Topic:UNFORGIVENESS & ITS RESTITUTION
Memorise: Whosoever
hateth his brother is a murderer: and ye know that no murderer hath eternal
life abiding in him. 1st John 3:15
Bible Text: 1st
John 2:9-11
Bible in one year: 2nd
Chronicles 30-31, John 2
As children of God, we must always be watchful of pitfalls capable of
nullifying all our efforts towards making Heaven. For example, God expects you
to make restitution when you have told a lie incriminating an innocent person.
In the same vain, if you have injured someone, you need to restitute. An
example of this can be found in Acts 16:33-34, where the jailor who had
contributed to the predicament of Paul and Silas took them to his house,
treated their injuries and gave them decent food. Have you injured someone
physically, emotionally or psychologically? Restitute your ways. In addition,
if someone offends you so hard that you promised never to forgive the fellow,
there is a need to forgive and release that individual so that you can make
Heaven at last. Anyone who hates his brother has stepped out of God’s light
into darkness and is seen as a murderer in the sight of God (1st
John 3:15). If you are in hatred, you are out of eternal life. Has anyone
offended you to the extent that you resolved not to forgive? You must change
that decision now if you do not want it to hinder your trip to Heaven. I once
hated a particular man very much, because of the way he maltreated my family
and I. But after I gave my life to Christ, I did not only forgive him, I also
went to tell him he was forgiven. It was not an easy thing for me to do, but by
the grace of God, I did it.
Is there un-forgiveness in your heart over some hurt or offence done to
you? If you love yourself, forgive today. Forgiveness must be communicated to
the one you have forgiven except it is done without sincerity. Some people say,
“I have forgiven my offender but I will not tell him so.” How will the fellow
you forgave know that he or she is forgiven? When a person is offended, it is
like being owed some kind of debt. It is when forgiveness is released that the
debt is paid. Refusing to forgive your offender sustains the debt, and we are
commanded not to owe any man anything but love (Romans 13:8). The irony of
un-forgiveness is that the one who refuses to forgive hurts himself or herself
the most. The offender may be going about with a free mind, but the offended
carries a heavy heart. Also, by begrudging the offender, the offended cannot
move beyond where he or she is. Un-forgiveness ties the offended to the same
spot. I hope you are not the one pegging your rise by not releasing your
offender?
Action Point:List
the names of people you hold a grudge against or who hold a grudge against you,
and prayerfully reconcile with them immediately.
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