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When we've been wronged, our hearts can become battlegrounds where forgiveness fights against our natural desire for justice. This week, Marc Wragg shows us what it means to forgive from the heart. We discover that genuine forgiveness isn't just a feeling or a one-time decision, but rather an ongoing demonstration of biblical love. The discussion challenges us to examine whether we're really forgiving by asking a penetrating question: Can we still fulfill the one-another commands of Scripture toward those who've hurt us? Can we serve them, speak truth to them, and care for their needs? If we find ourselves avoiding someone, creating emotional distance, or harboring expectations that they must meet before we show them love, we may be holding onto unforgiveness wrapped in religious language. Drawing from Matthew 18's parable of the unmerciful servant and connecting it to Ephesians 4, we're reminded that our impossible debt before God was released long before we confessed our sin. God's forgiveness toward us wasn't conditional on our repentance in eternity past, when He wrote our names in the Lamb's Book of Life. This reality transforms how we understand our call to forgive others, moving us from a transactional view to one rooted in unconditional release of debts, even as we pursue reconciliation and restoration in our relationships.
By Grace Immanuel Bible ChurchWhen we've been wronged, our hearts can become battlegrounds where forgiveness fights against our natural desire for justice. This week, Marc Wragg shows us what it means to forgive from the heart. We discover that genuine forgiveness isn't just a feeling or a one-time decision, but rather an ongoing demonstration of biblical love. The discussion challenges us to examine whether we're really forgiving by asking a penetrating question: Can we still fulfill the one-another commands of Scripture toward those who've hurt us? Can we serve them, speak truth to them, and care for their needs? If we find ourselves avoiding someone, creating emotional distance, or harboring expectations that they must meet before we show them love, we may be holding onto unforgiveness wrapped in religious language. Drawing from Matthew 18's parable of the unmerciful servant and connecting it to Ephesians 4, we're reminded that our impossible debt before God was released long before we confessed our sin. God's forgiveness toward us wasn't conditional on our repentance in eternity past, when He wrote our names in the Lamb's Book of Life. This reality transforms how we understand our call to forgive others, moving us from a transactional view to one rooted in unconditional release of debts, even as we pursue reconciliation and restoration in our relationships.