May
21

Keeping Short Accounts: The Ministry of Reconciliation

Honoré de Balzac's Melmoth reconciled

Keep­ing Short Accounts Makes the Process of Rec­on­cil­i­a­tion Easier

One theme that recurs in our house­hold is the process of rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. At the end of any trans­ac­tion should be the process of rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. It is an account­ing to com­ple­tion. What I mean by that is for any trans­ac­tion or inter­ac­tion to come to a close, there needs to be an account­ing for what is trans­acted (inter­acted) and pay­ment or resti­tu­tion made.

Today an ugly inter­ac­tion occurred between two mem­bers of my house­hold. One left for the bed room, smol­der­ing and divert­ing atten­tion by read­ing, the other was fold­ing laun­dry, regret­ting and smart­ing from the dam­ag­ing inter­ac­tion. In the end, what was needed to bring them together was rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. I explained to my appren­tice the con­cept of trans­ac­tion reconciliation.

I gave an exam­ple of a shop keeper and a cus­tomer rec­on­cil­ing accounts at the end of the month, with the items of the trans­ac­tion evened out through agreed account­ing and final pay­ment. I explained that when one party is injured in a con­fronta­tion, there is pay­ment due. That pay­ment is con­fes­sion in admis­sion and seek­ing of for­give­ness, which is where the rec­on­cil­i­a­tion hap­pens. I am happy to say that the trans­ac­tion occurred and both rec­on­ciled to good rela­tions imme­di­ately after our conversation.

The con­ver­sa­tion con­tin­ued around the con­cept of keep­ing short accounts with each other and God, mean­ing that if in the exam­ple,  the shop keeper and the cus­tomer wait to long between rec­on­cil­i­a­tions, some things are for­got­ten and or rela­tions are dam­aged and mis­trust ensues. Keep­ing a short account of our sins with God makes it eas­ier to keep a good rela­tion­ship with Him, wherein we can hear from Him clearly through His holy spirit daily, hour by hour.

There­fore, if any­one is in Christ, he is a new cre­ation. The old has passed away; behold, the new has come. All this is from God, who through Christ rec­on­ciled us to him­self and gave us the min­istry of rec­on­cil­i­a­tion; that is, in Christ God was rec­on­cil­ing the world to him­self, not count­ing their tres­passes against them, and entrust­ing to us the mes­sage of rec­on­cil­i­a­tion. There­fore, we are ambas­sadors for Christ, God mak­ing his appeal through us. We implore you on behalf of Christ, be rec­on­ciled to God. For our sake he made him to be sin who knew no sin, so that in him we might become the right­eous­ness of God.” (2 Corinthi­ans 5:17–21 ESV)

Jan
28

A Jostled Vessel

What­ever you are over­flow­ing with will spill out

This past week­end, I was talk­ing to my appren­tice about char­ac­ter and the great poten­tial it brings, if we were truly sur­ren­dered to God. Sur­ren­dered as if we were empty ves­sels. I used ves­sels in the sense that we have capac­ity to be poured into and then poured out. Imper­fect ves­sels as we are, with­out holes (in our faith and char­ac­ter), can con­tain bless­ings to God and oth­ers, in a way that we can daily be poured out as a drink offereing.

Lis­ten­ing this morn­ing to Ravi Zacharias—one of a few men who’s lives I fol­low, learn­ing from their faith, wis­dom and character—he told a story about a tumul­tuous time in his fam­ily grow­ing up in India. As a part of this story, relat­ing his moth­ers char­ac­ter,  he quoted this part of an Indian proverb:

“What­ever you are over­flow­ing with will spill out”

Easy to under­stand, right? The lit­tle boy in the car­pen­ters’ work­shop (pic­tured) appears to be mov­ing cau­tiously with a filled ves­sel (bowl) that serves some pur­pose (poured or some­how dis­charged to use) in the shop.  If his father or mas­ter  (pic­tured) were to back up as the boy went behind, he might bump into him, jostling his hands and poten­tially caus­ing the bowls con­tents to spill. The ques­tion is, if that bowl is us, what spills out?

For this rea­son I bow my knees before the Father, from whom every fam­ily in heaven and on earth is named, that accord­ing to the riches of his glory he may grant you to be strength­ened with power through his Spirit in your inner being, so that Christ may dwell in your hearts through faith—that you, being rooted and grounded in love, may have strength to com­pre­hend with all the saints what is the breadth and length and height and depth, and to know the love of Christ that sur­passes knowl­edge, that you may be filled with all the full­ness of God. (Eph­esians 3:14–18; Eph­esians 3:19 ESV)

Now in a great house there are not only ves­sels of gold and sil­ver but also of wood and clay, some for hon­or­able use, some for dis­hon­or­able.  There­fore, if any­one cleanses him­self from what is dis­hon­or­able, he will be a ves­sel for hon­or­able use, set apart as holy, use­ful to the mas­ter of the house, ready for every good work.
(2 Tim­o­thy 2:20–21 ESV)