Archive for the 'Bible Studies for Life' Category
Sheltered in God’s Forgiveness
Have you ever been faced with the need to extend forgiveness but you didn’t really want to? Has the wound ever been so deep and the grief so painful it felt as though holding the grudge was actually a healing balm rather than the poison it is?
Forgiving Can Be Very Difficult
In some respects, forgiving others is the most difficult thing God commands of His children. It can be harder than giving offerings, and more challenging than awaiting an answer to prayer. Much sanctification is accomplished in the process of forgiveness. Forgiveness is as much about us as it is about the one who has offended us.
Jesus taught us in the Sermon on the Mount to forgive (Matthew 6:12), to forgive as often as we are offended (Luke 17:3-4), and that we should forgive those in our churches who sin (2 Corinthians 2:7). In fact, continuing to forgive is the norm of the Christian life (Ephesians 4:32).
Writing in Bible Studies for Life, Philip Nation addresses the difficulty we often face when we need to forgive. “Forgiveness is a gift that’s often hard to give. Why? Because it costs so much. The person doing the forgiving essentially forks over the whole payment; the main cost is letting go of the hurt and giving up the offense that was committed. Forgiveness means you walk away from the judge’s bench and stand united with the guilty party.”1
Forgiveness Involves Surrender
Forgiveness is not saying we were not really offended. Forgiveness is not saying the other person really didn’t do anything wrong. Forgiveness is not saying, “It didn’t really matter.” Forgiveness is willfully surrendering the punishment for the offense to God, who judges all things rightly. It is an admission that our offenses toward God are worse than another person’s offenses toward us.
The Bible ties our need to forgive with our having been forgiven by God. In other words, the basis of our forgiving those who sin against us is that God has forgiven our offenses toward Him.
God’s Forgiveness Shelters Us
The forgiveness of God is a shelter for our lives. The psalmist wrote these words of great hope and encouragement, “Then I acknowledged my sin to You and did not conceal my iniquity. I said, ‘I will confess my transgressions to the Lord,’ and You took away the guilt of my sin…You are my hiding place; You protect me from trouble. You surround me with joyful shouts of deliverance” (Ps. 32:5, 7, HCSB).
We gain nothing when we run from God after sinning. Our best hope is to run toward God and seek His forgiveness. He alone provides shelter in forgiveness. He alone can cleanse and restore us. He alone can protect us from the vile, destructive side effects of bitterness and nursing a grudge.
Seeking God’s forgiveness brings us before Him in reconciliation and restoration. Fellowship is restored instead of broken. Fellowship replaces loneliness, assurance replaces doubt, and guilt is washed away in the glorious joy of the love of God.
Yours for the Great Commission,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church General Editor, Bible Studies for Life President, Southern Baptist Convention
References
Sheltered in God’s Salvation
Have you ever been caught walking in a rainstorm without an umbrella? Do we not all begin looking for big trees, doorways, or awnings to stand under to avoid being drenched? I could have used that this past week as I attended our University of Arkansas Razorback football game on a cold and rainy afternoon.
Have you ever been in a tornado or hurricane when finding shelter was a top priority? Far more deadly than a rainstorm, the power in these weather events means we need real shelter: concrete, solid barriers, steel doors, safety.
We need something to overcome the elements of our physical world.
God is our shelter
Scripture portrays God Himself as a shelter to us. Psalm 27:1-2 states, “The Lord is my light and my salvation–whom should I fear? The Lord is the stronghold of my life–of whom should I be afraid?” In another Psalm we read, “I call to You from the ends of the earth when my heart is without strength. Lead me to a rock that is high above me, for You have been a refuge for me, a strong tower in the face of the enemy.”1
In Bible Studies for Life, Philip Nation addresses the reality of God being our shelter: “The reason we can trust this light–this salvation, this stronghold–is because it comes to us not as a thing, but as a Person.”2 A personal shelter means personal interaction and personal response. God is not cold as stone or silent as steel; He knows our needs and covers us with Himself.
The Psalmist asks, “Whom shall I fear?” and “Of whom shall I be afraid?” The answer to these rhetorical questions is “no one.” God is greater and more powerful than any storm we shall ever face. It is He Himself who shelters us. Every storm of life is subject to His ultimate authority.
Satan cannot overpower our shelter
There is no upheaval Satan can cause that can overpower the shelter God provides, because “the One who is in you is greater than the one who is in the world.”3 No calamity of life can separate us from the God who is for us (Romans 8:31-39). No temptation is strong enough to wrestle us from the faithful power of God (1 Corinthians 10:13). No one is able to snatch us out of His hand (John 10:28-30).
God does not need to build a shelter for us; He is a shelter for us.
We deal with all kinds of adversaries
“We deal with adversaries…pretty similar to the ones [King] David faced. Financial problems, family stress, cultural craziness, and even wars around the world all plague us at one time or another. But just like David, we can gain confidence from our salvation, knowing that the enemies in our lives cannot overcome the victory God brings to us.”4
God is greater than all of our adversaries. Since He is for us, who can be against us?
Yours for the Great Commission,
Ronnie W. Floyd
Senior Pastor, Cross Church General Editor, Bible Studies for Life President, Southern Baptist Convention1– Psalm 61:2-3 (all scripture HSCB)
2– Bible Studies for Life, Storm Shelter, by Philip Nation
3– 1 John 4:4b
4– Bible Studies for Life, Storm Shelter, by Philip Nation