Author: Sharon Rose

  • Forgiveness – Part 2

    Forgiveness – Part 2

    A Work of Love

    Forgiveness is the greatest act of love one can show.

    When you really think about it, to forgive is to open the cell door of the guilty, and say, “You can go.” Even if they have shown no remorse and no change in behavior. We can swing wide the door of bitterness and unforgiveness and walk away.

    Jesus did this for us.

    When He accepted The Fathers will and died in our place on the cross, He, in effect said, “I forgive you! You are now free to live in Me.” The cell of our guilt was swung open with His death, and His resurrection that third morning. But there is a catch. We must have faith and believe that He died in our place, and accept the forgiveness He offers. Then we can begin to walk in newness of life. This is our choice. We can either accept the completed work of the cross and walk out of the cell, or we can sit there in front of an open door and stay in our guilt and shame.

    There is a Biblical truth found in the prayer of Saint Francis of Assisi, that says, “It is in giving that we receive.”

    As we offer forgiveness and freedom to our offenders, we ourselves are the ones that walk in freedom!

    Praise God!!!

    When we truly forgive, we walk away from the most taxing jobs we ever had. While we kept our fist tightly, clenched around that key of unforgiveness, we had set ourselves up in the role of attorney and guard!

    As the Attorney,

    we set to prove the “crime” of this individual(s) and will go on tirelessly to convince the “jury” of this person’s guilt. Rehearsing the offense, being sure that everyone has understood every detail of the wrongdoings. But we can’t stop there. We need a defense, and so we gain others who will side with us and witness on our behalf. After all, we do need a strong case against the accused.

    Brief periods of recess occur, but once the accused name is brought up, court has resumed, and the vicious cycle continues.

    As the Guard,

    there are many sleepless nights. We replay everything that has happened. Over, and over, and over, and over, and… well you get the point. The guilty may or may not still be in our life. Yet we see them clearly in the picture of our mind. We hash and rehash what they did, and what we should have done differently. We can’t seem to let go. We say things like, “I forgive, but I will never forget.” I know for myself, when I have uttered those words, I still have a thorn of bitterness sunk deep into my soul. I may have started the process of forgiveness, but it is not a completed work.

    We can sit in the guard’s chair, twirling that key around our finger, so preoccupied with a job that was never ours to start with, and miss the world around us. Or, we can grip that key one final time to open the lock and offer freedom to those who hurt us.

    Full forgiveness.

    With the door wide open, we can hand the key to Jesus. The only One who was ever authorized to hold it, and walk in the freedom we were always meant to be living in.

    Friend, I want to encourage you, if you find yourself holding onto a key of bitterness and unforgiveness, let it go. I know how hard it can be, but I also know firsthand the reward that waits for you. Today confess with your mouth, that you forgive ________ for ________, and then pray for them. Pray for them to have all the things you want for yourself. It may take days, months, and maybe even years, but I promise you, it is worth the work of letting go.

    Maybe you’re reading this, and you have never accepted the forgiveness that Jesus offers. There is no better time than now to accept the forgiveness Jesus has for you.

    It is as easy as A, B, C

    A – Admit that you are a sinner

    B – Believe in your heart that Jesus is The Son of God, and that He died in your place on the cross

    C – Confess with your mouth that Jesus is Lord, and call upon Him for salvation

    Then shout it out! Tell someone, tell everyone!

    I’m praying for you, continue in the good fight of faith (1 Timothy 6:12)

  • Forgiveness – Part 1

    Forgiveness – Part 1

    The Silence

    In the quiet hours of the morning, I sat in solitude. Before the house began to stir, I thought about past wrongs done to me. I had already made the decision to forgive these trespasses. Yet, it was in this moment, that it occurred to me, I don’t have to talk about it anymore.

    I realized that silence, is the final act of forgiveness.

    The more I thought on this new concept the more that it made sense. If I have truly forgiven a wrong done to me, why would I continue to talk about it? My eyes were now open.

