Community of Forgiveness
In order to have community with a person you must have a right relationship with them. This means two things; you must know the person (there is no right relationship where there is no relationship), and forgiveness must be a priority in the relationship.
Forgiveness is necessary because in every relationship, big and small, there are annoyances, wrongs, and frustrations that must be over come. Merely overlooking these issues will only get you by in the short run. To maintain a relationship that has longevity and depth, there must be forgiveness. Real forgiveness.
If you are like me, you understand this because you need it. We all need it. Forgiveness is a grace afforded us that we have not earned but can appreciate as a gift. We must seek that forgiveness when we are wrong, and we must be intentional about giving forgiveness to those who wrong us.
Lets imagine a relationship that doesn’t involve what I call “intentional forgiveness”. You have known this person for years. For the first few months of your friendship everything was going well and it seemed like you might have found a great friend. Then, over the course of time that person’s selfishness started showing through. Rather than possibly offending your new friend, you decided to shrug it off. The problem is, every time this selfishness shows through now, it’s harder to shrug off. Eventually you find yourself avoiding your friend, after all, they are only interested in themselves and don’t really care about you anyway.
Because you chose to avoid the discomfort of forgiveness, you forfeited what looked to be a promising friendship. Intentional forgiveness isn’t easy, it’s not comfortable or convenient, sometimes it requires that we have difficult conversations, but this type of forgiveness is the key to deep community among friends.
In a real relationship, where there is a deep level of community, there are always uncomfortable encounters of intentional forgiveness. I’m not saying this is easy. Relationships are hard. Developing community within a relationship is even harder. There’s no fast track to deep relationships, intimacy (community) only comes after working through something difficult together. Intentional forgiveness, for you, or from you, is one of those difficult processes that must happen in the development of real community.
This, of course, is just one component of what it takes to build real, deep community. More thoughts on this are coming…


April 5th, 2007 at 2:12 pm
Adam,
Well said! Every relationship (whether it is with one other person or a large group of people)requires a lot of work to foster its growth. That growth comes as the fruit of the work, and the work necessarily entails getting to know one another through talking, spending time together, discovering the similarities and the differences everyone has. The more we come to know one another, the more the (I like the way you termed it) “intentional forgiveness” is needed, and it is needed to be actively sought after and to be truly given. Without it we are not being vessels of mercy and grace, but are living as earthen pots full of self and sin.
It is my experience that being in “community” with others is necessary on many levels. Being with like-minded Christians feeds me, as I am blessed to minister to them/with them and as I am ministered to by them; it recharges me, encourages me, strengthens me, sharpens me, equips me. Such unity is built on ,seasons of laughing and crying together – and extensively on forgiveness, His and ours to one another.
I look forward to reading more of your post.
Blessings, Cg
April 6th, 2007 at 10:23 am
[...] by ubergoober on April 5th, 2007 Adam at askingY has a couple of good posts on community. Click here and [...]
April 8th, 2007 at 5:38 pm
[...] at askingY.com (see here) is talking about the same things that my home church has been talking about for the last year. [...]
January 18th, 2008 at 1:42 am
i accepted jesus but i suffer from biterrness and rersentment can i still be a christian