Two African friends,
Lesiba and Nomsa, were walking together at the edge of the Sahara Desert. At
some point in their journey, they had a terrible argument and Lesiba slapped
her friend in the face. Nomsa, who had gotten slapped, was feeling quite hurt.
Without saying a single word, she wrote in the sand, “Today my best friend,
Lesiba, slapped me in the face.”
They kept on walking until they found an oasis; there they decided
to take a bath. Nomsa, who had been slapped, soon got stuck in quicksand and
started sinking and drowning. Naturally her friend, Lesiba, saved her life by
pulling her out of that thick mire. After she recovered from her near drowning
experience, Nomsa wrote down on a stone, “Today my best friend, Lesiba, saved
my life.”
Lesiba who had
earlier slapped then later saved her best friend, Nomsa, asked this question:
“After I hurt you, you wrote in the sand, and now, you write on a stone. Why?”
Nomsa replied with a
knowing smile, “When someone hurts us, we should write it down in sand, where
the winds of forgiveness can erase it, but when someone does something good for
us, we must always engrave it in stone, so nothing can ever erase it.”
So learn to write
your hurts in sand and carve your blessings in stone.
Some people record
the faults and failures of others on what I term an EMOTIONAL ABACUS. That is,
they keep a mental record of personal offenses, and this stored information
influences their future dealings with others. However, the New Covenant
constrains us to react to our hurts in a decidedly different way. In the words
of the Apostle Paul, LOVE “does not dishonor others, it is not self-seeking, it
is not easily angered, IT KEEPS NO RECORD OF WRONGS. Love does not delight in
evil but rejoices with the truth. It always protects, always trusts, always
hopes, always perseveres.” (I Corinthians 13:5-7, NIV)
My friend, how is
your LOVE LIFE? If others were to examine your emotional abacus, would it
reflect a SCORE TALLY of offenses, or forgiveness and favor?
Sisters and
brothers, be continually blessed and please (above all else) MAKE SURE YOU ARE
READY TO MEET YOUR SOON COMING KING. Maranatha!
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