The Teaching of Jesus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about The Teaching of Jesus.

The Teaching of Jesus eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 201 pages of information about The Teaching of Jesus.

—­not of such do I speak, but of true forgiveness, and this, I say, can never for us men be an easy thing.  Perhaps a frank consideration of some of the difficulties may contribute to their removal.

(1) One chief reason why Christ’s command remains so largely a dead letter is to be found in our unwillingness to acknowledge that we have committed an injury.  That another should have wronged us we find no difficulty in believing; that we have wronged another is very hard to believe.  Look at the very form of Peter’s question:  “How oft shall my brother sin against me, and I forgive him?” “My brother” the wrong-doer, myself the wronged—­that is what we are all ready to assume.  But what if it is I who have need to be forgiven?  But this is what our pride will not suffer us to believe.  That “bold villain” Shame, who plucked Faithful by the elbow in the Valley of Humiliation, and sought to persuade him that it is a shame to ask one’s neighbour forgiveness for petty faults, or to make restitution where we have taken from any, is always quick to seize his opportunity.  And he is especially quick when acknowledgement is due to one who is socially our inferior.  If an employee be guilty of some gross discourtesy towards his master, or a servant towards her mistress, the master or mistress may demand a prompt apology on pain of instant dismissal.  But when it is the servant or employee who is the injured person he has no such remedy; yet surely, in Christ’s eyes, his very dependence makes the duty of confession doubly imperative.  “If,” Christ said, “thou art offering thy gift at the altar, and there rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee”—­note exactly Christ’s words; He did not say, “If thou rememberest that thou hast aught against thy brother”; alas, it is very easy for most of us to do that; what He said was, “If thou rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee.”  Whom did I overreach in business yesterday?  Whose good name did I drag through the mire?  What heart did I stab with my cruel words?  “If thou rememberest that thy brother hath aught against thee, leave there thy gift before the altar, and go thy way, first be reconciled to thy brother, and then come and offer thy gift.”

(2) If the difficulties are great when we have committed the wrong, they are hardly less when we have suffered it.  Thomas Fuller tells how once he saw a mother threatening to beat her little child for not rightly pronouncing the petition in the Lord’s Prayer, “Forgive us our trespasses, as we forgive them that trespass against us.”  The child tried its best, but could get no nearer than “tepasses,” and “trepasses.”  “Alas!” says Fuller, it is a shibboleth to a child’s tongue wherein there is a confluence of hard consonants together; and then he continues, “What the child could not pronounce the parents do not practise.  O how lispingly and imperfectly do we perform the close of this petition:  As we forgive them that trespass

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The Teaching of Jesus from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.