Tuesday, February 10, 2009

Forgiveness

My teacher wrote this on forgiveness and its really meaningful and I thought i should share it:

Frankly, this is one of the most difficult topics to share on.
I am sure it is not difficult for anyone to understand why.

Who among us can claim that we have never been hurt by others?
That person would be a liar.

Yet, why should we forgive others?
My reply is: Why not?

There are many reasons why I chose not to forgive those who hurt me.These include:
1. I had been hurt unfairly.
2. Justice meant that those who hurt me must suffer for their sins.
3. Those who hurt me did not ask for my forgiveness.

There are good reasons to forgive now.

1. "I had been hurt unfairly."
Have I not hurt anyone in my life?
Have I not hurt He who loves me most?
Can I effectively measure the hurt I suffered and the hurt others suffered because of me, and say that I am the lesser of sinners?

We can only conclude that this society is not God's original design, and we are still suffering the effects of sin.All the more, we cry, "Come, Lord Jesus. Come."

2. "Justice meant that those who hurt me must suffer for their sins."
I still believe in this, but vengeance is the Lord's.
He will decide when and where the vengeance will come.
Am I God, that I should think myself above the judgement of Christ?
Am I all-knowing, that I should trust myself the best judge of what and when is the appropriate punishment?
Did I really understand the message of the Lord?
How do I demonstrate Christ-likeness by holding on to the pain?

3. "Those who hurt me did not ask for my forgiveness."
When Peter asked Jesus how many times he should forgive his brother, I always thought that this passage meant that I must forgive those who ask.
However, I also believed that those who did not ask need not be forgiven.
At the same time, I could not reconcile this view with the prayer both Jesus and Stephen said at their deaths, that the Father would forgive them, for they did not know what they were doing.

Aren't we all "not knowing"?
If we truly understood how our words and actions would hurt others, would we still have done so?

If we would, we truly deserved to be condemned.If we ever had or have any regrets, doesn't it show that we "did not know"?
How can we trust that we hurt others without intending it, and yet, others hurt us with malice?
How deceptive the heart is!
How self-righteous we are!

I always said that we should know what kind of person God is first, before we can understand why He gave certain commandments, and in this case, the same principle can apply.

If we can believe that God is both just and merciful, we would understand some things:
1. The need for final judgement on Judgement Day
2. The call to be merciful
3. The use for His commandments

1. As God is just, He would not tolerate evil forever.
One day, all shall be made accountable for their thoughts, words and deeds.
Why then is He "delaying" judgement?
Why does He place such a premium on free will?
Isn't it because of His mercy and sense of justice at the same time?

2. As God is merciful, He demonstrates His patience with us, who are saved.
His will is that none shall perish, but this may not be the will of men.
This long-suffering God reaches out to us first, in that while we were still sinners, Christ died for us.
All we wise enough to call for judgement now?
In this culture of instant gratification, have we forgotten what we have received freely from the Lord?
As we freely receive His grace, freely we shall give.

3. I believe that all commandments are given for our benefit.
We do not commit murder, because this would bring fear, anger and hatred into our midst.
We forgive, because we can be truly free.
Those who hurt us, may never realise that they did evil in the sight of the Lord, and woe be to them when they fall into God's hand of judgement.
However, there could also be some who are sorry, but lack the courage to apologise.
They may have found their peace with the Lord, but we, for the lack of forgiveness, are still holding on to the pain.It is worth our while to forgive.

Let us try to live lives truly worth living!
How do we forgive?
How did we become Christians?
The answer is the same: by choice.Choose to forgive.

I lie, if I say that forgiving others is an easy choice.
May the Lord walk with us, as we choose to forgive others everyday.
May He complete our insufficiency.

Adapted From http://revelation3-20.blogspot.com/search?updated-max=2009-01-21T18%3A29%3A00%2B08%3A00&max-results=1. Mr Chia You Rock!

~~God Bless~~


JiaJie praised Jesus at 7:36 PM

About Me

Feng Jia Jie
Fong Gah Gi
Singaporean
13th August 1994
Slacking 15
Student
Christian
Toong Chai Presbyterian Church
Elias Park Primary School
Springfield Secondary School

BLOG RULES

I Am Always Right
No Spamming
No Flaming
Always Feel Free To Tag
If You Want Me to Add You, Please Leave Your Link

LOVES

GOD
Jesus
My Family
My Friends
My Church
Myself

HATES

Love Your Enemies

CLOCK


LEGEND

Orange Dot:Hour
Red Dot:Minute
Plane:Second


Message Board



Shared Blogs

*栋材仔 Youth Blog*
*British Council Blog*
*Class 3H Blog*

Links

Allie
Celine
Daniel
Eleanor
Eleanor 2nd Blog
En Lin
Hui Lin
Hui Ping
Hui Tong
Jia Jia
Jian Jun
Jonathan
Josiah
LiHan
Megan
Mr Chia
Natalie
Nidia
Paul
Rachel
Rachel Leong
Roystin
Ryan
Shafique
XiaoHan
YongRu
YongSheng
YiRen
YuZhe
Zjinyee

Other Websites

Command & Conquer Mods
DOTA Website
MapleSEA Site
Offical Command & Conquer Site

Monthly Memories

October 2008
November 2008
December 2008
January 2009
February 2009
March 2009
April 2009
May 2009

Credits

Blog Skin & Design
Jeremy Teng

Codes
Jeremy Teng

Designing Program
Adobe Photoshop

Bible Verses
Matthew 27:50-55 (NIV)
Romans 5:8 (NIV)

Brushes
Moargh.de
IceCracks Fractal Brushes Set1
Tree Brushes by JavierZhX

Creative Commons License
This work by Jeremy Teng (hysterically-weird) is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution-Noncommercial-No Derivative Works 3.0 License.