Monday, October 24, 2005

Forgiveness - Dan Windham

It is with great humility that I relate the following testimony of Christ's power in my life. I recently had a relationship that suffered terribly at the hands of my own selfishness. I had grown so callouse toward my friend that I was virtually incapable of reaching out in love. There were numerous occurrences during our friendship that put me in a position of scorn. I failed to recognize where my friend was coming from in several attempts to establish boundaries and consequently developed an attitude of self-righteousness that manifested itself in scorn and contempt for the flaws I perceived. Right or wrong, justified or not, there was no legitimate reason for me to begin turning away from my friend because I failed to empathize or show compassion. I lost sight of the plank in my own eye in an effort to assist my friend in the removal of a speck, as the scripture goes. The problem grew to a point where I began distancing myself from any possible interaction. What I failed to realize during this process is the terrible hurt I was inflicting on my friend in an effort to make myself feel better. It was a very unfortunate attempt at a trade-off. I lament the pain I caused and praise God for his forgiveness. I realize I am unworthy of it, but know that his grace is an unwarranted gift. I feel fortunate to be in a position to seek forgiveness because my friend is clearly more forgiving than I am. From this experience I learned that when I'm adamantly pursuing my own point of view and desperately trying to convince someone else of it, I should step away from the battle and make an effort to understand where my adversary is coming from. It was the pain I had caused my friend stemming from my own selfishness that started the battle in the first place. It was only after I had been accosted and attempted to defend my point of view that I realized I had caused the whole thing. I praise Jesus for his gift of discernment and for allowing a wretch like me to feel confident that he will be forgive. I am thankful for friends like these who, in the face of terrible injustice, can still understand and be forgiving as Christ forgave us.

Dan Windham

1 Comments:

Blogger Tonya said...

Thank you Dan for sharing. I think we can all learn from this experience you shared. Thanks for the post, let's continue to make this blog site an awesome way to glorify God and learn from each other through our expression of words. You are an incredible writer and I truly enjoy reading your work.

6:23 AM  

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