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Are You on Speaking Terms With God?
How to experience His forgiveness more fully
© 1998 by Paul Thigpen
When Wycliffe Bible translator Bob Russell sought a word for "forgiveness"
in the language of the Amahuacas of eastern Peru, he discovered
their unique way of asking one another for pardon. In that culture,
if an offender wants to be reconciled with someone he's offended,
he says to him, "Speak to me."
As Russell's native language assistant explained the idiom, people
who are unreconciled typically refuse to speak to each other. So
when the offender asks the offended to speak, it's the equivalent
of saying, "Show me we're friends again by being on speaking
terms once more."
The many biblical terms translated in English as "forgive"
reflect a beautiful array of meanings: to cancel debts; to lay aside
or to cast away sins; to spare, to cleanse, to rescue or to free
the sinner. Yet the Amahuaca expression strikingly translates what
is the most important biblical meaning of God's forgiveness -- above
all, it's a reconciliation, the restoration of a friendship with
Him that has been marred by sin.
The prophet Isaiah put it this way: "Your iniquities have separated
you from God; your sins have hidden His face from you, so that He
will not hear" (Is 59:2). Our wickedness is an offense to God's
holiness, and we aren't on "speaking terms" until the
offense is forgiven. But Christ's sacrifice has made a way for us
to be reconciled:
For [God] has rescued us from the dominion of darkness and brought
us into the kingdom of the Son He loves, in whom we have redemption,
the forgiveness of sins
.Once you were alienated from God
and were enemies in your minds because of your evil behavior.
But now He has reconciled you by Christ's physical body through
death to present you holy in His sight, without blemish and free
from accusation
(1:13, 21-22)
The sins that came between God and us can be cast aside so that
we can be friends again.
All other meanings of the word "forgiveness" must be seen
in the light of this one. As the various biblical terms imply, our
debts have indeed been remitted, our punishment has been averted,
our hearts have been cleansed and set free, our lives have been
spared-and all with a single purpose in mind: that we might receive
the greatest gift of all, to be once again "on speaking terms"
with our Father in heaven.
Like the prodigal son in Jesus' parable, we're relieved to be swapping
our smelly rags for a silken robe and our pigs' pods for a fat-calf
feast (see Lk 15:11-31). But what could possibly match the thrill
of seeing our Father -- the One whose heart we broke with our sin
-- running toward us with open arms? All the rest is simply tool
or token of that one great act: He has welcomed us home again!
Friendship Takes Two
If God has gone to such great lengths to reconcile us, why do we
sometimes fail to experience His marvelous forgiveness? Instead
of returning to our Father as the prodigal son did, why do we so
often wallow with the pigs so far away from home?
Once we recognize that forgiveness is above all the restoration
of a friendship, we begin to see the answer to these questions.
It's not that God's grace isn't great enough, or that some sins
provoke Him so mightily that He refuses to forgive. It's simply
that God's offer of forgiveness is essentially an offer of friendship.
Since friendship isn't a unilateral act -- it takes two -- then
our response is critical.
Those who have accepted God's great offer of reconciliation through
Christ may sometimes fail to experience His forgiveness in concrete
situations because certain attitudes or behaviors are somehow marring
their relationship with Him. The "peace with God" that
the Scripture tells us comes with reconciliation (see Rom 5:1) may
be disturbed. The freedom from the past and from the rule of sin
that God's forgiveness makes possible (see John 8:34-36) may not
be fully realized. The joy of being forgiven may be clouded (see
Psalm 51).
I once had a close friend in college who always seemed to be short
of cash. One day he asked me for a small loan. As he well knew,
I didn't have much money to spare myself, but I made the loan on
the condition that he pay it back by a certain date when I needed
it myself to pay a bill.
That date came and went, and the loan remained unpaid. At first
I was upset, of course, because I had to scramble to pay my bill.
But I was well aware of his situation, so I let go of my anger and
determined just to cancel the debt for the sake of our friendship.
Yet there was a problem: Because my friend knew he was guilty of
breaking his promise and causing me hardship, he started avoiding
me. He no longer dropped by my dorm room and never answered my phone
calls. He began eating in a different college dining hall so he
wouldn't run into me.
