If there is one thing I have never understood about grudge-holders, it is how they can think they have a monopoly on being hurt or injured. These are the folks that, though they profess forgiveness, and years later are acting kindly toward their victimsâat least in public--can at a momentâs notice give a laundry list of every bad deed that person has done to them. And they will, any time you want to hear it. In fact, they will happily do so before you even ask.
But somehow they think they are perfect. They have never done anything hurtful to anyone, and would be horrified if you started making your own laundry list against them! They must think that, or surely they would be more merciful, wouldnât they?
You see, grudge-holding is the worst kind of self-centeredness. It says, âMy hurts count more than yours.â It infers, âI have never done anything as bad as this to you.â And then it rationalizes, âWhat you did to me is so bad, it does not have to be forgiven.â
If you said that to a grudge-holder, he would be horrified, especially if he claimed to be a Christian. Unfortunately, that is another aspect of this sinâit keeps you from seeing yourself as you really are. We become so blinded by our âinjured innocenceâ that we cannot see the truth--no one is innocent; we all mess up once in awhile. It is bad when this sort of selfishness causes animosity between neighbors, sad when it causes rifts in families, and tragic when it causes a lack of unity in the family of God.
Jesus said I cannot be forgiven if I donât forgive. Forgiveness means I donât spread it around, I donât let fester in my mind, I donât bring it up again at any opportunity, ever. Forgiveness means I understand that I have done my fair share of hurts to others, whether intentional or not, and since I hope they will not hold them against me, I certainly wonât hold things against them. That is exactly what Peter meant when he said, Love covers a multitude of sins, 1 Peter 4:8. I think Peter uses that word âsinâ in an ironic way. We cannot cover real sins against God, and are not supposed to, but in our self-centeredness, we place what amounts to minimal slights in the same category as real sin. And Peter also makes it plain that no matter what I say about the matter, if I do not forgive and I show that lack of mercy by my constant grudge-holding, I do not love.
Forgiveness means having enough humility to recognize that no one has done to me anything remotely similar to what I have done to the Lord. Holding grudges means the oppositeâI have made my feelings just as important as Christâs, therefore I am just as important as He isâjust as important as God.
Didnât they used to stone people for that?
(The money figures in the following passage come from Lenskiâs commentary on Matthew. Any math errors are mine.)
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven like a certain king who made a reckoning of his servantsâŠOne was brought to him that owed him [about 60,000,000 daysâ pay]....The servant therefore fell down and said, Lord have patience with me and I will pay all. And the lord of that servant, being moved with compassion, released him and forgave him the debt. But the servant went out and found one of his fellow servants who owed him [about 100 daysâ pay]...and said, Pay what you oweâŠThen the Lord called unto him and said, You wicked servant, I forgave you all your debtâŠShould you not have had mercy on your fellow servant as I had mercy on you? And the lord was wroth and delivered him to the tormentorsâŠSo shall also my heavenly Father do unto you if you forgive not your brother from the heart. Matt 18:21-35
Dene Ward
But somehow they think they are perfect. They have never done anything hurtful to anyone, and would be horrified if you started making your own laundry list against them! They must think that, or surely they would be more merciful, wouldnât they?
You see, grudge-holding is the worst kind of self-centeredness. It says, âMy hurts count more than yours.â It infers, âI have never done anything as bad as this to you.â And then it rationalizes, âWhat you did to me is so bad, it does not have to be forgiven.â
If you said that to a grudge-holder, he would be horrified, especially if he claimed to be a Christian. Unfortunately, that is another aspect of this sinâit keeps you from seeing yourself as you really are. We become so blinded by our âinjured innocenceâ that we cannot see the truth--no one is innocent; we all mess up once in awhile. It is bad when this sort of selfishness causes animosity between neighbors, sad when it causes rifts in families, and tragic when it causes a lack of unity in the family of God.
Jesus said I cannot be forgiven if I donât forgive. Forgiveness means I donât spread it around, I donât let fester in my mind, I donât bring it up again at any opportunity, ever. Forgiveness means I understand that I have done my fair share of hurts to others, whether intentional or not, and since I hope they will not hold them against me, I certainly wonât hold things against them. That is exactly what Peter meant when he said, Love covers a multitude of sins, 1 Peter 4:8. I think Peter uses that word âsinâ in an ironic way. We cannot cover real sins against God, and are not supposed to, but in our self-centeredness, we place what amounts to minimal slights in the same category as real sin. And Peter also makes it plain that no matter what I say about the matter, if I do not forgive and I show that lack of mercy by my constant grudge-holding, I do not love.
Forgiveness means having enough humility to recognize that no one has done to me anything remotely similar to what I have done to the Lord. Holding grudges means the oppositeâI have made my feelings just as important as Christâs, therefore I am just as important as He isâjust as important as God.
Didnât they used to stone people for that?
(The money figures in the following passage come from Lenskiâs commentary on Matthew. Any math errors are mine.)
Therefore is the kingdom of heaven like a certain king who made a reckoning of his servantsâŠOne was brought to him that owed him [about 60,000,000 daysâ pay]....The servant therefore fell down and said, Lord have patience with me and I will pay all. And the lord of that servant, being moved with compassion, released him and forgave him the debt. But the servant went out and found one of his fellow servants who owed him [about 100 daysâ pay]...and said, Pay what you oweâŠThen the Lord called unto him and said, You wicked servant, I forgave you all your debtâŠShould you not have had mercy on your fellow servant as I had mercy on you? And the lord was wroth and delivered him to the tormentorsâŠSo shall also my heavenly Father do unto you if you forgive not your brother from the heart. Matt 18:21-35
Dene Ward