10,000 Reasons To Forgive

Carl Pollard

How many sins did you commit last week? Intentional or not, the number’s probably higher than you’d care to admit. Now think about this year—four months in, how many times have you let God down? Sin’s no small thing. It defies God’s holy nature, builds a wall between us and Him, and tears us apart from the inside. We love picturing God as all about love—and He is—but Proverbs 6:16-19 lists seven things He hates: haughty eyes, a lying tongue, hands that spill innocent blood, a scheming heart, feet racing to evil, a false witness, and someone who stirs up division. Done any of those lately? Zoom out to your whole life—how many sins would fill your book? The weight of that debt is crushing and “unpayable.”

Jesus tells a story in Matthew 18:21-35 that hits this hard. Peter asks, “How often should I forgive my brother?” Thinking he’s generous, he suggests seven times—way past the rabbis’ three. Jesus shuts that down: “Not seven, but seventy times seven.” Don’t count—just forgive. Then He goes on to teach about a servant who owes his king 10,000 talents—60 million days’ wages, an impossible debt. The king could’ve sold him and his family, but instead, he forgives it all out of sheer compassion. What does the servant do? He chokes a guy who owes him pocket change—100 denarii—and throws him in prison. Same plea, “Be patient,” but no mercy. The king hears, calls him wicked, and reinstates the debt. Jesus ends it blunt: “So My Father will do to you if you don’t forgive from the heart.”

Our sin debt’s like that 60 million days—”unpayable.” Yet God forgives it through Jesus’ death and resurrection. Ephesians 2 says it’s grace, not our effort. But here’s the point: if we’ve been forgiven that much, how can we not forgive others? That servant’s hypocrisy is ours when we hold grudges or burn bridges. Jesus says the standard we use on others is the one God’ll use on us. If we can’t release someone’s debt against us, our own forgiveness hangs in the balance. 

How often do we forgive? Don’t count—God doesn’t count your sins against you. He releases the debt every time we ask. We’ve got to do the same.

Habakkuk: Living By Faith (II)

Faith often requires waiting patiently. What is now may seem like what will be, but trust in God’s character and power calls on us to “wait upon the Lord” (Isa. 40:31). What does Habakkuk have to say for the one struggling to keep faith in faithless times?

Faith Taught (2:1-20)

Neal Pollard

Habakkuk is struggling, but he desires to know God’s answer in the situation. There is a tremendous difference between railing out at God like a spoiled, uncontrolled toddler and reaching up to God begging for clarity and understanding while trusting that He can help. So, Habakkuk dutifully reports himself like a guard looking out from the walkway of a defensive wall, watching and waiting for an answer from God (1).

Starting in verse two, the Lord answers him. God wants him to write His answer down, a permanent and practical record for others to read. Habakkuk is told that these words are for the not-too-distant future (3). 

From verse four to the end of the chapter, God gives Habakkuk a lesson on faith.

LIVING BY FAITH (4). God starts the lesson with the contrast between the proud and the righteous. What He says about the proud sets the stage for what follows in the bulk of the chapter. His heart is not right within him. As the result, we will see what he is capable of. Yet, the righteous will live by his faith. This had to be comfort for Habakkuk as he struggles, by faith, to understand why God is using the wicked Chaldeans to punish the sin of the prophet’s country of Judah. The righteous would need to cling to their faith as they endured the events prophesied in chapter one. Think about how that has not changed today, even if the specifics are different. The world seems to be winning, and at times God may even use people and events to try and refine our faith. The proud has an impure heart, but the just shall live by faith (Rom. 1:17; Gal. 3:11; Heb. 10:38). 

LOSING BY FAITHLESSNESS (5-19). It appears that God is describing the character and behavior of the Babylonians. Though they are stronger and winning for the present, their immorality and ungodliness would undo them. Their voracious appetite for sin and destruction (5) would bring about their downfall (cf. Gal. 6:7-8; Prov. 22:8; Hos. 8:7). 

This is captured by the five “woe” statements in this chapter. “Woe” is an interjection of lamentation, found 50 times in the prophets. Ten percent of the occurrences are right here. It forms a list of charges that would indict the Babylonians. It would be a song sung by those who witnessed and endured their cruelty (6). The lamentation would be for those who:

  • …Take advantage of others financially (6-8). They would be overwhelmed by those who got the financial advantage over them. 
  • …Trust riches to get them what they think they want (9-11). They were impoverishing themselves, sinning against themselves. 
  • …Turn to violence and bloodshed to get what they want (12-14). God’s glory would eclipse not only whatever they temporarily achieve, but the name they briefly have for themselves (cf. Heb. 11:25). 
  • …Take advantage of others socially and sexually (15-17). What they sought to do to others would happen to them. The cup of judgment in God’s hand, which He was making others (like Judah) drink from as Babylon passed it to them, would come around to them and turn glory to disgrace. 
  • …Trust idols to save and lead them (18-19). They are proud of their invention, then turn and serve and worship it even though it cannot speak, guide, or save. 

