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To Forgive and to be Forgiven

As you read and study what has bee written here, do not just blindly accept it.  Please check the Scriptures and ask the Holy Spirit to reveal to you His truth.  The Scriptures quoted are from the King James version with the words of Jesus in red.

What does it mean to forgive and to be forgiven?

According to the College Edition of Webster’s New World Dictionary of the American Language "forgive" is defined as:

Anger or resentment causes us to want to retaliate or punish someone or something. Usually the source of anger or resentment is a sense of having been offended or perhaps injured in some way. This sense of having been offended is most often because "we didn’t get our way." When "we don’t get our way" we are actually rebelling against some form of authority.

When we are forgiven, we will have been pardoned and no penalty will be assessed against us. The one who has forgiven us will have given up all resentment against us, and, is willing to overlook whatever fault that they thought we might have. An interesting point about the act of forgiving is we are not required to forget but only to stop being angry and desiring retaliation.

What does Scripture say about anger and resentment?

Our anger should not be allowed to cause us to sin nor should we carry it over to the next day.

We are to rest in the Lord, cease from anger, forsake wrath and not do evil. Our answer is to be soft, deferring anger and instead overlook the transgression. Bitterness, wrath, anger, and evil speaking are things we are not to engage in.

When we speak in anger we become foolish, stirring up strife. Being slow to anger, or to defer it with a soft answer, we will not cause strife to occur.

Seeking vengeance to soothe our anger is not to be done because God says He will settle the account. We also are not to overcome evil with evil but instead to use good to triumph over it.

Paul, tells us in chapter 5 of Galatians, verses 12 to 26, to love your neighbor as yourself; not to bite and devour each another. We are to be led of the Holy Spirit and not let the lust of the flesh rule. Paul goes on to itemize seventeen different things we are not to lust after and wrath is listed among them. He tells us these lusts of the flesh will keep us from inheriting the kingdom of God. Paul then lists nine fruits of the Spirit which we will exhibit as we allow the Holy Spirit to lead us.

What does Scripture say about forgiving and being forgiven?

There are 56 verses of The King James version of the Bible where the word forgive appears. Twenty-eight are in the Old Testament and twenty-eight in the New Testament. "Forgave" is used in one verse of the Old Testament and in six of the New Testament. The word forgiven appears 18 and 24 times, respectively in the Old and New Testaments. This is 104 times we are given some direction about forgiveness.

What is to be Forgiven, and by whom?

Only God can forgive sin as it is His righteousness that has been offended. He will forgive any sin one might commit except blasphemy of the Holy Spirit. Once you have repented, or turned away from, the sin it will be forgiven by God.

We cannot forgive sins committed against God. We are instructed however, to rebuke our brother who trespasses against us and to forgive him when he repents. To refuse to forgive, or to have ought against our brother, will prevent our being forgiven for our trespasses by the Father.

Who has been forgiven?

We, who have accepted Jesus Christ as our Saviour and are born again of the Spirit, are forgiven by God. Jesus was sent to earth to provide reconciliation for us with the Father. His death on the cross, burial and ascension to the right hand of the Father has purchased for us the adoption into the family of God. All our past sins have been blotted out and we are forgiven of ALL our trespasses.

Who are we to forgive, and why?

In Ephesians 4:32 we are told "be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you." Because God has forgiven us, we who are born again, are to forgive one another. We have not been given a choice in the matter but rather have been commanded by God to forgive.

Psalm 78, verse 35, describes for us the behavior we are to demonstrate towards those we feel have offended us.

Jesus tells us in Matthew 5:22-24 that when we are angry at our brother without cause, judgement may fall upon us. He goes on to command us to leave our gift at the altar, go and reconcile our self with our brother and then we may return to offer our gift. These commands leave us no option to continue to remain angry.

In Matthew 6, verses12, 14 and 15, Jesus teaches us about forgiving and forgiveness. If we do not forgive others their trespasses, our heavenly Father will not for give us our trespasses. When we refuse to forgive, we are placing ourselves in bondage.

When Peter asked if he was to forgive seven times, Jesus answered him saying "not seven, but seventy times seven." This would be four hundred and ninety times for the same trespass. This is far beyond the total number of times one individual would ever commit a single trespass against us. We must believe from this that we are to forgive every trespass against us. Jesus re-enforced this, in verses 34 and 35, where He tells us the heavenly Father will deliver us to the tormentors if we refuse to forgive from our hearts the one who trespasses against us.

As can be seen from verses 34 and 35 above, there is a consequence for not forgiving another. In fact, the act of not forgiving is rebellion against the Word of God.

Rebellion is Witchcraft

God, through Samuel the prophet, instructed King Saul to attack and utterly destroy the Amalekites for opposing the children of Israel when they first entered the Promised Land. King Saul was to destroy not only the men but all the women, children, babies and cattle - everything!

King Saul conquered the Amalekites but he failed to follow all of God’s instruction to him. He kept back the choicest livestock for himself and his men and also did not kill Agag, king of the Amalekites. God sent Samuel to rebuke Saul by saying "rebellion is as the sin of witchcraft and stubbornness is as iniquity and idolatry."

Paul, in his letter to the Galatians, asks the question "who has bewitched you?" He was chastising them for not obeying the truth which had been given. They had been walking in obedience to the Holy Spirit but then began to walk after the flesh. Paul explains the effects of walking after the lust of the flesh by describing the works of doing so. He continues by saying such fleshly works are the behaviors of unregenerate, fallen humanity. It is easy to conclude that rebellion is a work of the flesh because it is the rejection of God’s legitimate authority.

What are we to conclude from this?

Anger is not to be kept beyond the going down of the sun. When anger or wrath leads to the desire for retaliation it becomes sin. Revenge is the prerogative of God, not man. Anger and wrath are of the flesh and God has called us to walk according to the Spirit. Love, joy, peace, gentleness, longsuffering, goodness, faith, meekness and temperance are manifested when we are walking by the Spirit.

We are to forgive, as we have been forgiven by Jesus. This is not a suggestion, but rather a command of God. Failure to obey God is rebellion which, He declares to be witchcraft.

 

If you desire additional information you may contact me:  Bill

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