In short, he lived every day under a cloud of shame that ruined
our friendship. And his failure to come to me and talk about his
offense denied me the chance to say, "I forgive your debt."
Opening Ourselves to Forgiveness
In a similar way, experiencing divine forgiveness and its proper
fruit depends in part on our right response to God. The Scripture
reveals several particular responses that help us open ourselves
to receive God's forgiveness in its fullness. Consider these:
Confess your sin. The scriptural promise of forgiveness for our
daily failures includes an important condition: "If we confess
our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive our sins and
purify us from all unrighteousness" (1 Jn 1:9, emphasis added).
King David tells us how his own failure to admit his sin blocked
his reception of God's forgiveness:
When I kept silent,
my bones wasted away
through my groaning all day long
.
Then I acknowledged my sin to you
and did not cover up my iniquity.
I said, "I will confess my transgressions to the Lord"
--
and You forgave the guilt of my sin (Psalm 32:3, 5).
Failure to admit his wrongdoing turned David away from God and
led to a loss of peace and joy.
In a sense, our refusal to confess our sins to God is a refusal
to be "on speaking terms" with Him. If we would be reconciled,
then we must admit to the sins that are damaging our friendship
with Him.
Practice humility. We can't ask God to forgive our
sin, and we can't accept His forgiveness for it, when our pride
keeps us from even recognizing that we've sinned. Our Lord's parable
of the Pharisee and the tax collector vividly demonstrates this
obstacle to forgiveness (see Lk 18:9-14).
The tax collector was painfully aware of his failings, beating his
breast and crying out, "God, have mercy on me, a sinner!"
(v. 13). The Pharisee, on the other hand, was self-righteous, "praying
to himself" (v. 11) and patting himself on the back for all
his good deeds. Yet despite all the Pharisee's religious accomplishments,
His relationship with God was flawed by pride, and pride is blind
to its own evil. Not surprisingly, then, Jesus tells us that the
humble tax collector went home forgiven, but the proud Pharisee
did not.
Fight against habits of sin. Like the conscience blinded
by pride, the conscience blinded by habitual sin is unable to recognize
its need for grace. Perhaps the most startling scriptural example
of a hardened conscience is the mocking thief crucified next to
Jesus, whose cruel and blasphemous attitude suggests that his heart
had been calloused by his crimes (see Lk 23:39). His scorn of Jesus'
sacrifice and his lack of any remorse stand in stark contrast to
the humble plea of the other thief, who rebuked the impenitent criminal
for failing to see that they both deserved their punishment (see
vv. 40-43).
The same gift of grace appeared to both men; the same possibility
of forgiveness was offered to both. One, through a seared conscience,
refused grace and was lost forever. The other, though equally a
sinner, accepted grace -- and gained paradise with the Lord.
We may not refuse God's grace altogether as the one thief did. But
if we persevere in a particular kind of sin until it no longer disturbs
us, we may become like those whom Paul described as having "consciences
seared as with a hot iron" (1 Tim 4:2). Our friendship
with God will be damaged by the sin we no longer recognize.
Recognize the seriousness of sin. Even when we must
admit to ourselves that some aspect of our attitude or behavior
is sinful, we may nevertheless convince ourselves that the sin is
of little consequence. Yet only when we recognize the true seriousness
of even "small" sins are we able to experience fully God's
forgiveness of them.
Remember the "woman who had lived a sinful life" but who
came to Jesus while he was the guest of Simon the Pharisee (see
Lk 7:36-50). She wet the Lord's feet with her tears, wiped them
with her hair, kissed them and poured costly perfume on them. When
this scandalized Simon, Jesus observed that her extravagant behavior
reflected her own keen awareness of the seriousness of her sin:
She was able to love Him deeply, to enjoy an intimate fellowship
with Him, because she knew how great was the debt she had been forgiven.
In contrast, Jesus pointed out, Simon himself had received Him rather
coldly. The Lord compared the Pharisee to a man who "loves
little" because he "has been forgiven little," and
self-righteous Simon probably took that to mean that he didn't have
any serious sin to be forgiven. But knowing Jesus' explicit and
repeated condemnations of Pharisaical pride and hypocrisy, we might
more reasonably conclude that Simon's problem wasn't that his sin
was insignificant. He had simply failed to recognize just how serious
it was, and thus he had failed to accept forgiveness for it.