    When I choose to think on, or talk about a wrong done to me, it stirs up fresh pain and anger. New life is breathed into past hurts. The offense becomes just as raw as when it first happened. Fresh tears stream down my cheeks while hurt and anger wrestle in my heart. I have opened a time portal and stepped aside to allow things from the past to creep in and rob my present. Any joy that I should be experiencing in this moment is forfeited and exchanged for a tromp in the mud and muck of the past instead.

    But oh, what freedom is found in full forgiveness! (more on that next week) No longer bound by the past, I can now live fully in the gift of today! I don’t have to give my time, thoughts, and conversations to those things that now lay behind me.

    It is the same when we come to a place of repentance and confess our sins to Jesus. When we accept His work of forgiveness, through His death, burial, and resurrection, He casts our sins as far as the east is from the west. Never to be remembered again (Psalm 103:12).

    That is Good News!

    Once we are forgiven, Jesus NEVER brings up our sins again.

    He doesn’t talk about it!

    So why do we?

    The name, “Christian” means belonging to Christ. It was first intended to be derogatory to the “mini-Christs” that were living out Jesus’ teachings. This stirs me to challenge all Christians.

    Let us live up to our name!

    Let us forgive in the fullness of Christs love. Let us stop talking about the terrible things that have been done to us. Instead let us now place our efforts in forgetting those things that are forgiven and fully live in the abundant life Jesus offers us now.

    As I close for today, I want to remind you that Final Victory Comes In The Silence! Stay strong in the faith my friend, spurring each other on in love and good works (Hebrews 10:24).

    Continue in the Good Fight of Faith (1 Timothy 6:12)

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  • Looking for Dishes

    Looking for Dishes

    “Hurry up,” I told my oldest son for the seventh time. “If we jog, we can still catch them.”

    “But mom, my legs are tired,” he answered as he collapsed to the ground.

    My younger son had already walked ahead with a family friend. Their shadows appeared and disappeared as they walked underneath the solar lights that lit the walk path. It would be at least an hour before the sun was up.  I looked ahead. It would be a strain to catch up with them now. I turned back and look at my son laying in the middle of the walk path on his back. He was content laying on the hard asphalt and looking up at the stars.

    “This feels better,” he sighed.

    I guess I’ll join him, I thought as I laid down next to him.

    “Mom, I really like looking for dishes.”

    “Dishes?” My mind pictured the kitchen sink at home. “In the sky?”

    “Yeah. The big dipper and little dipper, they’re my favorite. I like how they pour into each other.”

    “That is pretty cool, isn’t it?” In the silence of the moment, I reflected on his words, “They pour into each other.”

    I learned a vital life lesson from my 8-year-old son right then. Our life should be one of pouring. Every day we should be looking for ways to pour into each other. Not dipping from someone else to try and fill up ourselves. When we live a life of dipping, then everyone ends up empty. BUT once we transition to a life of pouring, then everyone is full and there is no lack!

    “That looks like the big dipper there,” he pointed.

    “I think your right, it sure looks like it.”

    “Do you know what that one is?” He asked.

    “No, I don’t know very many of them. Most of them you have to use your imagination to be able to see what they’re named.” I paused for a moment before adding, “You know, God, He holds all the stars in place by the power of His might. He has called them all by name.” (Isaiah 40:26 and Psalm 147:4)

    We continued in conversation while the stars slowly began to fade. The sun would soon outshine them completely.

    I reflected on the two lessons I learned that morning as we drove home.

    The first is that we must pour.

    Each moment in our life is an opportunity to pour or dip from someone else. My prayer for us, is that we will look at our own life, not as having a deficit but as having an abundance and that we dip deeply and pour lavishly into someone else’s life. It could be as simple as a phone call to an old friend. There could be a shut in you know that you could take a meal to. You might leave coins at the quarter machine for the next child that comes by. Or like me, maybe you’ll find yourself looking up at the stars.

    The second is that all we really have is this moment. Right now.

    We run through life in such a rush to get to the next moment, that we have robbed ourselves of the beauty that this moment held. Days and years fade as quickly as the stars at dawn. I am reminded of James 4:14 KJV that says, “Whereas ye know not what shall be on the morrow. For what is your life? It is even a vapour, that appeareth for a little time, and then vanisheth away.”

