Forgiveness is Spring For the Soul

Spring is a season of new beginnings. If you were going to pray and work for a new beginning with people in your life, what would be key actions to take and attitudes to cultivate?

I’ve found that forgiveness is central to the season of spring in my relationships. I resist forgiveness though. I either don’t take it seriously enough, or I don’t want to admit that I did something wrong and need to make amends.

I’ve always appreciated Kierkegaard’s take on Christianity and forgiveness – he puts it in a way that startles me and even rattles me. He doesn’t let me settle with platitudes about living out my faith – he challenges me to re-examine my assumptions and habits.

Maybe he can do that for you too – even better, re-inspire us to keep learning how to forgive and love as Christ does for us, and the world.

“Christianity’s view is: forgiveness is forgiveness; your forgiveness is your forgiveness; your forgiveness of another is your own forgiveness; the forgiveness which you give, you receive, not contrariwise, that you give the forgiveness for which you receive.”

“It is as if Christianity would say: pray to God humbly and believing in your forgiveness for he really is compassionate in such a way as no human being is; but if you will test how it is with respect to the forgiveness, then observe yourself. If honestly before God you wholeheartedly forgive your enemy (but remember that if you do, God sees it), then you dare hope also for your forgiveness, for it is one and the same.”

“God forgives you neither more nor less nor otherwise than as you forgive your trespasses. It is only an illusion to imagine that one himself has forgiveness, although one is slack in forgiving others.”

“It is also conceit to believe in one’s own forgiveness when one will not forgive, for how in truth should one believe in forgiveness if his own life is a refutation of the existence of forgiveness!”

“For, Christianly understood, to love human beings is to love God and to love God is to love human beings; what you do unto men you do unto God, and therefore what you do unto men God does unto you.”

“If you are embittered towards men who do you wrong, you are really embittered towards God, for ultimately it is still God who permits wrong to be done to you. If, however, you gratefully take the wrongs from God’s hand ‘as a good and perfect gift,’ you do not become embittered towards men either.”

“If you will not forgive, you essentially want something else, you want to make God hard-hearted, that he should not forgive, either: how, then should this hard-hearted God forgive you? If you cannot bear the offenses of men against you, how should God be able to bear your sins against him?”

“If you have never been solitary, you have also never discovered that God exists. But if you have been truly solitary, then you also learned that everything you say to and do to other human beings God simply repeats; he repeats it with the intensification of infinity. The word of blessing or judgment which you express concerning someone else, God repeats; he says the same word about you, and this same word is blessing or judgment over you.”

“Such a person will certainly avoid speaking to God about the wrongs of others towards him, about the speck in his brother’s eye, for such a person will rather speak to God only about grace, lest this fateful word of justice lose everything for him through what he himself has called forth, the rigorous like-for-like.”

Soren Kierkegaard, Works of Love, p348-353

The Courage To Be Misunderstood

If you’re a leader, you’ll be misunderstood.

If you care about people, you’ll be misunderstood.

Even if you serve people well, you’ll still be misunderstood.

If you’re like me, it’s terribly frustrating to be misunderstood. I have a deep need to be liked, so I have to fight against the urge to please everyone with my decisions. Whether as a leader, a neighbor, or a family-man, the risk of being misunderstood is constant.

But rather than being afraid of being misunderstood, we ought to accept reality, and face it with courage. Sure, we ought to do our best to keep things in context while being truthful and wise in our explanations. But if it’s laced with fear, you’ll undermine the trust you need to overcome the misunderstanding.

It’s courage, not fear, that overcomes misunderstanding.

That’s what we see in Jesus, as told by Mark in the gospel. After feeding the five thousand, Jesus had sent his disciples across the lake in their fishing boat while he went up into the mountains to pray. Late that night, as they struggled against the wind, Jesus came out to them on the lake. They were terrified by Jesus – how can he walk on water and why does the wind stop when he shows up?

They still did not understand Jesus. But that didn’t stop Jesus from being with them, speaking into their life, and giving them courage.

Jesus risked being misunderstood by his own disciples even as he worked to train them for his mission. It took courage for Jesus to teach them, send them out to preach and heal, to live with them, and then still be misunderstood. Sometimes they were still afraid of him!

“Take courage! It is I. Don’t be afraid.”

If it was difficult for the disciples to understand Jesus in the first century, imagine the challenges we face in the 21st century. We are separated by two millenniums and six thousand miles. Jesus is still misunderstood in America, even (mostly?) by Christians. That includes me.

So when we see how patient and persistent (and sometimes exasperated) Jesus was with his disciples when he was misunderstood, we can imitate him in regard to those who misunderstand us.

All people have power. Some know it and use it to their advantage, often at the expense of others well-being. A lot of us don’t think too much about the power we have over others. Which means we may not appreciate how we make others afraid of us.

