Father's Day_An Opportunity For Reconciliation
Reconciliation
With Those Who Wounded Us
Series Review:
·
The need for all humans to be reconciled to
God because of Sin
·
The barriers to reconciliation that Jesus
broke down
·
The need to be reconciled with each other
As far as being reconciled
to each other is concerned Jesus had much to say on the matter. It occupied a central part of his most
notable sermon, the Sermon on the Mount: Blessed are the peace makers, turn the
other cheek, go two miles, give your cloak also and his most often quoted line forgive us our sins, as we have forgiven those who have sinned
against us.
As we examine more of what
Jesus and the New Testament writers had to say about reconciliation of
interpersonal conflicts one thing becomes abundantly clear. If it is going to happen it is up to me to
make it happen. The responsibility for
seeking reconciliation is placed at the feet of the one who is offended and not
at the feet of the offender. This is a
great reversal and is one of the reasons who so few of us are willing to engage
in reconciliation. It flies in the face
of fairness and our own personal sense of justice. Listen to these passages:
(Matt 5:23 [ISV])
“So
if you are presenting your gift at the altar and remember there that your
brother has something against you, leave your gift there before the altar and
first go and be reconciled to your brother. Then come and offer your gift.
I
guarantee you that if the people of God were following this text there would be
no evidence of brethren being in malice for weeks at a time. There would be
more evidence of persons slipping out of church at breaking of bread or during
the offertory.
Rom. 12:18 If possible, so far as it depends on you, live in peace with all
people. The clinch
phrase there is ‘so far as it depends on you.’
Yes I know that some persons are war mongers and some persons are
extremely difficult to live with but a lot depends on you.
Another classic text on
reconciliation in the church that is woefully ignored today:
15 “If your brother sins against you, go and confront him while the two of you
are alone. If he listens to you, you have won back your brother.16 But if he doesn’t listen, take one or two
others with you so that ‘every word may be confirmed by the testimony of two or three witnesses.’ 17 If, however, he ignores them, tell it to
the congregation. If he also ignores
the congregation, regard him as a gentile
and a tax collector.
How is it that the church
of Jesus is filled with so much gossiping, backbiting, backstabbing and petty
cliques if Jesus left such a strong medicine for us?
What does this personal
responsibility for reconciliation mean for us today as we observe Father’s Day?
The lack of a sufficiently
nurturing environment at home and in particular the absence of a father to
specifically love, guide and relate to the child in a healing and affirming way
may result in what is typically called the “father wound.” Many Jamaican and Caribbean children do
suffer from this “father wound.”
Abused children are 25% more likely to experience teen pregnancy. Abused
teens are less likely to practice safe sex, putting them at greater risk for
STD’s.
A positive and continuous relationship to one's father has been
found to be associated with a good self-concept, higher self- esteem, higher
self-confidence in personal and social interaction, higher moral maturity,
reduced rates of unwed teen pregnancy, greater internal control and higher
career aspirations. Fathers who are affectionate, nurturing and actively
involved in child-rearing are more likely to have well- adjusted children. - Dr. George Rekers
Two first graders
were overheard as they left Sunday School class, "Do you really believe
all that stuff about the devil?" "No, I think it's like Santa Claus.
It's really your dad."
Forget the joke now and come back to the reality of the average Jamaican
teenage male: many hold their father in a similar esteem because of the wounds
they have inflicted by their presence or absence or both. The father-wound that many of us face is
deep, very deep. The father-wound is the physical, emotional and spiritual
wounds inflicted upon children by men who themselves have been wounded by their
Fathers.
In his epic work on Godly
masculinity, “Wild At Heart” , John Eldridge writes: In the case of
violent fathers, the boy’s question is
answered in a devastating way. “Do I have what it takes? Am I a man papa?” No,
you are mama’s boy, an idiot, a faggot… Those are the defining sentences that
shape a man’s life. The assault wounds are like a shotgun blast to the chest.
This can get unspeakably evil when it involves
physical, sexual or verbal abuse carried on for years. Without some kind of
help, many men never recover. The
manifestation of the woundedness is the continued brokenness in family life and
the serious social repercussions like gangs and criminal minds.
It is God’s fatherhood
which begins the process of healing from the deep wounds inflicted upon
children. It is only as His character is embraced and His value system embraced
that personal healing will be found and communities restored.
There's a Spanish
story of a father and son who had become estranged. The son ran away, and the
father set off to find him. He searched for months to no avail. Finally, in a
last desperate effort to find him, the father put an ad in a Madrid newspaper.
The ad read: Dear Paco, meet me in front of this newspaper office at noon on
Saturday. All is forgiven. I love you. Your Father. On Saturday 800 Pacos
showed up, looking for forgiveness and love from their fathers.
Perhaps
the most relevant missionary challenge for our society was penned by the
Apostle Paul in his letter to the Corinthians: Even though you have ten thousand guardians in Christ, you do not have
many fathers, for in Christ Jesus I became your father. (I Cor. 4:15 NIV). Paul knew that these people didn't need
another teacher, their needs were much deeper, they needed a father.
In
Jesus famous parable of the lost son in Luke 15. We see a father and son who had become
estranged. We see a rude, impudent son who wounds his father deeply by not only
asking for his inheritance but leaving home with clearly no intention of
returning.
The
parable is really not so much about the conduct of the younger son. It is about
the unforgiving, ungraceful older brother who refuses to be reconciled with his
brother.
Notice
that though the father has been wronged he stands daily looking out, hoping to
see his son coming home. He stands ready to be reconciled. Notice too that the young son has come to a
place where he takes responsibility for being reconciled with his father. He returns home ready to face his father whom
he has wounded. His father, the offended
stands ready to forgive.
His
actions: hugs and kisses. The tense used
to describe the kiss suggests that the father kept on kissing the son, he calls
for a robe, he calls for a ring and a sandals.
The ring and sandals were the garments of a free man not a slave. The father would not allow the son to
complete his statement about making him a hired servant. He receives him the
son that He is.
Write
a letter
Visit
your father, visit your son
Visit
the grave
Heal
the memories by deciding to release it
End
the cycle of woundedness
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