Monday 25 February 2013

Devotion: Magnanimity an attainment


Luke 23:34

 “Then said Jesus, Father, forgive them; for they know not what they do.” This is a very powerful statement. We cannot fully understand its power since we have not gone through a situation like this and we have never said this before.

In our newspaper, we read about the murders in the name of revenge.
The cross of Christ also shows his magnanimity along with His love, grace, and his physical sufferings. I would like to point out 2 things so that it helps us to understand his magnanimity.

  1. A rare instance of Human Magnanimity
  2. A beautiful example of practicing what you preach

A rare instance of Human Magnanimity

It's very important to note that when did he say this statement. He said this statement when he was on the cross. These first of the seven words from the cross seem, from their position in the record, to have been spoken very early in the awful scene, probably while the nails were being driven into the hands and feet.
Different from other holy dying men, he had no need to say, “Forgive me.”

Conscious, not only of perfect innocence but of the purest and even the loftiest aims, Jesus Christ found himself not only unrewarded and unappreciated, but misunderstood, ill-treated, condemned on a totally false charge, sentenced to the cruelest and shameful death a man could die.
What wonder if, under those conditions, all the kindliness of his nature had turned to the sourness of spirit!
2. At this very moment, he was the object of the most heartless cruelty man could inflict, and must have been suffering the pain of body and of mind that was literally agonizing.
3. At such a time, and under such treatment, he forgets himself to remember the the guilt of those who were so shamefully wronging him.
4. Instead of entertaining any feeling of resentment, he desired that they might be forgiven for their wrong-doing.
5. He did not haughtily and contemptuously decline to condemn them; he did not and reluctantly forgive them; he found for them a generous extenuation; he sincerely prayed for his heavenly Father to forgive them. Human magnanimity could hardly go further than that.
6. The greatness of his forgiveness can be better understood when we compare it to our forgiveness. It’s very difficult for us to forgive a person who has done wrong to us and love him as before.


A beautiful example of practicing what you preach

There are certain topics about which it's very easy to preach about but difficult to practice  One of such topic is forgiveness.

When in his great sermon, (Matthew 5-7.) he said, “Love your enemies. Pray for them which despite-fully use and persecute you, that ye may be the children of your Father which is in heaven,” he urged upon us to cherish and to illustrate the loftiest virtue on the highest grounds.
This he now beautifully, perfectly exemplified. He was literally and truly praying for those who were using him despite-fully, as the greatest generals and captains have proudly and honorably claimed that they “never bad men do that which they were not willing to do themselves,” so this our glorious
Leader, he who came to be the “Leader and perfector of the faith”
(Hebrews 12:2), never desired of us any virtue or grace which
he did not possess and did not himself adorn. He could and did say to his disciples, not only,” Go thither in the way of righteousness,” but also, “Follow me in every path of purity and love.” We may well love our enemies, and pray for those who despitefully use us, that we may be the children of our Father in heaven, and that we may be followers of our patient, magnanimous Master. And it is here, truly, that we have —

Conclusion

I just wanted to point out the greatness of his forgiveness. His forgiveness is not like ours. Just like he forgave the soldiers and the people around him he forgave our sins also. This should not encourage us to do more sins to test his forgiveness. The nails that the soldiers hammered were on his hands and feet, but today we are hammering the nails on his heart through our sins after getting that salvation. To pray sincerely for those who do us wrong is one of the very highest points, if not actually the very loftiest, of human magnanimity. To dismiss all vindictive purpose, all resentful thought; to look at our enemy’s procedure in a kindly light, and to take, as Christ did here, a generous view of it; to cherish a positive wish for his good; to put this wish into action, into prayer; — by these stages we reach the summit of nobility.

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