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What is the Christian’s Central Message? Forgiveness!

by | Nov 21, 2015 | Forgiveness

Acts 26:17-18 “I am sending you to them to open their eyes and turn them from darkness to light, and from the power of Satan to God, so that they may receive forgiveness of sins and a place among those who are sanctified by faith in me.”

Here is a true testimony of what forgiveness does in people’s lives:

Writer Norman Cousins said that life is an adventure in forgiveness. I think Fr. Lawrence Martin Jenco would agree.

In 1984, Fr. Jenco traveled to Beirut, dedicated to help the poorest of the poor. On January 8, 1985, he was kidnapped by Shiite Muslim extremists and held hostage for 564 days. He endured imprisonment, beatings, illness and heartbreaking periods of sorrow and loneliness. Several years after his release, he wrote a book (BOUND TO FORGIVE, Ave Maria Press, 1995) about his experiences in captivity and, more importantly, about the power of love and forgiveness.

Fr. Jenco tells about being taped like a mummy from his ankles to the top of his head each time he was transported from one place to another. He described being forced to breathe only from his nose as his mouth was stuffed with a cloth and taped shut.

He tells of times when his captors said they were going to kill him and he waited for the bullet to go through his head. Other times he was dressed up and told he was going home, only to have his spirits dashed when he was later informed they were just kidding.

He remembers being chained hand and foot, donning a plastic bag on his head, and left in a two-foot by six-foot closet. And he remembers his stench when he was denied washing for over four months.

He was later asked what lesson those of us who haven’t been in such a position can learn from his experience and apply to our daily living. He said, “Just look at the madness that goes on in the world today. We lug our hates and our bigotry and prejudices from generation to generation and we pass [them] on…. We [must] stop and look at each other and say, ‘I am so sorry for the hurt I caused you. I ask your forgiveness.’ And then [we must] extend forgiveness and…receive forgiveness. Somewhere along the line we are going to have to do that. We’re all bound to forgive.”

Fr. Jenco has forgiven and can attest to the power of forgiveness. And though our hurt may not be the same as his, it is no less real. We, too, are “bound” to forgive. For when we covenant with life to earnestly forgive whatever hurts come our way, we see amazing results. We find inner peace and, often, improved physical health as well. As Dr. O. A. Battista says, “One of the most lasting pleasures you can experience is the feeling that comes over you when you genuinely forgive an enemy — whether he knows it or not.”

Genuine forgiveness is crucial if we are to be at peace. Whether or not it restores a broken relationship, it sets our own hearts free. Those who will be bound by the promise to sincerely forgive, will be freed from the bonds of the past. Bound by love, they are bound…to be happy.

© 2001 Steve Goodier lifesupport-subscribe@topica.com

I have met (via online) a husband and wife from British Columbia who were our subscribers. Two years ago they traveled all the way from BC to Ontario (Vineland to be precise) with one goal: to meet the man who killed the wife’s mother because of drunk driving. Why would anyone want to meet the one who killed a beloved one? Is it for revenge? Is it to insult him? Is it to belittle him? No, none of the above. They came to meet him in order to forgive him for what he had done. Yes, he had hurt them deeply, but Jesus’ love reigns in their heart and they wanted to share this with him. This is what true Christianity does to people: they are able to forgive! Hallelujah!

In His love,

Rob Chaffart

Answers2Prayer Ministries, www.Answers2Prayer.org

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