Good
Morning All,
Revelation
3:20; “Behold, I stand at the door and knock. If anyone hears my voice and
opens the door, I will come in to him and eat with him, and he with me.
There is an old preacher’s joke that goes something like this. A preacher was trying to visit one of his
members. He stood at the door and
knocked and knocked but nobody answered.
So he took out his pen and paper and wrote on the paper “Rev. 3:20” and
left it on the door, thinking it was a clever way to get a member to read the
Bible. On Sunday, a note addressed to
the preacher was found in the collection plate.
Below his writing of “Rev. 3:20” was a lady’s handwriting with the verse
“Gen. 3:10.” With his curiosity raised
he quickly opened his Bible and read, “I heard your voice but I was afraid because
I was naked so I hid.” Sometimes it
happens.
Have you ever avoided answering the door to your home because you didn’t
want the person to know that you were home?
Perhaps it was a salesman or a neighbor that you just didn’t want to
deal with today. Sometimes, pressures
lead us to avoid answering the door because we fear a bill collector. Sometimes in anger we avoid answering the
door because we aren’t ready to speak to them just yet. How long have you left the door
unanswered? For some it is years upon
years.
That is what happens when you refuse to forgive your brother or sister. Oh, you may allow them a physical presence;
you may even be “civil” towards them; but if you refuse to forgive then you
have effectively shut the door on any true relationship. You have decided to not answer them. If it is a plea of repentance or a plea for
mercy as long as you shut the door, you have locked that person out of your
life.
You are also locking Jesus out of your life. When we refuse to forgive, we are blocking
God’s forgiveness to us. We are closing
the door on our relationship with Jesus as well. Jesus came to fix broken people. He came to fix broken hearts, broken spirits
and broken relationships. All the
healing requires forgiveness. All the
healing requires open doors and when the doors are open; reconciliation can
occur.
The greatness of Christ’s reconciliation for us is that he continually
knocks at the door of our heart wanting to be allowed in. He wants to enter your heart and dwell in you
with the peace of his fellowship. He
wants us to live content with the certainty of our salvation. He wants us to take this God given
reconciliation and then go out and heal our brokenness in the relationships
that we have with our family, friends, neighbors and other brothers and sisters
in Christ. Jesus is standing at the door
and knocking. We should also stand at
the door of those who we have hurt or hurt us so that we may be reconciled to
them because of Christ’s great love for us.
Father,
too often we let pride and ego destroy our relationships with those whom you
have placed in our lives. Forgive us and
lead us to open the door to the healing that is needed in this world. Guide us by your Spirit to be healers in this
world. In the precious name of Jesus our
Lord, amen.
God’s Peace,
Pastor Bret
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