Sunday, December 13, 2015

a disturbed heart


It seems like I have been in my car a lot lately.

I went to Phoenix a few weekends ago and decided that instead of listening to Justin Biebers new cd on repeat…I was going to actually do something productive with my 7 hour drive and listen to podcasts!

(Actually…I first tried to listen to Harry Potter and the Sorcerers Stone on Audible…but it is just as boring listening to that book, as it is trying to read it! I mean – I LOVE the Harry Potter movies. They are some of my favorites…but I just can’t get through the first book…………….it’s soooo boring...so I thought I would try listening to it while I had the time in the car…but it was awful. Don’t worry though – I decided to start with the third book [since that’s the movie where I start getting really into the story] and I like it much better! So I will read the first two books once I read the last five =] okay…..this is the longest subsentence ever…….I think I just made that word up….)

Anywho…so I decided to listen to podcasts from Willow Creek Community Church. Willow Creek is located in Chicago. I first learned about it last year when I went to a satellite showing of the Global Leadership Summit. The Summit is hosted at Willow Creek by Bill Hybels, the Senior Pastor at the church.

Bill, along with another Pastor at the church, Steve Carter, did a five-week series called “Disturbing Grace”.

Steve opened the series with this gut-wrenching piece of truth:

“God’s grace is disturbing. It’s compelling and expansive. It provokes, unrattles and unnerves. It demands that you see God and yourself and others in an entirely new redemptive light.”

When I first heard this – I had to rewind it a few times to completely gather what he was saying.

God’s grace is disturbing.

God’s grace is compelling.

God’s grace is expansive.

God’s grace provokes.

God’s grace unrattles.

God’s grace unnerves.

God’s grace demands that you see God in an entirely new redemptive light.

God’s grace demands and you see yourself in an entirely new redemptive light.

God’s grace demands that you see others in an entirely new redemptive light.




Have you ever been hurt?

I mean – truly hurt…

By someone whom you placed your complete confidence in and thought you could trust 100%?

Someone who, when they hurt and betrayed you, caught you completely off guard? You never saw it coming. Maybe you saw tiny red flags…but nothing that would have given you any indication that they would hurt go to such extremes to hurt you…

Or maybe you saw bigger red flags…red flags that you knew you shouldn’t have ignored…but you did…because you cared about the person – and/or because you wanted to give them the benefit of the doubt…you want to believe in them and trust them.

Maybe if was a family member or a best friend. Or maybe it was a co-worker. Or a boyfriend or girlfriend…

No matter who it was – they hurt you.

But you don’t want to be bitter. Because you know, that if life has taught you anything, it is that being bitter IS NOT being better.

So you want to extend grace.

But you are having somewhat of a difficult time trying to figure out exactly what that means…



Here’s what I can tell you…


We think people hurt us.

We think that the pain and the betrayal that we experience from certain people is an end-all.

And we think that because we have been hurt, we have a right to make it known.

For some reason, we gain this sense of entitlement. We think that, because we have been hurt, we reserve the right to not forgive. Or we think that we reserve the right to have the upper hand.


“I know you said you’re sorry, but I don’t have to forgive you because I was genuinely hurt in it all and I don’t trust you or anything you say anymore, including when you apologize.”


The idea of forgiveness sounds appealing to us – but the reality of it sounds like a lot of hard work and the loss of our much-treasured entitlement.


We don’t get it at all. Our self-centeredness has completely blinded us.

We don’t get that we have a Creator. A perfect, just, merciful, loving, Creator.

We don’t get that this Creator…created us. He knows everything about us. He knows every single sin. Every single lie. Every single cheat. Every single impure thought. Every single ounce of hatred or bitterness that we harbor.

Not only does He know our past sins. He knows our present and future sins as well.

But because He is our creator and we are His children – He has given us the most precious thing of all – His Son. And with that, His grace and forgiveness.

I know I have talked about this so many times before…but it is TOO GREAT to NOT talk about over and over and over and over and over again! I wish this truth were the ONLY thing I talked about. I wish I never lost sight of or forgot it.

