Luke 6: 36-38
Jesus said to his disciples: “Be
merciful, just as your Father is merciful. Stop judging
and you will not be judged. Stop condemning and
you will not be condemned. Forgive and you will be
forgiven. Give and gifts will be given to you;
a good measure, packed together, shaken down, and overflowing,
will be poured into your lap. For the measure with
which you measure will in return be measured out
to you."
Introductory Prayer: Dear Jesus, too often I
compare myself with others. It´s easy for me to
find or imagine my superiority to them. I ignore
you and your great goodness. I forget that everything I
have comes from you and that I can´t claim
the credit for any quality and virtue, although I would
like to. I wish to keep this truth in
mind and to have an attitude of genuine humility
in my heart. Here I am, Lord, to know and
love you more through prayer.
Petition: Lord, help
me to forgive from the heart.
1. The True Battlefield: Although
it is difficult, we can usually bring ourselves around to
excuse an injustice we have suffered. We forget about
what happened, and we try to move forward. However,
it is more difficult for us to forgive when we
look into our offender’s heart and refuse to turn
a blind eye to the goodness that is there.
Our hearts are a battleground for good and evil, and
to forgive is to be willing to help both
the offender and ourselves overcome the logic of evil. It
is to wager on the side of good and
to trust that goodness is ultimately more attractive to
the human heart than the idol of evil. Christ always
looked into the heart and wagered on the side
of good.
2. Turning the Other Cheek: “For if you
love those who love you, what credit is that
to you? Even sinners love those who love them” (Luke
6:32). Christian forgiveness involves waiving our claim to damages.
It means turning the other cheek. It means giving
up our cloak as well. Yet all this is
relatively easy in comparison to giving over our good name,
to proceeding in charity even when we will be
misunderstood. Even here, we must waive our claim to
damages, willingly die in the furrow, and patiently await the
Father to raise us up again.
3. Going the Entire
Distance: The Christian ethic is positive. It does not
consist merely in not doing bad things but in
doing good things; building up positively. We change the
world little by not doing things. Christ was not
satisfied with that. He gave up his tunic, he
gave up his good name, and he gave up everything—to
the last drop of his blood. So often we
feel good about ourselves because we measure up to our
neighbor; but it is not our neighbor with whom
we must compare ourselves. It is God with whom
we must compare ourselves, and he has shown us how
to be fruitful: by paying our ransom with his
own blood. In forgiveness and mercy, his generosity is
without measure.
Conversation with Christ: Dear Jesus, help
me to seek perfection in loving you and my
neighbor constantly. I want to travel the path of generous
love because it is your path, and you are
the source of all my happiness.
Resolution: I
will be the first to offer an apology or a
solution to build unity in my home and workplace.