We may feel more sophisticated than the Babylonians today, but we are wise to learn from their mistakes. The law of love will keep us from taking advantage of others in any way. Nor will we put our trust in money or anything that competes with the place only God is to occupy (Mat. 6:33). But if we do, God wants us to know how it will end. 

LOOKING UP BY FAITH (20). The end of the lesson is short and succinct. It will only be heeded by the faithful one of verse four. “The Lord is in His holy temple. Let all the earth be silent before Him.” This truth should produce hope, patience, confidence, but also reverence and fear. It will keep us from being hasty and impulsive, remembering that “God is in heaven and you are on the earth; therefore let your words be few” (Ecc. 5:2b). 

I Dare You To Jump Off This Wall

Thursday’s Column: Captain’s Blog

carl pic

Carl Pollard

Peer pressure was a topic that I was taught a lot as a teen. Many have the false assumption that only teens struggle with peer pressure. While it is true that as a young person it is easier to be persuaded, adults and mature Christians can fall for peer pressure just as easily.
While there are many personal illustrations I could use of times that I fell for peer pressure and did something dumb, I’m not going to use them because I like my job at Hebron. But, there is one that I will tell because it’s a great illustration on the power of peer pressure.
Back when I was 12 years old (I was young, perfect and innocent) I fell for peer pressure and I’ll never forget the life lesson that I was taught. At the Bear Valley church there was a wall outside that the teens would sit on and hang out. This wall was about 10 feet tall and at the bottom was a bunch of rocks and bushes. I remember watching all the teen guys jump off the wall and land in the bushes below. I wanted to jump off so bad, but I knew I’d get in huge trouble if I did. All the cool kids would go out after church and see who could do the coolest jump off this wall. I remember one of the guys saying, “This is how you prove you’re a man.” And so of course I had to prove I was a man. I didn’t want them to think that I was a chicken. So one evening after church I went and sat on top of the wall and got ready to jump. Everyone was watching and I knew there was no turning back. I sat on the wall for a good 15 minutes trying to build up the courage to jump off what seemed like a 30 foot drop. I finally took the plunge and jumped…and fell like a sack of rocks onto the drainage pipe below and broke it clean in half. A feeling of dread washed over me when I realized what I had done. One of the deacon’s kids ran and told his dad…who told the elders…who told my parents…who told me that I was grounded from going outside after church for the foreseeable future. Every Sunday and Wednesday I was forced to stay with my parents in the auditorium until we left. I learned a very valuable lesson that day. Peer pressure is dumb. And the only thing that you gain from it is trouble.
Being pressured to jump off a wall probably won’t ever happen to you, but there’s a choice that each one of us will have to make at some point in our lives. That’s the choice of who we will call our friends and companions. This choice will shape who we are, how we live, and where we will go in the next life. The foundation for this subject is built by looking at a comparison between the righteous and the wicked. We can build our character by choosing righteous company, but what does righteousness look like?
In Psalm 1, we are given this comparison. “Blessed is the man who walks not in the counsel of the ungodly, nor stands in the path of sinners, nor sits in the seat of scoffers” (1). There is a progression of temptation laid out here: blessed is the man who…Walks not in the counsel of the ungodly (the one who sees the sin and keeps walking) Nor Stands in the path of sinners (sees the sin and stops to watch out of curiosity) Nor sits in the seat of the scoffers (sees the sin and sits with them to join in).
“But his delight is in the law of the Lord, and on his law he meditates day and night” (2).  Rather than walking next to sin, standing with evil, and sitting with evil company, his delight is in God’s Word and not in the sin of his fellow man. This man is blessed because he chooses to mediate on the Law of the Lord rather than dwelling with those in sin.
“He is like a tree planted by streams of water that yields its fruit in its season, and its leaf does not wither. In all that he does, he prospers” (3). Once the righteous man has chosen God’s Word over sin, we are given the result of this choice. He’s healthy. He produces fruit. He’s well nourished. He’s blessed in what he sets out to accomplish. This happens as a result of choosing godliness over evil company.
“The wicked are not so, but are like chaff that the wind drives away” (4).  Those who choose evil deeds over God’s Word are worthless. They are described as chaff. Chaff is the husk on the outside of a wheat kernel. You can’t eat it, and it basically doesn’t do anything. You have to take it off before you can make anything with the wheat. How they would do this is they would throw it up in the air and it would seperate from the kernel and the wind would blow it away while the wheat would fall back down.
The wicked are useless to God. When it comes to choosing friends, we have just two choices. The righteous (that are blessed in what they do) or the wicked (the ones that are useless to God). The choice should be an easy one for us, and yet Christians will fail to make the right decision.
A piece of advice: Don’t jump off the wall. Choose to hang with those that are concerned for your well being. Choose the righteous friend that will look out for your soul.
jumper