For
some people, principles and factual teaching is the best way. For others,
hearing the teaching in the form of a story is a better way. If you
are in the latter group, this page seeks to explain the things covered
in the following pages and summarised in the Prologue in story form.
We hope you will find it useful. (If you would find it helpful, please
feel free to cut and paste or simply copy it, to you computer for use
off-line.)
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Introduction
Alan,
when he was a child, had a problem. His Mum had been an alcoholic and
as such she was often not in control of herself and wasn't able to care
for the kids. And there was more. It wasn't until after Alan had left
home and gone to college that Mum had sought help and gone on a programme
that had enabled her to be drink free since. At age twenty, while at
college, Alan became a Christian. Life progressed well for him; he married
and had two children. He had a good job and couldn't ask for much more,
except there was still a nagging doubt in the back of his mind as to
whether he was good enough. When he talked with a counsellor friend,
they gently pointed out that he always seemed to need to get everything
just right. He was, in other words, a perfectionist, and as he and his
friend talked it through, he realised that because of his Mum's state
when he was a child, he had never seemed to be able to please her, despite
however hard he tried. Mum's alcoholic haze had made her temper tantrums
worse and Alan had often come out of it, the worse for wear.
Mum
now lived over a hundred miles away from where Alan and his little family
lived and so contact over recent years had been very infrequent. Now
Alan was beginning to face up to his beatings and the demands on him
as a child, which he had up until then accepted as normal. He began
realise that he deeply resented his Mum and the years of uncertainty
and anguish through childhood. As he talked it through with his friend,
he realised that his feelings went a lot deeper than he had realised
and hostility towards Mum was an understatement. Gradually his friend
led him to thinking about forgiveness. “Why should I forgive her,” Alan
demanded, “she was in the wrong! I am the injured one! I'm a mess because
of her!”
“Yes,
but we still have to forgive,” his friend gently insisted. “Aren't you
a Christian? Isn't forgiveness a Christian virtue?”
“Yes,
I suppose so,” Alan grudgingly conceded. “But it seems so unjust!”
“You'll
have to talk to her,” the friend pressed on.
“Homecoming”
: Alternative No.1
Thus
it was a couple of weeks later that Alan drove up country and knocked
on his Mum's front door. He had rung to warn her he was coming. After
about half an hour, over a cup of tea, Alan eventually plucked up enough
courage and blurted out, “Mum I want you to know I forgive you!”
His
mother looked rather startled, and responded not very graciously, “Really
dear, what for?”
“For
the years you beat me and went on at me!”
“Don't
be silly dear, you deserved it!”
Alan
didn't really know where to go with that. “Well I forgive you anyway.”
“Well
that's nice dear, now let's hear no more of it, shall we.”
Which
is why a couple of hours later Alan found himself driving home wondering
what had been the point of the journey. When he told his counsellor
friend he said, “Well it doesn't matter how she responded. The important
thing is that you forgave her.”
“Right,”
said Alan who still felt very dissatisfied by the whole affair.
……………………………………………………………………………………………………………….
“Homecoming”
: Alternative No.2
A
little while later, Alan happened to mention it to Brian, his pastor
at church.
“How
do you feel about it?” Brian enquired.
“Well
I suppose I should forgive her, but if I'm really honest Brian, I still
feel it's really unjust that she hurt me all those years and I've got
to pluck up courage and broach the whole thing with her,” Alan replied.
“She ought to be coming to me to say sorry.”
Brian
grinned. “That's right, but unfortunately people often aren't very good
at facing up to their failures and sometimes need a little help along
the way.”
Alan
wasn't very sure he liked the sound of that. “Can't I just say I forgive
her and leave it at that?”
“How
do you think you'll feel if you say that?” Brian asked gently.
“Well
I'll have done what the Bible tells me to do, I suppose, but I'm not
sure it will change much. I still have all these feelings about her
and saying the words doesn't seem to take away the injustice of it all.
She ought to be punished for what she did to me. Yes, that's what I
really feel, I suppose, if I'm honest,” he added lamely.
Brian
looked serious. “Hmmm. That would be justice wouldn't it. Have you received
justice at Jesus' hands?”
Alan
laughed to break into the serious way the conversation had been going.
