person.  If we are not a forgiving person we are not really a forgiven person.


So, What Is Confession?

October 2, 2012

This week I’m blitzing daily blogs to unpack each point of yesterday’s Jet Pilot’s Compass for you.  The first point isCONFESSION…

“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”   (1 John 1:9)

In the original Greek language, what we translate as confess is a compound Greek word: to say and the word for sameness.  It literally means to say the same thing God says or to agree with God.  If you know the Word of God and are in the Spirit enough to be convicted by the Holy Spirit, you can know what God says and how He feels about what you have done.

Your confession is to agree with Him. Our responsibility is to agree with Him.  He does all the rest.

He knows when we are lost.  Because He loves us He very much wants us to agree with Him that He might recover us and lead us into the green pastures and still waters that lead to a table of provision and a full cup that never empties.  That’s why He wants us to confess our sins and start climbing in the right direction spiritually.

He is not a divine policeman with a huge club just waiting to crack us over the head when we step out of line.  The ministry of Jesus is summed up in the Gospel of Luke this way: “For the Son of Man has come to seek and to save that which was lost” (19:10).  That Gospel shows us in beautiful ways the blessings that came into the lives of lost people because Jesus found them and led them to the blessings of salvation.

Agree with Him and He will guide you to the blessings He has just for you.


Another Prescription for Forgiveness

September 28, 2012

All we like sheep have gone astray; we have turned, every one, to his own way; and the LORD has laid on Him the iniquity of us all.”  (Isaiah 53: 6)

A police officer on a motorcycle noticed a large enclosed truck driven down Sixth Street in Los Angeles, California.  The driver stopped every few blocks, got out, and beat all around the sides of the truck with a large baseball bat.   After observing this for some time, the officer flashed his lights and ordered the driver to pull over.  The policeman said to the driver, “Mister, as far as I can tell, you’re not breaking the law.  But I just gotta’ know, what are you doing?”

The truck driver explained, “Officer, this truck here has a capacity of five thousand pounds.  But, you see, I’ve got six thousand pounds of canaries.  So, I gotta’ keep a thousand pounds of canaries up in the air all the time!”

Perhaps you are up in the air about what you must believe to know that your sins are forgiven.  Isaiah told us in the verse above that if we confess that we are included in the first and last all of his verse then our sins are forgiven.

As a seminar for baseball umpires concluded, an old veteran umpire  said, “The way I see it, some are balls and some are strikes, but they ain’t nothin ‘til we call ’em!”

I have just thrown you a strike.  I have shown you how to know your sins are forgiven.  But like the old umpire said, what I have shown you isn’t anything until you call it something.

What do you call this Good News from Isaiah?


A Prescription for Forgiveness

September 25, 2012

Forgive us our debts, as we also have forgiven our debtors.”   (Matthew 6:12 NIV)

In all the communication that flows between a husband and wife there are ten critical words that often must be spoken.  These ten words have saved marriages and the lack of them has dissolved marriages into divorce.  Those ten words are: “I was wrong.  I am sorry.  Will you forgive me?” And they critically need this ten-word response: “You were wrong.  I was hurt.  But I forgive you.”

Some people will never say the words: “I was wrong.” They never say: “I am sorry.” And they certainly would never ask for forgiveness.  They would rather live alone for the rest of their lives than to say these ten critical words.  It may be their pride prevents them or perhaps they are driven by the myth of their own perfection.  But these words can make the difference between marriage and living alone.

It is hard to imagine an unforgiving authentic disciple of Jesus Christ when the Disciple’s Prayer instructs us to forgive as we have been forgiven or we invalidate our own forgiveness (Matthew 6: 8-15).  According to the translation from which I have quoted, the teaching actually asks our Lord to forgive us as we have already forgiven those who have sinned against us.