    As I learn to embrace the moments of life, I am finding such a richness in the days that is hard to contain. I am grateful for this simple life moment that I took the time to stop and look at the stars. The lessons I learned because I chose to stop and be still with my son for a single moment changed my life forever. He poured into my life so completely, and he didn’t even know he was pouring! Isn’t that beautiful? He was tired and chose to enjoy the moment and he shared it with me, and he poured. My, how he poured.

    These slowdowns, the moments we pour are the treasure that so richly highlight this life we have been given. We must learn to embrace them in the fullest.

    Friend, I want to encourage you to slowdown and pour today, and you will find yourself in the center of contentment when you do.

  • The Miracle of The Crumbs

    The Miracle of The Crumbs

    Is it ok to be absolutely honest with you?

    This walk, life as a Christian hasn’t been the journey I had expected.

    I have moments of complete joy, faith surging through my veins, knowing within my innermost being that my God will fulfill the good work He began in my life (Philippians 1:6), for The One who spoke it, is Faithful and True (Revelation 9:11). Yet, I have sat in moments of doubt, because it seems the call on my life will never be fulfilled. Gloom knocks on the window of my heart, refusing to leave in anticipation that I will throw back the curtains and allow the darkness of despair to enter and suffocate the music of hope that I desperately cling to.

    Moments of this precious life now lost because my sight was focused on a future I envisioned. A future that hasn’t manifested the way I thought it should. I was too proud to eat the crumbs. I missed the miracles, treasured moments placed in front of me, because my eyes were locked on the loaf.

    And she said, “Truth Lord: yet the dogs eat of the crumbs which fall from their masters’ table.” Matthew 15:27 KJV

    This women from Canaan had sought out Jesus in need of healing for her daughter who was vexed with a devil. Jesus seems cold and uncaring as He spoke,

    “I am not sent but unto the lost sheep of the house of Israel…It is not meet to take the children’s bread, and to cast it to dogs.” Matthew 15:24, 26 KJV.

    Yet this woman responds, “Truth Lord, yet the dogs eat of the crumbs…” this Canaanite woman received the miracle she set out for because she was willing to embrace the small things. She understood that the crumb had all the same ingredients in it as the loaf. She was content with little, and The Lord blessed her with much.

    I am humbled by this scripture, as I see how many miracles I have missed because I was not willing to be thankful for the crumbs. The small opportunities I am given each day to operate in the calling on my life; to share the gospel of Jesus Christ.

    How about you? Have you too, missed the miracles, moments to operate in your calling because they appeared as crumbs? Walking past them, eyes set on what is esteem to be a greater call.

    I can’t help but think of the scripture in Luke 16:10 KJV that says,

    “He that is faithful in that which is least is faithful also in much: and he that is unjust in the least is unjust also in much.”

    How can we expect the big if we have been unfaithful with the little?

    Father God, please forgive me for being ungrateful for the crumbs. Open my eyes to see the priceless opportunities available today to walk in the call you placed on my life, in Jesus’ name, amen.

  • Lessons from the book of Ruth

    Lessons from the book of Ruth

    Part 1 – Commitment

    As I meditate on the four chapters contained in the book of Ruth, the Lord continues to show me truths that apply to what our life and relationship with Christ should look like, now, as we live for His kingdom purposes in this foreign land.

    The definition from Oxford Languages explains the word commitment as the state or quality of being dedicated to a cause, activity, etc.

    Back Story: The book of Ruth opens with a famine in the land of Israel. Preservation in mind, Elimelech gathers his wife Naomi and their two sons and journey to Moab. Moab was a pagan nation birthed from the incestuous relationship the daughters of Lot had with their father after the destruction of Sodom and Gomorrah. (Genesis 19:29-38) The Moabites did not serve Yahweh the God of Israel but instead served the false gods Chemosh and Astarte. In the time span of about 10 years, Naomi’s husband and two sons die, leaving her and her two Moabite daughters-in-law, Orpah and Ruth widowed. With empty hands and a report that the famine in Israel is over, Naomi releases Orpah and Ruth to return to their families and to the gods of their land as she is resolved to return to Israel. Orpah kisses Naomi goodbye but Ruth clung to her mother-in-law.

