Right or Healed?

Matthew 18's parable of the ungrateful servant ends with the words, "“This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother from your heart.” Jesus is speaking of being thrown into a torturer's den if having been forgiven, we do not forgive.

Don't we like to think of Jesus as meek and mild, sweet and kind? He is that, except when he's tough and sharp and setting boundaries against our self-destructive impulses. Unforgiveness, which is anger stored beyond it's expiration date, will make us sick. The resentment and bitterness rots us. Jesus is just telling us the truth–if we choose an attitude of unforgiveness, we will pay a price–a high price!

If we are in emotional turmoil, we do well to check our levels of anger/resentment/bitterness. These emotions, I'm convinced, are the torturer's den Jesus is describing. He wants to save us from ourselves when he warns us against unforgiveness. Satan whispers in our ear, "You're right, you should be furious."  Jesus stands on our other side, shouting, "Let me handle the injustice. You'll be free. Let it go!"

For some of us, though, the attraction to being right is literally stronger than our desire to be free. We would rather be right than healed. Yikes. What enormous power our choices wield.

Breakthrough4Wholeness

Next Sunday, November 9, at 6:30, a Prayer Service for Wholeness will be held at the Urbana Holiday Inn, just south of I-74, just off Lincoln avenue. Ten churches and organizations, across our usual denominational barriers, will join together to pray for healing of all kinds. If you're in the area, please come. We'll start with singing, hear three testimonies of healing, brief remarks about healing, and then we will pray for each other.

We held this meeting last year, with a palpable sense of the presence of God. We are expecting God to again honor what he has asked us to organize. To see more information and to see the sponsoring churches and organizations, go to our website.  

 "Ordinary people praying for ordinary people in the presence of an extraordinary God."

 

Baby Trust

No devotional this week, either. Grandboy and his mom are visiting and memoir manuscript is being proofed after publisher's edit.

I'm meditating on the trust of a four month old. As I imagine my "breathtakingly honest" (one of my first readers said) memoir parading in public, I'm trying to imitate my grandson's trust.

Jesus, once a baby yourself, teach us to trust you like a newborn.