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We continue in our One Another series today and we are going to land on the subject of forgiveness.
We’ve talked about forgiveness before, in fact, I’ve preached about forgiveness right here at Bristol in the Because You Asked series a few months ago.
A few months ago, we talked about what forgiveness is not, and what forgiveness is.
We talked about how forgiveness is not letting someone get away it.
Forgiveness is not forgetting.
Forgiveness is not automatic reconciliation.
And you can go back and listen to the rest of that message if you like.
Today, we are going to zero in on
how we are to forgive one another
why forgiveness is so critical that we are commanded to forgive one another.
And we are going to do that by looking at forgiveness in two ways:
Offering forgiveness
Receiving forgiveness
So let’s pray together as we come to God’s Word this morning.
Paul, in writing to the church at Colossae, is telling them, now that you are saved, put on the clothes of salvation.
Just like when we are born, the first thing that happens is we are cleaned off and put in a blanket.
Well, for the Christian, after we are born again, we are commanded to put on the clothes of salvation, and Paul illustrates those clothes in this text.
The Clothes of Salvation
Compassion - Tenderness for those who are suffering
Kindness - A disposition of graciousness
Humility - A posture of service and sacrifice toward one another
Meekness - Considering the rights and feelings of others
Patience - Self-restraint that enables one to withstand injury and insult without malicious retaliation
Next, Paul expands the clothing of patience by adding these attitudes and actions:
Bear with one another.
If we have to bear something, its usually not pleasant.
We can become impatient.
We often do.
Bearing each other’s burdens, bearing each other’s foolish choices, bearing each other’s hurts.
In other words, we are to put up with things that we dislike in others sometimes for the sake of the Gospel and for the sake of God’s children.
These are manifestations of the clothing of patience.
Forgive one another.
And then, Paul even gives a directive command as to how we are to forgive in that we are to forgive each other as Christ as forgiven us.
Doesn’t that sound familiar?
We read a few weeks ago that we are to love each other as Christ loved us, and now we read we are to forgive each other as Christ has forgiven us.
This is where we are going to camp out for this morning, but briefly, I want to give you the overview of the rest of the text that we read, and then we will come back to the command to forgive each other.
In verse 14, Paul illustrates the final piece of clothing, which is
love
Every virtue, or clothing, that Paul wrote are, at their utmost, a manifestation of love.
So this is why Paul says that love is the most important piece of clothing because without it, the other virtues do not happen.
As Paul continues in verses 15 and 16, Paul tells the church to
let the peace of God rule in their hearts
let the word of Christ dwell in you richly
There’s a whole lot that we can take away from these verses, but for today, we will simply see this:
If the peace of God rules in our hearts, and the word of Christ dwells richly in us, then what pours out of us will demonstrate God’s love for us, and our love for each other.
Now, let’s get back to forgiveness.
Offering Forgiveness
In the last message I preached here at Valley Bristol we talked about the things that keep us from offering forgiveness in the first place.
And the primary obstacle is a misunderstanding of what forgiveness is.
Again, we’ve covered that aspect before so I won’t spend too much time on that particular part today.
So let’s look at the chief commanding verse:
Forgive one another as the Lord has forgiven you.
What does that mean?
Forgiving as the Lord forgave us means that forgiveness is offered before an apology is heard.
Forgiveness needs to be our 2nd nature response for when we are hurt/betrayed.
Garden of Eden.
Letter to JD. (examples)
Forgiving as the Lord forgave us is acknowledging that God’s justice is better than ours.
If the price that Jesus paid on the cross for your sins was enough to accomplish salvation and life for you, why then isn’t it also enough for the person who wronged you?
How confusing it must be before a lost and dying world when they look at the church and see that God’s people are fighting amongst themselves, refusing to forgive, splitting up, and giving in.
You see, when we forgive as the Lord forgave us, we are demonstrating not only our love for others, but Christ’s love.
In fact, I would suggest that when we forgive, we demonstrate the love of Christ to and for other, and when we refuse to forgive, we demonstrate our love for others.
That is, our love apart from Christ.
Furthermore, we are acknowledging that Christ’s sacrifice really was enough, not just satisfy justice for our own sin, but for the sins of all those who believe in Jesus.
There’s a misunderstanding about forgiveness that says that forgiveness is “letting go.”
Doesn’t that sound sweet?
We are not randomly letting go, we are intentionally laying our hurt at the feet of Jesus and saying Lord, I don’t want to carry this anymore.
Your justice is enough.
I surrender my grudge to You so that I might experience Your Peace.
God’s justice brings God’s peace
Man’s justice brings only death
Just look out the window, and you’ll see this play out before your eyes.
And sadly, sometimes we don’t even have to look out the window because we can watch our own church families get swallowed up into a mess a bitterness and hatred.
Receiving Forgiveness
The command of offering forgiveness to your fellow believers (yes, to everyone, but in this context, we are talking about forgiveness among the same body of believers) assumes that such an offer will be received.
Moreover, the command also implies that the way to bring about peace among feuding believers is through forgiveness.
Which follows the nature of God perfectly, since the way to have peace with God is also through His forgiveness.
Nonetheless, the hardest thing about receiving forgiveness is this:
Pride
Pride
It is our pride that leads us to hide from the forgiveness of Jesus, and it is our pride that rejects the forgiveness being offered by others.
Think about it.
If we are offering forgiveness before an apology is heard, as God has demonstrated, then we are, at the same time we are offering forgiveness, pointing out a potential sin in the life of another person, and again, keeping ourselves from the sin of bitterness, resentment, and hatred of one another.
And who among us likes to get those kinds of progress reports?
No one likes to have their blind spots pointed out to them, especially if its something we may have done wrong, or something we have done that has been received incorrectly as well.
We all think we are basically fine and we all think that everybody always understands what we mean.
It is the offering of forgiveness that makes restoration possible, and it is the receiving of forgiveness that completes such a pursuit.
You know, if you look at the fruit of the Spirit in Galatians chapter 5, you’ll find that first on the list and chief among the fruits is love.
If you look back at , you’ll see that love is the most important piece of salvation clothing to put on because it leads to everything else.
In the Corinthians, we read that the greatest virtue is love, even though hope and faith remain.
And of course the greatest commandment is centered on our love for God and each other.
But you know what isn’t mentioned in lists and commands like those?
Pride.
Forgiveness is not expression of our pride, its an expression of God’s love.
We forgive because He forgave first, even all the way back to the Garden of Eden.
And so we are to forgive as Jesus has forgiven us.
I’d like to call the ushers forward at this time to distribute the communion elements.
Practical Apps
To forgive like the Lord I need to:
Let God bring His justice into the situation in His time
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