    And Ruth said, Intreat me not to leave thee, or to return from following after thee: for wither thou goest, I will go; and where thou lodgest, I will lodge: thy people shall be my people, and thy God my God: Where thou diest, will I die, and there will I be buried: the LORD do so to me, if more also, if ought but death part thee and me. When she saw that she was steadfastly minded to go with her, then she left speaking unto her. (Ruth 1:16-18 KJV)

    What I see with Ruth is that her life was not altered until she made a commitment to Naomi that she would follow her, even to death. However, greater than her commitment to Naomi was her commitment to The One True God, The God of Israel. It was at this moment when she made a commitment to follow Him, that He became her God. Her life was radically altered, and she began to live in the blessings and favor of God.

    So, it is with us, we can live a mediocre life with the knowledge of who God is, but it isn’t until we make that full commitment, when we take a stance and say, “You alone God, will I serve. You alone, will I live for. You alone, will be my God,” that our life takes on new form. Once we make a steadfast declaration to God, to live this moment and every future moment dedicated to Him, we enter into a place where spiritually we begin to glean in the fields of The Lord Most High.

    I’d like to encourage you to evaluate where you stand before God, right now.

    Are you like Orpah, who knows of God but would rather return to the familiar things that this world has to offer, or are you like Ruth, who is ready to forsake all things to pursue the Living God, the True God Jehovah?

    As I think back, I can still clearly see the moment that I fully committed my life to the Lord God. When similar to Ruth, I made the decision that I would stand for God alone, that He would be my God. I drew my line in the sand, and nothing has been the same since. He is my All in All, everything else is dust. I implore you today, to make a commitment to the Lord, to pursue Him with every fiber of your being and to serve Him alone. I promise you this, you will never regret selling out for the Kingdom of God.

    And every one that hath forsaken houses, or brethren, or sisters, or father, or mother, or wife, or children, or lands, for my name’s sake, shall receive an hundredfold, and shall inherit everlasting life. (Matthew 19:29 KJV)

  • A Work of Forgiveness

    A Work of Forgiveness

    The first time I heard Brandon Heath’s song, Give me Your Eyes, I was helping my older brother relocate our real father to a rehab facility from Colorado to Kansas. This man had signed his parental rights away when we were quite young and walked away. For most of my life, I referred to him simply as “The donor.” I had no respect for him. I hadn’t been saved very long before God began a work of forgiveness in my heart towards this man and the hope of a relationship restored with him.

    As I prepared to help him move, I purchased a bible to give him. I wrote in it a heartfelt note of forgiveness and appreciation to him as my father. When I offered him the bible, he rejected it. I asked to leave it, he would not allow me to. That was the last time I saw him. I walked away with the bible, a broken heart, and a wisp of anger.

    He died in February 2015. My heart broke that any hope of restoration died with his last breath. He died alone, worse, he didn’t have to.

    The Lord has continued to work in my heart, in that I now see him through different eyes. My heart hurts for the life he had. You see, I have learned that everyone acts in a way that makes sense to them. This does not mean their behavior is right or justify their actions, but this perspective can give us insight to comprehend their behavior. I now see things in his life that I am certain influenced the choices he made in his journey. I understand now, he loved us the best way he knew how, and I can respect him for that.

    As I close, I want to encourage those who have been hurt, allow the Spirit to have His perfect work in you and let Him mend your heart. And to those who have walked away, you are still worth loving, allow yourself to be loved.

    What happened to that bible? I’m so glad you asked. About two weeks later one of my younger brother’s friends was talking about how much he wanted a bible and didn’t have one. I smiled, ‘cause I just happened to have an extra. I will never forget the look on his face when I gave it to him.

    God knows all things my friend. Trust in His ways.

    Exodus 20:12 KJV Honour thy father and thy mother: that thy days may be long upon the land which the LORD thy God giveth thee.

    Matthew 6:14-15 KJV For if ye forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither will your father forgive your trespasses.

    Written February 26, 2022