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part 2 -
04-17-06, 01:20 PM
Today's Josephs
Today, many are coming out of abusive church systems. Those, calling themselves "brothers," sold them into religious captivity. Those who loudly claimed to love them unconditionally now shun them and speak ill of them behind their backs. As a result, many of these wounded ones are openly hurt and bitter. They have been betrayed and their coat of many colors ripped from their backs and soaked in blood. Sadly, the gift that they dared to manifest among jealous brethren is now silent and they seek to avoid further wounding by focusing on the evil intentions of their brothers, often searching the scriptures for ammunition against their foes. "I'm never going to be hurt like that again. . . You meant it for evil. . ."
In the movie, "Patch Adams," there is a scene where Patch has just been put in an insane asylum, having given up on life altogether. One of the patents, an old man, comes up to him and thrusts four fingers inside his focal distance as he looked at the man's face. Then the man shouted, "How many fingers? How many fingers do you see?" Patch stepped back, looked and said, "Four." The man then said, "You are an idiot!" and stormed off. Later, Patch found out that this man was a genius and had voluntarily become interned because he could not stand the world outside. He went into the man's room and asked him what the answer to the riddle really was? The man said, "Three." If you had looked beyond the fingers and focused on my face you would have seen thee fingers, not four. You have to look beyond the obvious manifestation to see the solution to your problem."
The key to forgiving our brothers is locked away from us until we finally come to see that our wounds are the wounds of a dear Friend (Proverbs 27:6). Until we see God's hand in our sufferings, we are destined to wrestle with flesh and blood, pointing the finger at our persecutors and blaming them for the injustice of it all.
In man's distorted, promiscuous view of love there is no room for pain, no place for discipline, and no value in wounds. Therefore, pain is met with resentment and wounding with retaliation. Their can be no lasting healing until we finally stop blaming our brothers and start thanking our Divine Friend, who loves us enough to wound us that he might heal us. Until we come to see that "God meant it for good", we can never forgive our brothers and know the goodness of His wounds.
"Come, let us return to the LORD! He has torn us in pieces; now he will heal us. He has injured us; now he will bandage our wounds. In just a short time, he will restore us so we can live in his presence. Oh, that we might know the LORD! Let us press on to know him! Then he will respond to us as surely as the arrival of dawn or the coming of rains in early spring." (Hosea 6:1-3 NLT)
Beyond the wounds are restoration, healing and a renewed desire to follow on to know the Lord. In fact, without them, we would never be released from the shell of our human natures and stretch forth toward His marvelous light.
The Holy Spirit, through the writer of Hebrews, speaks of the hostility from sinners that the early believers suffered, as the child training of a Father. "For consider Him (Jesus) who endured such hostility from sinners against Himself, lest you become weary and discouraged in your souls. You have not yet resisted to bloodshed, striving against sin. And you have forgotten the exhortation which speaks to you as to sons: "My son, do not despise the chastening of the Lord, Nor be discouraged when you are rebuked by Him..." (Hebrews 12:3-5 NKJV) The heavenly Father's discipline has one end in view, "...for our profit, that we might be partakers of his holiness."
In his message entitled "Let us go on," T. Austin Sparks said regarding the sufferings of these early believers,
"Their sufferings may have come from devil-driven men, from the very devil himself, and yet they're in the hands of a Father, Father has hold of those sufferings for the training of His children."
In the book of Hebrews there is a great promise for those who submit to the hand of their Father, "Now no chastening seems to be joyful for the present, but painful; nevertheless, afterward it yields the peaceable fruit of righteousness to those who have been trained by it." (Hebrews 12:11 NKJV). The question is, will we patiently submit to His mighty hand and wait for the promise of the harvest? Will we open our hearts to receive the peaceable fruit of righteousness, the mind of Christ within?
Until we see that the stripes that others have inflicted upon us are not the wounds of our enemies, but the strips of a loving Father we can never be free from bitterness and resentment. Until we can honestly say, "God meant it for good...Faithful are the wounds of a friend," we will resist the purging blows of God our Father. Sometimes we might feel as Job did, "...he breaks me with a tempest, multiplies my wounds without cause." Job could not see it then but he would learn through his sufferings that God's wounds are not without cause but for cleansing and blessing! They are for healing! They are for good. So goes the proverb, "Blows that hurt cleanse away evil, as do stripes the inner depths of the heart." (Proverbs 20:30 NKJV). This gives new meaning to the words "by His stripes we are healed"(Isaiah 53:5), for it is the Father who controls the scourge.
Jesus is Lord, and there's nothing you can do about it!
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