Our desire to be understood could be another attempt to control and exert power over others. We would be wise to pay attention to the power we have (even if we think it is impotent or misunderstood) and how we use it in regard to others.

Jesus used his power to heal, to welcome, to embody the love of God, and to proclaim the forgiveness of sins for those who would repent.

Jesus used his power to transform lives, to set people free from fear in order that they may live a life of courage and trust in the God of Israel. And the whole time he risked being misunderstood. By his family, by his friends, his his disciples, by the religious and political authorities, by his own mother.

As you sense God’s call on your life to serve him in this world, your “yes” to the Lord may result in misunderstanding.

Like all important decisions, the greater the stakes, the greater the risk of misunderstanding. But when Jesus is calling you to follow him, we can hear his words to his disciples in every generation, every nation, every storm: “Take courage! It is I. Don’t be afraid.”

What is Jesus calling you to do with your power?

What are the ways that Jesus has been appearing to you, inviting you to trust him with your life?

In what ways does Jesus make you afraid? What are you afraid of losing as you sense Jesus making himself real to you?

What kind of courage is Jesus calling you to exude as he invites you to join him in his work to heal the world for the flourishing of all?

Get Some Rest

“Thousands of tired, nerve-shaken, over-civilized people are beginning to find out that going to the mountains is going home; that wilderness is a necessity.” – John Muir (reknown Scottish-American naturalist)

This past summer my family vacationed in Shenandoah National Park, Virginia. It was a beautiful place to hike, with powerful waterfalls, rushing streams, towering trees and breathtaking vistas. Getting outdoors may not be for everyone, but for us it’s a priority. We don’t get out on the trails as much as we want, though. As we get older, I find it takes more intentionality.

How about for you? Where do you like to go when you’re over-worked, over-stimulated by work stress, needing a place of natural beauty instead of pre-fab decor? Do you head to the beach? The mountains? The back 40 behind the farm-fields? The wilderness? You have permission to get out there and get some rest!

Jesus repeatedly in the gospel takes time to get away and get some rest.

Mark tells the story of Jesus sending out his twelve apostles to travel to the villages of Galilee to proclaim the kingdom of God and heal all who are sick. The apostles come back to Jesus after their journey to report on all the amazing things that had happened. Surrounded by many thankful people, and those still wanting healed, Jesus told his starving friends, “Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.”

Is rest a gift to your rhythm of life, or is it a luxury? God gives us a whole day of rest each week, if we will take it. And he’s given us a stunningly amazing Creation to enjoy, if we will get out there.

Beaches and mountains are vital to restoration, but so can local areas for hikes, sitting around ponds, relaxing around a little campfire, breathing deeply in the fresh morning air of a sunrise. Getting to a quiet place to rest doesn’t have to be expensive or clog your busy schedule.

In the story that Mark tells, the attempt by Jesus to get away with his apostles gets thwarted. People from the villages come swarming to Jesus’ quiet place to be with him. As tired and hungry as he is, Jesus has compassion on them, “because they were like sheep without a shepherd.” Jesus welcomes them, he teaches them, feeds them, and then sends them home. He sends his disciples to the other side of the lake to rest, while he heads up the side of mountain to pray.

The plans we make to rest and enjoy stillness, to pray and soak up the quiet, don’t always come easily. We have to stay flexible, big-hearted, and committed.

But sometimes we don’t believe we need or deserve rest. Work has a way of wearing us down though, schedules have a way of carrying us along at a faster speed then our minds or bodies can keep up with. Rest is a way to press a necessary pause button, so our souls can catch up with our bodies.

I really like being in the woods. And I love a small fire by the lake at sunset. I enjoy landscaping on a sunny day. What’s better than a good book and steaming coffee on the back porch in the early morning?

What are the ways for you that you can creatively get away by yourself and get some rest? Keep it simple, keep it personal, keep it refreshing.

Jesus invites us to rest. It’s a way to be with him. It’s a way to be sustained by him in the work he has invited us to do with him. As followers of Jesus, what keeps us from resting like he rests?

If we’re following him, we have permission to make Sundays more restful, to insert more get-aways into our schedules. The work will always be there. So refresh your spirit, mind body with some rest, in a solitary place.

Hear the words of Jesus spoken to you: “Come with me by yourselves to a quiet place and get some rest.”

Need some ideas?

YMCA Camp Potawotami

 

YMCA Camp Crosley

 

Fort Wayne Trails

http://fwtrails.org/design/images/logo.png

 

Fort Wayne Parks

http://www.fortwayneparks.org/templates/cityoffortwayne/images/logo/dark/header3.jpg

 

Allen County Parks

http://allencountyparks.org/wp-content/uploads/2017/04/acplogonewjhutchins4-300x222.jpg

 

Indiana State Parks