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And do not bring sorrow to
God's Holy Spirit by the way you live. Remember, he is the one who has
identified you as his own, guaranteeing that you will be saved on the day of
redemption. Get rid of all bitterness, rage, anger, harsh words, and slander, as
well as all types of malicious behavior. Instead, be kind to each other,
tenderhearted, forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven
you. (Ephesians
4:30-32 NLT).
Melvin
McDonald served in the Canadian Navy during World War II. One Monday, the
79-year-old McDonald and his wife showed up at the front desk at police
headquarters in Winnipeg. His opening line to the police officer that offered to
assist him was, "I got a grenade." He wasn't making a threat, mind you, just
stating a fact. With that, he took a hand grenade out of a brown paper bag and
gave it to the officer.
The shocked constable kept his head. He did, however, call the bomb squad
immediately. Then things really started to happen. Most of the main floor of the
Public Safety Building was evacuated, the fire department was put on alert, and
the bomb squad showed up with all its sophisticated paraphernalia. The grenade
was still primed and ready with explosive. Its fuse was intact. "I've had it in
the house all these years," the veteran said. "I used to have it on a stand."
His nephew had suggested it ought to be turned over to the police. An
embarrassed McDonald apologized for all the commotion he caused. It was only a
keepsake from a training exercise in Scotland in the early 1940’s.
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Many people today are carrying around a “grenade” which is primed and ready
also. It’s not a physical explosive, but one just as deadly. That explosive
would be unresolved conflict and anger. One of the unhealthiest ways to live is
by burying and denying unresolved anger, hurts, or bitterness from the past.
These are the supercharged, repressed, negative emotions that, like an old live
hand grenade, when triggered can cause an emotional explosion and severely
damage or destroy close relationships. On the other hand, if these emotions stay
buried and get triggered, they can cause an implosion and destroy a person's
health and well being.
Like all of God's directives, it is not without good reason that the Bible
advises us to get rid of these destructive emotions. And we don't get rid of
them by burying them and denying their existence. It is imperative that they are
recognized, expressed in creative rather than destructive ways, and resolved.
The apostle Paul has a solution to getting rid of such conflict in our reading
this morning. He uses three words. We are to be kind, tenderhearted, and
forgiving. Kindness is a graciousness that is rooted in a tender heart, someone
who may truly empathize with another’s plight. These two lead us to forgiveness.
Give it a try.
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Chad J Hedgepath.
Cited on KneEmail; www.oakhillcoc.org. |