mandag, februar 14, 2011

TIlgivelse

Sidder og arbejder med prædiken - tror prædikenen kommer til at handle om Guds ufattelige nåde. En nåde, der også provokere - jo mere nåde jo større provokation.
Men også en nåde, der gerne skal sætte vores liv i en nåderig vibration i retningen af vores næste.


Prøv læs denne historie, som jeg overvejer at bruge:


"The man I ate dinner with tonight killed my brother." The words, spoken by a stylish woman at a PF banquet in Seattle, amazed me. She told how John H. had murdered her brother during a robbery, served 18 years at Walla Walla, then settled into life on a dairy farm, where she had met him in 1983, 20 years after his crime. Compelled by Christ's command to forgive, Ruth Youngsman had gone to her enemy and pronounced forgiveness. Then she had taken him to her father's deathbed, prompting reconciliation.

Some wouldn't call this a success story: John didn't dedicate his life to Christ. But at that PF banquet last fall, his voice cracked as he said, "Christians are the only people I know that you can kill their son, and they'll make you a part of their family. I don't know the Man Upstairs, but He sure is hounding me."

John's story is unfinished; he hasn't yet accepted Christ. But just as Christ died for us regardless of our actions or acceptance, so Ruth forgave him without qualification. Even more so, she became his friend."

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