Recognize grace as a costly treasure. God's grace
is free, but it isn't cheap: It cost Him the most precious life
of His Son. If we fail to recognize the steep price that was paid
to reconcile us to God -- if we view forgiveness as cheap -- then
we'll place little value on our restored friendship with God, and
we'll be more likely to persevere in sin.
The writer to the Hebrews recognized the seriousness of this problem.
He warned that those who "deliberately keep on sinning"
(10:26) have actually devalued and despised God's gift of forgiveness
in Christ. Such a person "has trampled the Son of God under
foot
has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant
that sanctified him
has insulted the Spirit of grace"
(v. 29). When we persist in sin with the idea "No problem --
God will forgive me," we lose all sense of the treasure that
is God's grace, and we reject the freedom from sin that it's intended
to bring. Is it any wonder in such a case that our experience of
forgiveness will be empty?
Cultivate faith in God's goodness and mercy. Our Lord's
parable of the talents (see Mt 25:14-30) reveals the sad irony of
those who mistrust God because they doubt the goodness of His character.
Though they receive the same gifts of grace that others receive,
they're unable to profit from such gifts -- they bury them -- because
they're paralyzed by fear.
To experience fully the grace of our reconciliation with God-to
know the power of His forgiveness-we "must believe
that
He rewards those who earnestly seek Him" (Heb 11:6). If we
doubt that God is willing to forgive us, we won't be motivated to
seek His forgiveness. So we must plant firmly in our hearts the
scriptural promises of divine mercy, meditating on them and using
them in prayer as the psalmist did: "You are kind and forgiving,
O Lord, abounding in love to all who call to You" (Ps 86:5).
Realize that no sin is greater than Christ's sacrifice.
Sometimes we fail to experience God's forgiveness because we're
tempted to conclude that our sin is so great, or so tenacious, or
so shameful, that God can't possibly forgive it. But this conclusion
is simply a failure to appreciate the magnitude of what God has
done to reconcile us to Himself. Think of the infinite value of
Christ's atoning death. Could our sin possibly be greater than His
sacrifice?
Judas apparently made this deadly mistake. After his betrayal of
Jesus, he "was seized with remorse and returned the thirty
silver coins to the chief priests and the elders. 'I have sinned,'
he said, 'for I have betrayed innocent blood" (Mt 27:3-4).
Judas thus admitted his guilt; neither pride nor a seared conscience
kept him from recognizing it. But instead of seeking forgiveness,
he despaired of God's grace. So "he went away and hanged himself"
(v. 5), closing the door to reconciliation with God that remained
open to the other apostles despite their abandonment of their Master.
Forgive others quickly and completely. Finally, we
must note that Jesus was quite explicit about the consequences of
holding a grudge. After teaching His disciples what has come to
be called the Lord's Prayer, He added a sobering comment: "But
if you do not forgive men their sins, your Father will not forgive
your sins" (Mt 6:15). Then, as if to underline the point, He
later told the frightening parable of the servant who was denied
mercy because he himself was unmerciful (see Mt 18:21-35).
The lesson is clear: Bitterness damages our relationship with God
and blocks our experience of His forgiveness. What we refuse to
grant others, we reject for ourselves. For that reason, we must
obey the scriptural command: "Forgive as the Lord forgave you"
(Col. 3:13).
"On Speaking Terms"
Is God's forgiveness available to all? Is it a free gift? Is it
greater than the greatest of our sins? Is He always willing to forgive?
Yes on every count. But our experience of His forgiveness depends
in part on our right response to His grace.
Once again, I think of my cash-short college friend. Though he hid
from me for months, the story actually had a happy ending. One night
we ended up at the same party thrown by a common acquaintance. When
he walked into the room, his eyes met mine, and he knew what he
had to do. He took me aside to ask my forgiveness. I told him the
debt had been canceled long ago, and asked him, with a hug, what
had taken him so long to find out.
We were "on speaking terms" again.
The parallel should be clear. To know the breadth and depth of God's
mercy, we must strive, in all the ways we've noted, to let no sins
or doubts remain between us, causing a separation. Only then can
we enjoy the fullness of a restored friendship with the Father who
never tires of running to meet us with arms open wide.
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