In this Scripture, the admonitions...
Illustration
In this Scripture, the admonitions all come to rest at the door of a recommendation to forgive one another. If we get that right, the rest falls in place.
Robert Schuller writes about it in Be Happy You Are Loved, "Resentments are like snow drifts, and forgiveness acts like the snowplow. Forgiveness, in the eyes of the non-Christian, is simply a matter of passive acquittal. But to the Christian, that's not it at all. Forgiveness is the snowplow, opening the road, removing the barrier, plowing through, or tunneling underneath, so that communication can be resumed and what people are trying to say can be heard again. We dialogue and interchange; we move back and forth. Whether it's between God and myself or a person and myself, forgiveness is a snowplow" (pages 209-210).
At the close of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln offered extremely lenient peace terms to the defeated Confederates. Some of his advisors said to him, "You are supposed to destroy your enemies." Lincoln replied, "That's exactly what I'm doing. Do I not destroy my enemies by forgiving them and making them my friends?"
- Barnhart
Robert Schuller writes about it in Be Happy You Are Loved, "Resentments are like snow drifts, and forgiveness acts like the snowplow. Forgiveness, in the eyes of the non-Christian, is simply a matter of passive acquittal. But to the Christian, that's not it at all. Forgiveness is the snowplow, opening the road, removing the barrier, plowing through, or tunneling underneath, so that communication can be resumed and what people are trying to say can be heard again. We dialogue and interchange; we move back and forth. Whether it's between God and myself or a person and myself, forgiveness is a snowplow" (pages 209-210).
At the close of the Civil War, Abraham Lincoln offered extremely lenient peace terms to the defeated Confederates. Some of his advisors said to him, "You are supposed to destroy your enemies." Lincoln replied, "That's exactly what I'm doing. Do I not destroy my enemies by forgiving them and making them my friends?"
- Barnhart
