It is always a joy to visit with parochial school teachers.
They are always filled with so many delightful stories and insights,
which they have harvested from the little ones who have been placed into
their charge.
I remember not so long ago I was talking with a
retired parochial school teacher about forgiveness. She told me the
story of a third-grade class years ago. During the course of her
assignments to them, she had asked them to write a one-sentence
definition of forgiveness. There were many answers supplied, but it is
one student's answer that has stayed with her.
That student
wrote, "Forgiveness is like meeting someone for the first time."
Not seeing an immediate connection, the teacher asked the young boy just
what he meant.
It didn't take him too long to explain. He said,
"Well, when you meet somebody for the first time, there is nothing that
person could have done or not done to make you upset or disappointed
with him. That's why I think forgiveness is like meeting someone for the
first time. When God sees us, there's nothing about us to upset Him,
disappoint Him, or make Him angry with us."
That young man had an
incredibly deep understanding of our blood-bought forgiveness.
Indeed, God says the same thing.
In the book of Revelation He
tells us that because of Jesus He is making all things new. That would
include a new heaven and a new earth, but it would also mean those souls
who are part of the new heaven and earth are also transformed and new.
Washed in the blood of the Lamb they have stood before the judgment
throne of God and been declared innocent of all wrongdoing. That is not,
of course, because they are so good or perfect. They aren't -- not on
their own. It is because their sins, which were scarlet, have been
washed by Jesus' blood. Because of His sacrifice they are now seen to be
as white as snow.
Or, as our young lad put it: because of Jesus,
our Heavenly Father meets us for the first time.
And just for the
record that's the way we ought to see others whom we forgive. We need to
see them for the first time, too.
We need to see them without any
spot or blemish.
THE PRAYER: Dear Lord, for the forgiveness Jesus
has given me, I give thanks. Now, because I have been made new, I no
longer need fear You or Your judgment. Today, I also ask for the ability
to forgive others as completely as I have been forgiven. Let me see
them, too, as being new. In Jesus I ask it. Amen.
Pastor Ken
Klaus
Lutheran Hour Ministries
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