“Give and it shall be given
to you: pressed down, shaken together and running over.” It’s a principle in scripture I will pair it with a comment from my husband
made in the mid 90s when I was struggling with some issues in my teaching career. His comment was “At the end of the day, at
the end of the year, what do you need to have accomplished; what do you have to
walk away with?”
It’s hard to really consider
that life is reciprocal. Several years
ago the Newsboys recorded a song with the line “The good I do goes
nowhere. The bad just seizes the
day.” While I identify with the song
strongly on its premise that we concentrate on sin instead of love and grace as
we should, that one line –though it reflects how we often feel, kind of sidetracks
me. On a post about a negative episode
in a friend’s life, another friend commented ‘Karma, lol.’ The friend wasn’t really being mean, but it
made me think about the way we interpret life.
When things are going great,
we seldom consider reciprocation as a cause.
Yet when we read the verse above, we seldom consider negative actions or
reactions as an outcome. We concentrate
on the future that will be bright if we are kind and giving and the ‘we’ is
usually ‘you guys out there.’
A contact recently informed
me how utterly despicable I am and basically that I’m going to get mine from
God eventually and from that person in the present. I won’t say I didn’t consider or pray about
the accusation, but in the end grace is grace or it isn’t. Forgiveness doesn’t exist unless you
participate. Peace will belong to the
peaceable.
That said there is a
principle of reciprocation in both good and bad things. Sometimes it doesn’t seem like it to the
person who is behaving himself while being battered and bludgeoned, but in
Psalms, Jeremiah, and Hebrews we are told to wait for it; it’s coming. None of us are without sin. If we claim we are, the first letter of John
says we are deceived. And so a daily cry for forgiveness is in order. If we find ourselves committing the same sin
over and over, then both a cry for forgiveness and a careful consideration of
what’s bringing that about is in order.
A person in my past brought repeated
injury to me in unconscionable ways with never a request for forgiveness. One day I was instructed by God to forgive
regardless. Yet this person’s behaviors
caused repercussions that injured again and again and each time a new result
was uncovered and the anger came I would again ask for grace to forgive and be
done with it. Eventually I realized I
would never be done with it so how could I forgive in reality. Then the same Spirit that instructed me to
forgive taught me that forgiveness doesn’t depend on a lack of pain to be true.
There are those who assert
that if a person still feels pain, they have not forgiven. Some things will always cause pain and
perhaps the acknowledgement with out vengeance is part of the healing of the
soul. As grace was extended to me, I
must be willing that grace be extended to others regardless and that comes back
to me in surprising ways.
Reverse thinking is a mark
of growing, intelligent development. If
you can deconstruct a problem or a situation you can often find solutions or
understanding. And so you begin an
honest backward trek to see how you arrived at this point ill equipped or
unprepared. But seldom do we begin a
backward trek to see how we came to success and peace, perhaps because we don’t
feel the need to fix success and peace or to avoid it in the future. Yet perhaps the analyzing of the good in our
lives would be as productive if we practiced it.
If you are angry all the
time and feel that everything has worked against you, looking backward
–deconstructing – may help you to get a handle on it. Reverse thinking won’t add to your present
situation, mind you. But it can help you
see what choices and mindsets may have led you to this point and what you can
avoid in the future. This process should
be introspective. You can’t fix other people.
One factor often overlooked
and ignored is what you brought to the table that should have been left
behind. What we give that should be
given we expect to be reciprocated. What
we gave that we should not have given, we seldom expect to be reciprocated. But as the song says “The bad just seizes the
day.” Most of the time “I’m sorry’ is all you have to give at that point. Often “I’m sorry” is not respected and seldom
changes the outcome of events set in motion.
If the other person is able to receive it, “I’m sorry” makes a big
difference to both hearts. But until
then, it is moot. What saying “I’m
sorry” does is within the heart of the person who speaks it, whether or not it
was accepted. If you can make amends, it
is the godly thing to do. But sometimes
you cannot and the result must be left to grace. Likewise, to continue expecting another
person to pay for a wrong in the past is harming yourself again and again and
not really harming the other person regardless of your need to bring them down.
One of the reasons for this
is that the past is truly past. I cannot
walk backward in time and change one action of my own or someone else. I cannot even walk backward in time and come
to a pure judgment of another’s action and motive. As a child I suffered some unthinkable
things, but I’ve learned that there is a warp in years that alters our
perception of an evil event. I’m not
saying that no offense really occurred.
But I have learned that it is part of the past for a reason.
So how does the law of
reciprocation work here? What have those
who injured me experienced? Was it
adequate payment for the ill I received? I don’t know but I do know about the other
statement. I know what I must take from
it, what I must end up with for life and soundness. Some of the best actions were not the obvious
response once I looked at that first year of teaching. The same is true today of more weighty
matters.
So my conclusion: behave yourself. Don’t forget to be kind. Serve your God and your people the best you
can, knowing you will make mistakes. God
forgives. I must forgive. Other people may not forgive. Who I am depends on me before God, not on
other people –except as they pray and spur me on to God. Good deeds done right walk quietly and, most of
the time, slowly in this world. Evil
shrieks. Be patient and keep your eyes on the path. The rest will come.
All good maxims to live by!
ReplyDeleteEcc 9:
7Go, eat your food with gladness, and drink your wine with a joyful heart, for God has already approved what you do.
8Always be clothed in white, and always anoint your head with oil.
9Enjoy life with your wife, whom you love, all the days of this meaningless life that God has given you under the sun—all your meaningless days. For this is your lot in life and in your toilsome labor under the sun.
10Whatever your hand finds to do, do it with all your might, for in the realm of the dead, where you are going, there is neither working nor planning nor knowledge nor wisdom.