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DID YOU LEAVE THE HANDLE STICKING
UP?
Jeanette Lockerbie in The
Image of Joy tells about having overheard a Christian say about a fellow
believer, "I've buried the hatchet - but I've left the handle sticking
up."
A man by the name of Sydney Harris said it this way - "There's no point in
burying a hatchet if you're going to put up a marker on the site."
The Encyclopedia of Sermon Illustrations gives a perfect example of
someone who buried the hatchet and left the handle sticking up, just in
case he might need to use it again someday - "There is too much of the
spirit of the Highland man who, having been persuaded on what was supposed
to be his deathbed to forgive a neighbor who had been led into his chamber
for a formal reconciliation, called after him as he was leaving the room,
'Remember, if I get better, this will all be off!' "
It is the Christian's duty to forgive.
In other words, it's our obligation, responsibility, service, part, task,
charge, business, and office before God to forgive and then forget every
offense that is committed against us. God's grace is sufficient to bring
about this lasting result. Revenge is out of the question for every
believer.
Someone once said - "There is no revenge so complete as forgiveness."
William Blake added to that - "The glory of Christianity is to conquer by
forgiveness."
And Chrysostom once said - "Nothing causes us to so nearly resemble God as
the forgiveness of injuries."
What about it, Fellow Believer?
Have you conquered your enemies by forgiving them?
Have you completely buried the hatchet - handle and all - by forgiving the
guilty party and then forgetting every offense committed against you?
Do you resemble God this day or the devil?
It all depends on whether or not you are able to forgive those who hurt
and offended you in the past and are then able to forget the offense.
Do you find yourself rehearsing every act that was committed against you?
Does it play in your mind every day like a broken record?
Do you constantly bring it up before all?
Does everything that happens to you remind you of it?
Then it sounds like you still have the handle showing where you buried
your hatchet.
You are not filled with the spirit of forgiveness but the spirit of the
Highland man who, at the first opportunity, desires revenge and to get
even.
The words of J.C. Ryle are disturbing yet so true - "It is a melancholy
fact that there are few Christian duties so little practised as that of
forgiveness."
We are a people who have been forgiven of so much by our Master and Lord.
How is it then that we have such a problem being merciful unto others when
we have received so many mercies from our God?
How is it that we fall so short of the Glory of God in this area of
forgiving and then forgetting?
Have we forgotten where we have been brought from?
Have we forgotten what we once were and what we are today - and all
because of the Grace of God?
There is no place for boasting.
If there is any good in us - it is there because of Calvary.
But -- you argue and protest -- you don't know what I have been through.
Luke 23:34 - No one has been more offended than the Son of God, yet on the
Cross He was able to Forgive all of us who put Him to death by our sins,
by saying - "...Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do..."
What about this issue of forgiveness? What does the Bible have to say to
us today?
Matthew 18:21-22 relates - "Then came Peter to Him, and said, Lord, how
oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him? till seven times?
Jesus saith unto him, I say not unto thee, Until seven times: but, Until
seventy times seven."
"I forgive him" - We can know that we have truly forgiven someone from our
hearts -
...when we can consider the situation as though it never happened;
...when we harbor no malice or resentment toward the party who hurt us;
...when we treat our offender kindly, thoughtfully, gently, and
considerately.
This is when we know that we have truly buried our hatchet - handle and
all.
"Till seven times?" - The Jews had an understanding that a man was
required to forgive another three times but not the fourth - having a
"three strikes/you're out" mentality. Theirs was a limited forgiveness.
This explains why Peter brought up a certain number in reference to
forgiving another.
"Until seventy times seven" - What did Jesus say in response to Peter? He
immediately refuted the concept of having a limit on our forgiveness. God
certainly does not hold any limits on our forgiveness and we must do the
same for our offenders; that is, if we call ourselves followers of Christ.
As often as a brother injures us and then asks for forgiveness, that is as
often as we are to forgive him and then forget his wrongdoing.
We are not to keep count of the offences done against us.
It's the duty of every believer to ask for forgiveness for any wrongdoing.
We are not to deliberately be inconsiderate of the feelings and rights of
others.
We are not to carry ourselves so highly in that we mistreat others and
then think nothing of it.
May God help us in this area and swiftly convict us when we slight our
brother or sister in the least way.
It's the duty of every believer to then forgive another who asks for it.
At no time ever are we allowed to bear a grudge or mediate revenge. Even
when another doesn't step out and ask, we should still treat this
individual kindly and respectfully, hoping and praying that by heaping
coals of fire upon our enemy's head, the Lord will bring him to the
realization of his unkind actions or words.
Luke 17:3 - In this area of forgiveness, the Lord Jesus warned us to "Take
heed to yourselves..." We must be on guard against the enemy gaining a
place in us through any unforgiveness towards another. So many have their
prayers hindered simply because they have not yet forgiven others.
Luke 17:3-4 instructs us - "...If thy brother trespass against thee,
rebuke him; and if he repent, forgive him. And if he trespass against thee
seven times in a day, and seven times in a day turn again to thee, saying,
I repent; thou shalt forgive him."
"If thy brother trespass against thee" - This will happen to us so we need
not be surprised when it does. Others will sin against us, injure us, and
perhaps even do damage to our reputation or life.
"Rebuke him" - How did the Lord Jesus teach us to handle these matters? He
taught us to reprove our brother - go to him and tell him his fault,
seeking for a possible explanation of his actions.
"If he repent, forgive him" - We are commanded to forgive him every time
that he repents. We are never to count the offenses done against us nor to
think about them again.
Did you bury your hatchet with the handle and all?
If not, today is as good a day as any to be sure and bury every offense of
the past, never to remember them again.
If there is anyone who you need to forgive, don't put it off another
moment.
Forgive and then forget, leaving it all behind you.
May God Give All of His People the Grace to Obey This Word Today.
Connie
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