God is perfect. He will never maliciously hurt us. Yet, we wake up every morning already drowning in the sins of our day. Already betraying Him. Whether intentional or not – we constantly betray Him.

Yet He forgives.

His grace is disturbing.
And it should utterly wreck us.


So, we think people hurt us and betray us – and of course – to an extent, they do…but what are another’s sins towards us when we compare it to our sins towards such a perfect and holy God?

Nothing.



I don’t care what hurt someone has cause us. When we see ourselves as God see’s us – our response is to run and hide out of shame and embarrassment.

And if we allow bitterness and resentment to overcome us, keeping us from forgiving and extending grace towards others, then we should really run and hide out of shame and embarrassment.

I can’t help but think of Matthew 18 when Christ talks about the parable of the unmerciful servant…


Then Peter came to Jesus and asked, “Lord, how many times shall I forgive my brother or sister who sins against me? Up to seven times?”
Jesus answered, “I tell you, not seven times, but seventy-seven times.
Therefore, the kingdom of heaven is like a king who wanted to settle accounts with his servants. As he began the settlement, a man who owed him ten thousand bags of gold was brought to him. Since he was not able to pay, the master ordered that he and his wife and his children and all that he had be sold to repay the debt.
At this the servant fell on his knees before him. ‘Be patient with me,’ he begged, ‘and I will pay back everything.’ The servant’s master took pity on him, cancelled the debt and let him go.
But when that servant went out, he found one of his fellow servants who owed him a hundred silver coins. He grabbed him and began to choke him. ‘Pay back what you owe me!’ he demanded.
His fellow servant fell to his knees and begged him, ‘Be patient with me, and I will pay it back.’
But he refused. Instead, he went off and had the man thrown into prison until he could pay the debt. When the other servants saw what had happened, they were outraged and went and told their master everything that had happened.
Then the master called the servant in. ‘You wicked servant,’ he said, ‘I cancelled all that debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn’t you have had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?’ In anger his master handed him over to the jailers to be tortured, until he should pay back all he owed.
This is how my heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive your brother or sister from your heart.



You’ve heard the saying: “Fool me once shame on you, fool me twice shame on me.”

We can’t fool God.

And once we understand this reality…I don’t think it’s possible to have bitterness.

I don’t think it’s possible to not forgive someone.



I’m not saying that when do forgive someone that we should automatically trust them again – heck no!

“God wants us to reconcile but not go back.”

I would never agree with someone going back to a person/relationship that has hurt them (all depending on the type of relationship and the extent of the wrong-doing of course – there definitely can be plenty of exceptions)

What I am saying is that life – is life. It can be really rough sometimes and people can be cruel. But no matter what happens – we are not meant to live in our bitterness and hatred. We are meant to blossom and grow and live.

We can’t be the person that God has called us to be if we are ruled by hurt. We need to ask God to help us to truly forgive others the way that He has forgiven us.

No dwelling over past situations – no harboring hints of anger – no bringing it up again. We need to forgive.

We need to have the forgiveness and grace that causes the world to think there is something wrong with us because we so freely extend it.

God’s grace is disturbing and our grace should be disturbing too.



This song has been a favorite of mine lately…


Heaven knows I’m a broken man
These tired bones they can barely stand
The ways of the world oh I lay in my grave
To the darkest of nights when You call my name

Your love Your love oh it set me free
Oh no guilt no shame got a hold on me
Your love Your love well it opened my eyes
I was a dead man walking till You gave me life

Grace it comes with a price I’m told
Took the light of the world just to save my soul
But in the valley of the shadow of the cross you’ll find
Oh no brokenness when I come alive

Your love broke the chain
And I’m free from the guilt and shame
Love opened my eyes

Oh Your love Your love it set me free
Oh no guilt no shame got a hold on me
Your love Your love well it opened my eyes
I was a dead man walking till Lord
I was a dead man walking till Lord
I was a dead man walking till Lord
You gave me life

“Dead Man Walking”

-       John Tibbs