Moses prayed for Pharaoh, but it didn’t mean they became BFFs. Forgiveness isn’t the same as friendship. Yet, we still need to forgive.
A lesson in forgiveness
I asked my pastor last week, tongue-in-cheek, if we could please stop picking devotional/sermon topics that smack me upside the head. This week’s topic, as you know, is forgiveness. I had the opportunity this morning to show forgiveness when I was grumpy and didn’t want to.
Let’s begin at about 11:30pm last night, when I finally came to a stopping point on my term paper and decided to go to bed. Granted, it was my own fault for staying up so late, but once I went to bed, I had a difficult time going to sleep. (It couldn’t have been the diet soda I’d been drinking all night?!?) I finally drifted off a little past midnight, I suppose.
Then, at 2:15am, I was woken up by the soft click of a door opening and closing somewhere in the house. (As an aside, what is it about moms’ ears such that the slightest off-kilter sound can wake us up from a deep sleep?) I listened for a moment,thinking perhaps one of the boys just needed to go to the bathroom. A minute or two later, I heard another door close–this time, not so discreetly–followed by voices chit-chatting.
I was livid. In true Angry Mom fashion, I grabbed my glasses from the bedside and practically stomped down the hallway to investigate. Sure enough, Nos. 1 & 3 were watching tv in the extra bedroom and talking as if it were the middle of the afternoon. I ordered them both back to bed and told No. 1 that he was grounded.
No sooner had I finally started to drift off to sleep again, No. 4 came crying into the room, saying that he was scared. No. 3 must have inadvertently woken him up when he went back to bed. He eventually settled down and went back to sleep. I have no idea what time it was, at this point, but I knew then that it would be a lonnnnng Monday.
[Later] This morning, No. 1 sulked about being grounded, and I told him in no uncertain terms that I was not pleased that he woke up two of his brothers and me. He told me, “Fine, bye,” and walked out to catch the bus. He didn’t even say, “I love you,” and he always says that. 😦
Wouldn’t you know … he missed the bus. He needed a ride to school and I needed to go to work a little early today, so I drove him. We had a chance to talk in the car and start over with both of our attitudes. By the time I dropped him off, we were squared away and ready for a new day. Reconciling with my son over something that should have been a mere frustration but just seemed to compound as the hours passed was a refreshing way to start my day. I’m still tired, though.
(P.S. Idk why the paragraphs keep getting scrunched … I’ve tried adding extra line breaks and even pasting from Word, but it doesn’t seem to help.)
Prayer prompt for Monday, April 18
The Bible says that Pharaoh’s heart was hardened. Spend time today thinking about the calluses on your own heart; ask God to soften them.
Prayer prompt for Sunday, April 17
Pharaoh wanted forgiveness for selfish reasons; he didn’t really want to let Moses go. When have you ever apologized without meaning it?
Say it like you mean it (Prayer Devotional for the week of April 17, 2011)
The forced apology: it’s one of those classic, I-can’t-believe-I’ve-turned-into-my-mother scenarios that most parents have tried. Two kids are bickering, and a parent intervenes, telling the troublemaker to apologize. Cross-armed and scrunched nose, the kid yells, “I’m SORRY!” with no inkling of remorse.
We can make them say it, but we can’t make them mean it. We can even make the other one comply with an obligatory, “I forgive you,” but we can’t make them mean it, either. Remorse and forgiveness are choices that we have to make for ourselves. Let’s look at a couple of what-not-to-do stories from the Old Testament about asking for and receiving forgiveness:
Pharaoh had a knack for saying one thing and doing another. Check out the story in Exodus for the full scoop, but suffice it to say that he was pretty indecisive. He would tell Moses that he and his people could leave Egypt, but as soon as they left he’d send soldiers chasing after them to bring them back. He begged Moses to ask God’s forgiveness so that the plagues would stop, then he would reject God and refuse to let Moses go [again]. Moses was faithful to intercede for Pharaoh, but Pharaoh kept digging himself deeper and deeper into a hole of deceit, which ultimately cost him everything he held dear.
Back up a few chapters to the end of Genesis and consider the story of Joseph. This was a guy whose jealous brothers threw him into a pit, sold him into slavery, then faked his death. Years [and many more trials] later, Joseph was faced with a choice during a devastating famine: deny his brothers food and let them die for what they did to him, or forgive and save them. He chose to let go of the grudge, but even after the family was reunited and reconciled, Joseph’s brothers still doubted whether he really meant it. They suspected that as soon as their father died, Joseph might renege on his offer. See how he responded in Genesis 50:19 (NIV): “But Joseph said to them, ‘Don’t be afraid. Am I in the place of God?’” Joseph knew that God is the judge; his job was just to forgive.
So, we are faced with a choice: Do we give God lip-service and tell him we’re sorry, when we don’t really mean it? Or, will we fess up to our shortcomings and accept his forgiveness?
Prayer prompt for April 16
Thank God in advance today for being able to handle your burdens. What are you still hesitant to relinquish to his care?
Prayer prompt for April 15
Our society isn’t as agrarian as it used to be, but pray today for family farms & family businesses and ask God to bless their work.
Prayer prompt for April 14
The next time you eat out, pray for the people who prepared your meal. Thank God for his provision that allowed you to buy such food.
Prayer prompt for April 13
Hunger remains a terrible problem in the world. Pray today for people in our community & globally who are hungry. Ask God how you can help.
Business vs. busyness
I remember learning how to spell the word business. If I own a business, then “I” will be busy. Bus-I-ness.I enjoy making up mnemonic devices to remember spelling words, vocabulary, etc. (We’ve already established that I’m a geek, right?)
For example, the four classifications in increasing substance for explaining statistical data are: nominal, ordinal, interval and ratio. NOIR … as in, pinot noir. 😉 I’m trying to teach my 4th grader about mnemonic devices, as well (albeit, not related to wine), since he tends to put off studying his spelling words until the last possible moment.
Today’s post is less about mnemonic devices than it is about simply being busy. That would be busyness, wouldn’t it? I have committed to writing the weekly prayer prompts & devotionals for church, and although I am thoroughly enjoying this new ministry, it does cut into my writing time that I would otherwise spend on blog posts.
Besides that, I’ve just been busy.
I need to reconcile the federal deficit by next Saturday, and since I’m going out of town mid-week, I have to start writing very soon or else pin myself into a corner of a few days of break-neck speed writing. That would not be fun, since Ang Under A Deadline is not the most pleasant person to be around. I seldom travel, but I’m going out of town three times this month, so I hesitate to leave the house again in the evenings to go to the library, etc., in order to write, but I may need to. It is difficult to concentrate on sequestration and spending caps when the kids walk all the way across the house, right past Dad, to pepper me with questions that have nothing whatsoever to do with our $15 trillion federal debt.
Speaking of going out of town, as soon as I finish my deficit paper, I promise to write a post about last weekend’s adventure (girls’ weekend – i.e., time with friends far away from laundry, dishes or textbooks – woohoo!) and next week’s conference. It is my first academic shindig, and I will be presenting a paper as a panel discussant. I am equally stoked and terrified. My panel is in the first batch of the morning on Thursday, so at least I will have the rest of the conference to recoup my wits.
Until I can carve out some more writing time, I hope that you’ll continue to join me in prayer with our daily prompts, and if you wouldn’t mind – I sure would appreciate your prayers during this stressful time in my life, as well. Thanks!