Forgiveness is absolutely essential to any long-term relationship. The fact is, the longer you have been in a relationship, job, or church, the greater the chances that you have been hurt. Not because people are evil or because people intentionally tried to hurt you, but because we live in a fallen world. And in a fallen world, even people of good will who love God and care about each other will get cross-threaded from time to time.
The key to staying in that relationship, job or church is to forgive. I think there are three keys in play here:
1) Determine intent.
Realize the intent is usually not to hurt you. You have to offer the benefit of the doubt here. If the intent was to hurt you, you don’t want a relationship anyway.
2) Take responsibility.
Realize that you may be partially to blame in the process. I have noticed that people who are frustrated at me are people with whom I am frustrated.
3) Choose to forgive.
That is right. It is a choice, not a disposition. Forgiveness is often playing for the long game.
People who can’t renegotiate relationships after being hurt will miss the nearly infinite benefits reaped by both parties in a long-term relationship. If you have been in your marriage, friendship, job, or congregation for a long time, you have a significant investment in that relationship. You have built something significant together. Don’t let temporal disappointments rob you of infinitely greater long-term (or even eternal) joys.
What is the secret of successful long-term relationships?
Forgiveness.
Plain and simple.
If you'd like to hear more from Pastor Shane, our weekly services are online. They can be found HERE.
Thank you for sharing your pastor's wonderful message with us.
ReplyDeleteThat is great advice on forgiveness. Thanks for the party.
ReplyDeleteThank you for the link party and great message. Much needed in our world.
ReplyDeleteThis message is spot on, particularly the part about assuming good intentions. If you can't let go of the thought that the other person is trying to hurt you (whether that thought is substantiated or not), it's best to leave the relationship. I, as a non-Christian, personally don't believe that forgiveness is a requirement, but I do believe that in the sense of letting go, it is most helpful.
ReplyDeletePriceless advice heading into the holidays when every high hope for family time can get cross threaded so fast! Let's go in strong from the start!!
ReplyDeleteGreat advice on forgiveness. Thanks, Penny, and thank you for the linkup. Enjoy your day.
ReplyDeleteMy entries this week #30-32
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