“No, of course not. I've heard you preach enough times to know I've
received grace, not justice. It I'd received justice God would have
judged me and that would have been seriously bad.”
“OK,”
said Brian, “so when did God forgive you?”
Alan
looked blank.
“No,
come on,” Brian prodded, “when did God's forgiveness get to you?”
“Well
I suppose it was when I repented and said sorry when I first came to
him?” Alan suggested.
“That's
right,” Brian continued, “in fact I think you'll find that throughout
the Bible no one gets forgiven until they said sorry. Forgiveness always
follows repentance.”
“But
what about Jesus telling Peter to forgive seventy times seven times,”
Alan questioned.
Brian
opened his Bible and read, "Then Peter came to Jesus and asked,
"Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother when he sins against
me? Up to seven times?" Jesus answered, "I tell you, not seven
times, but seventy-seven times." That's in Matthew's Gospel.”
[Mt 18:21,22]
“Well
that seems straight forward,” Alan broke in. “We've just got to forgive.”
“Hold
on,” Brian came back. “Don't pick on odd verses. Put that alongside
Luke on the subject and we find…” he paused as he turned pages, "If
your brother sins, rebuke him, and if he repents,
forgive him. If he sins against you seven times in a day, and
seven times comes back to you and says, `I repent,' forgive him."
[Lk 17:3,4] You've got to take the whole picture presented to
us by Scripture. If one Gospel gives a shortened version of Jesus teaching,
look at another Gospel if it gives a fuller teaching. Matthew's is a
summary of the back end of the story.”
“What
do you mean?” Alan looked confused.
“Well
Luke gives us the fuller picture. There were four stages: first sin,
second rebuke, third repentance and fourth, forgiveness.”
“Yes,
and that kept happening,” Alan added.
“That's
right, and the primary point Jesus is making is that however many times
someone comes back and says sorry, we've got to forgive them. God didn't
withhold forgiveness from us when we said sorry, so we mustn't withhold
forgiveness from others when they say sorry.”
“But
my Mum hasn't said sorry!” Alan put in rather strongly.
Brian
acknowledged the strength of Alan's feelings with a grin. “No, that's
why we need to look at the rest of Luke's verses that I read. If we
have to wait for repentance before we forgive, then our role is to confront
our offender to help them come to repentance.”
“Fat
chance of that happening!” Alan retorted.
There
was a pause.
Eventually
Brian spoke. “What would it need for your Mum to come to repentance
through you confronting her with the past?”
“God
to seriously be on the move!” Alan responded quickly.
Brian
grinned. “Right, but what part do we play in this?”
“What
do you mean?” came the reply.
“Well
in the Bible God calls us co-workers with Him, which means that, yes
He will move, but so often He wants us to be involved in it as well.”
“Right…”
came Alan's hesitant response.
“So
what does God want from you, do you think,” Brian pressed on.
“Me
to forgive her?”
“No, you can't do that until she has repented. It's like forgiveness
is a legal declaration in the sight of heaven, that let's her off the
hook, and you can't do that until she has acknowledged it and said sorry.”
“OK,
but I'm not sure what is expected of me then.”
“How
do you feel about her?” Brian asked.
“Angry!”
Alan shot back.
“Hmmm…
can I give you a verse to ponder over?” Brian said as he turned the
pages of his Bible. “Here it is: Love your enemies and pray for
those who persecute you . What do you think that's all about?”
“Sounds
like it's about the impossible, if you ask me,” Alan came back.
“Would
Jesus say it if it's impossible? Would he instruct us to do something
he knows we can't do?”
“…Er,no…”
Alan looked perplexed.
“So
what does it need to be able to do that as a Christian, do you think?”
“A
lot of grace, I guess.”
“Is
God's grace sufficient? Brian asked.
“Trick
question!” Alan grinned, “I remember you preaching on it two weeks ago.
God said to Paul, ‘My grace is sufficient.' I remember it, somewhere
in 2 Corinthians 12 isn't it?”
“Excellent,
that's right.” Brian grinned back. “So what have you just said to me?”
“Oh
blow! That I need God's grace to love Mum and pray for her, and it's
there for me.”
