Get
rid of all bitterness, rage, anger, harsh words, and slander, as well as all
types of evil behavior. Instead, be kind to each other, tenderhearted,
forgiving one another, just as God through Christ has forgiven you.
- Ephesians 4:31-32 (NLT)
I
am a horrible example of not holding a grudge.
I’m honestly ashamed to admit that there are hurts I have carried much longer than I should have. Even recently.
A close friend responded to something in a way that hurt me deeply, and instead of dealing with it well, I let it settle into my heart. Looking back now, it really was not that big of a thing… but I sure made it big.
I became passive in little ways. Conversations changed. Interactions changed. The crack in our friendship slowly widened into a chasm.
The worst part? I’m not even sure my friend knows what they did that hurt me. So now we sit in this strange place where neither one of us knows how to apologize for something the other person may not even fully understand.
Do we just sweep it under the rug and pretend it never happened? Do we sit down and have an uncomfortable conversation and see if it’s even possible to step out of the hurt?
Anger is sneaky like that. It rarely explodes all at once. Most of the time it grows quietly in the background until one day we realize it has taken root deeper than we ever intended.
And the truth is… this isn’t really about me winning. It isn’t about proving who was right or wrong. It’s about Jesus. It’s about whether I am willing to live out the same grace and forgiveness that He continually gives to me.
Forgiveness does not mean pretending pain never existed. Sometimes it simply means choosing that the relationship matters more than the hurt.
I don’t know exactly how this story ends yet. But I do know that bitterness has never healed a single relationship. Grace has.
And I hope it still can.
#dailybreadbykitty
Daily Inspiration from the Bible
- Ephesians 4:31-32 (NLT)
I’m honestly ashamed to admit that there are hurts I have carried much longer than I should have. Even recently.
A close friend responded to something in a way that hurt me deeply, and instead of dealing with it well, I let it settle into my heart. Looking back now, it really was not that big of a thing… but I sure made it big.
I became passive in little ways. Conversations changed. Interactions changed. The crack in our friendship slowly widened into a chasm.
The worst part? I’m not even sure my friend knows what they did that hurt me. So now we sit in this strange place where neither one of us knows how to apologize for something the other person may not even fully understand.
Do we just sweep it under the rug and pretend it never happened? Do we sit down and have an uncomfortable conversation and see if it’s even possible to step out of the hurt?
Anger is sneaky like that. It rarely explodes all at once. Most of the time it grows quietly in the background until one day we realize it has taken root deeper than we ever intended.
And the truth is… this isn’t really about me winning. It isn’t about proving who was right or wrong. It’s about Jesus. It’s about whether I am willing to live out the same grace and forgiveness that He continually gives to me.
Forgiveness does not mean pretending pain never existed. Sometimes it simply means choosing that the relationship matters more than the hurt.
I don’t know exactly how this story ends yet. But I do know that bitterness has never healed a single relationship. Grace has.
And I hope it still can.
Daily Inspiration from the Bible