Mercy Lets Go
Author: Andrew Comiskey
March 22, 2021
Why such a gap between our
belief in God’s capacity to cleanse us from all unrighteousness and our refusal
to let Him?

My friend Dana shared
about how she fell into a lesbian relationship while discerning life in the convent.
Despite multiple confessions and absolutions, she could not forgive herself.
Torment, not trust in Jesus, prevailed in her life until she stopped and agreed
with Jesus. What He accomplished for her at Calvary trumped what she did.
Period. Intellectual assent dropped into her depths and she dropped the stone
she held toward herself.
Dana had yet to forgive
herself. Yes, she knew Jesus released her in some technical sense, but she
could not stop defining herself as a moral felon. The sword of judgment, not
the Cross of Christ, hung over her.
A demonic trick? Maybe. An
effort of our stubborn fallen humanity to atone for ourselves? Perhaps. We may
well derive some perverse comfort from a sustained effort to feel bad about
acting badly. Regardless, when we practice the presence of our failures rather
than Almighty Mercy, we mistrust Jesus. We cast a shadow over His tender face
and refuse the love that makes all things new.
Dana shared how she
finally broke as He broke through to loving her. She received mercy where she
needed it most. With His help, Dana opened the trap door of her heart and let
the garbage she had enshrined tumble out, away, never to be brooded over again.
She lives under one shadow now—the outstretched arms of Jesus who gave all to
free her. Her lovely countenance reflects His.
Mercy freed her to let go.
Dana shared all this in the context of forgiving others. She said that unless
one has been forgiven at core, it is difficult, maybe impossible to do what
Jesus asks and ‘forgive others from the heart’ (Matt. 18: 35). The garbage gathered
around our trap doors may well block the flow of mercy toward those who have
most damaged us. Dana shared new freedom in releasing beloved enemies through
the mercy that now courses through her veins.
This Lent, I urge you not
to linger around the mess you have made. Confess it, yes, then take that
forgiveness and say to yourself: ‘As Jesus has forgiven me, so I forgive
myself.’ Extend that mercy to all whose sin still ails you. Only way to heal.
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