“Good
man!” Brian exclaimed enthusiastically. “What do you think God wants
for you?”
“Oh,
come on! This is a test on your past sermons! His best!”
“Does
He want the best for your Mum?”
Alan
paused and said quietly, “Yes.”
“And
what do you think the best is for her?” Alan pressed on.
“That
she's able to say sorry, receive my forgiveness and for us to be reconciled?”
Alan tentatively suggested.
“Wow,
it gets better every minute!” Brian now had a broad smile on his face.
“Let's push on with this. If you approached your Mum and angrily confronted
her with her past, how do you think she'd respond?”
“Defensively,
with anger, and she'd probably reject everything I was saying. All right,
I get the message. I've got to get my heart right about her before I
go to her otherwise I'm not doing my best to ensure she comes through
to get the best for her. Yes, all right!!”
“Yes,
that getting your heart right with God's help so you can genuinely want
the best for her is what many Christians call forgiveness, but it's
not. It's simply you getting your heart straight as Jesus wants it to
be, and that's a big enough hurdle to get over, before we think of anything
else! Forgiveness is what comes after you go to her and, using God's
grace, help her to face up to the truth of what she did to you, so she
can say sorry. Once that happens you have the privilege of being heaven's
representative to be able to declare forgiveness.”
“Wow,
that's awesome. Can we pray together about this please?”
The
two men prayed together.
Several
weeks later the two men were both involved in a strategy in which they
hoped the end result would be a blessed mother and son. While Alan drove
north, Brian prayed back at home.
When
Alan arrived at Mum's home and she opened the door to him, he smiled
and said gently, “Hi Mum, how are you?” She invited him in and for about
half an hour they talked about anything and everything.
Eventually
Alan felt the time had come to broach the subject of the past.
“Mum,
there's something I'd like to talk about with you. Can we talk about
the past?”
“The
past dear? What about it?”
Alan
paused, “I'm sure I wasn't always the perfect child and I'm sure I could
have helped you better cope with the difficulties you had when I was
young.”
Mum
said nothing.
Alan
struggled on. “After I left home and went to College, I became a Christian,
and it's that which I feel bad about, because I'm aware I haven't been
around for you, and I'm sorry.”
“Darling
you don't have to feel sorry, it was me that was being the problem and
if anyone should say sorry, it's probably me, dear.” Alan couldn't believe
it!
“What
were you feeling in all those years Mum?”
“Do
you really want to know? It's a long time back.”
“Yes,
I really want to know.”
“Well,
I suppose if I'm honest I just felt hurt about your Dad, completely
out of control, didn't know which way to turn, felt utterly rejected
by him and the family and I suppose that's why I started drinking more
and more.”
“Oh
Mum!”
“Since
I've stopped drinking it hasn't been easy but I've managed with help
from the local AA group and some good friends.”
“Oh
Mum,” was all Alan could say, but before he could add anything more,
she continued.
“Life
was hell then and having you three kids around didn't help. I know I
was a lousy mother to you all, but it was the drink doing it.”
“Have
you ever wondered what I felt in it all, Mum?”
“Yes,
I have as I've looked back, dear. I was so hard on you and I was so
strung up that nothing you could do would ever please me. Life must
have been terrible for you too.”
“It
was.”
“I
can imagine. When I think of the number of times I hit you, I don't
know why you didn't run away. I am so sorry dear, I'm so sorry.”
“Mum,
I forgive you.”
His
mother's shoulders were shaking and tears were pouring down her face
and the two of them just hugged.
Later
in the day, when he had got back home, Alan called in on Brian to tell
him what had happened.
“And
the incredible thing was that I hardly had to say anything when it came
to it. It was like she'd got this great burden she wanted to unload,
and it just needed me approaching her with gentleness to let her start
releasing it.”
“Yes,
and God being there for you both.”
“Too
true!”
“So
how have you left it?” Brian asked.
“Oh
we're going to keep in contact and I'm going to take the family up there
in a couple of weeks to see her.”
“And
how are you feeling?” the pastor asked.
“Great,
really great! It's like all the anger has completely gone.”
“And
how's your Mum feeling?”
“Freed and forgiven! And you'll never guess what she started asking
me about…”
The
conversation went on for another joyful half hour.