Again,
you sense this same type of joy and love found in the words of tender forgiveness
spoken to the woman who washes Jesus’ feet with her hair. She was simply described in the story as a
sinner, but she acts with the deeply moving joy and gratitude of one of Jesus’
forgiven.
And,
then there is that sinner hanging on the cross with Jesus who refuses to join
in on the taunts thrown Jesus’ way.
Instead, he asks that Jesus remember a sinner like him, and Jesus
responds in the middle of this bloody scene with surprising words of joy;
“Today you will be with me in paradise.”
There
is so much joy to be found in forgiveness.
There is joy found in the amazing freedom of having the weight of your
sin lifted from your shoulders. But, maybe
even more important is the joy that Jesus shows in granting that
forgiveness. It is as if forgiveness was
the greatest gift that God could think up when considering all the gifts that a
heavenly parent could provide the world.
With
all that in mind, I am drawn to ask: since forgiveness brings so much joy to
the one who is given the forgiveness, and even more joy comes to the one who
grants the forgiveness, why is it so hard to do?
Why
is forgiveness so hard?
We
are not alone in our struggle. Just
previous to our gospel reading for today, Jesus let the disciples in on the
secret of why forgiveness is so powerful: because it does not end. Jesus teaches in Luke 17:4: “If the same person sins
against you seven times a day, and turns back to you seven times and says, ‘I
repent,’ you must forgive.”
Forgiveness is powerful because it is persistent.
God’s mercy is like a shepherd who leaves 99
sheep in order to find one that is lost, and then rejoices when that lost sheep
is found.
God’s mercy is like a woman who sweeps the
floor looking for a lost coin and throws a party when that coin is discovered!
Forgiveness does not give up. Forgiveness does not give in. Forgiveness does not allow anyone to say,
“This time around it is a lost cause.”
Forgiveness cannot be defeated by a grave. Forgiveness will go all the way to the cross
in order to save a world that rejects the notion of such amazing love.
But, maybe it is exactly the persistence of
love that makes it so incredibly hard. I
do not know about any of you, but when a two year old throws his dinner plate
on the floor fpr the seventh time that night, and I need to scrub the food out
of the carpeting for the seventh time in an hour (What house designer chooses
to put carpet in the dining room anyway?)…after the seventh time I feel like it
would be more effective to just say something like, “Fine! We’re done!
We can always eat again tomorrow!”
If it is that hard to forgive a two year old,
imagine how hard it is to forgive over and over again an adult who should know
better…who should have figured out by now how to put together some semblance of
a life that is decent. But, no, there
are plenty of adults who have not figured out life and they make the same
mistakes over and over and over again and need to ask for forgiveness over and
over and over again. The persistence
that forgiveness requires is hard.
“Increase our faith!” the disciples cry
out. “Give us more faith so that we can
do this!” “This is hard.” “This is discouraging!” “We need more faith!”
Would it not be nice if gaining faith was
like charging a super powerful battery that you could just plug in and charge
up fully so that you can be ready to accomplish the impossible once again? Would it not be nice if just coming to church
once a week were enough to get us going again with no problems or hitches? Heck, a once a month recharge would be even
better! Jesus, can we shoot for an
increase of faith that lasts for at least a month?
We walk around as if faith were something of
which you could have more of less. We
walk around as if faith were power packs that you can pick up along the journey
to keep the game going longer and make you stronger with some timely upgrades. Jesus thinks all of this talk is absolutely
ridiculous.
"If you had
faith the size of a mustard seed, you could say to this mulberry tree, "Be
uprooted and planted in the sea,' and it would obey you.” the Lord replied to
the disciples, and to us who think we need more faith…who think that faith is
something that can be quantified. How
much faith do you need to do the hard work of forgiving over and over and
over? About one point five millimeters
worth of faith is all you need (the size of the average mustard seed).
Maybe,
faith has nothing to do with having a certain amount of understanding, or
having a certain amount of spiritual strength. Maybe, faith is simply trusting that when
Jesus says forgiveness is immensely important to the salvation of the world and
that we should just do it, we will trust him and just do it.
This
does not mean that we necessarily agree that forgiveness will work. It does not mean that we will feel immensely forgiving
in the moment. It simply means that we
will forgive because Jesus said to; just like a slave serves dinner without
question; or an ice cream store employee gets the ice cream, not because they
like the person to whom they are serving the ice cream, but because it is their
job.
And
so, sisters and brothers in Christ, forgiveness is our job. As followers of Christ, we forgive because Christ
forgave us and because forgiveness is what followers of Christ do.
We
have seen this very thing in the news as the brother of a man who was
wrongfully murdered by a police officer, came up to the police officer after
her jail sentence was given, embraced the police officer, and told the police
officer that he forgives her for taking his brother away from him.
We
saw it when the family and friends of those who were murdered in a southern church
by a young man a few years back forgave the young man for such an incredible
act of evil.
Each
of these people trusted that forgiveness will save the world. Each of these people trusted that Jesus knows
what he is doing. Each of these people
had faith the size of a mustard seed.
It
is a faith that says, “We are worthless
slaves; we have done only what we ought to have done!" Forgive as you have been forgiven. Find the eternal joy that can be found in the
simple faith that is forgiveness.
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