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By In Men, Theology, Wisdom

Letters To Young Men: The Burden of Performance

Young Man,

It has been a while since I have written a letter to you. The demands of life and new responsibilities have kept me from it. I have also been mulling over the topics that need to be covered. I don’t want to become too repetitive, but the principles through these letters necessarily overlap. So, I have been mulling over what characteristic of masculinity needs to be emphasized in this letter, and I have settled on the masculine burden of performance. There are always gaps and questions left unanswered because you can think of many “but” and “what if” exceptions and questions. I can’t answer all those questions in a book much less this short letter. I won’t even try. Indeed, I am still working on understanding and formulating my thoughts. Writing helps me to do that and, hopefully, think more about these issues and cultivate your masculinity.

The masculine burden of performance is the necessity to continue to perform and grow in your masculine responsibilities, which will, under healthy circumstances, help you remain attractive to women in general or your wife in particular. The phrase “burden of performance” floats around in the manosphere. I don’t know who coined it, but Rollo Tomassi has much to say about it on his blog and in his books. I touched upon it some in my letter to you regarding respect. This needs to be developed because, quite frankly, living in a culture that is primarily feminine in its perspective, men don’t understand why they can’t just be “accepted for who they are” without some type of performance-shaming, which hurts their feelings. (I’ll explain why this is feminine in a moment.) Men shouldn’t have to perform and achieve to be respected. “I just want to be me” is usually code-speak for, “I don’t want to work for your respect. I want your respect (love) just because I exist.” We should be attractive to women just as they are attractive to us: just for being. Women may have some form of affection toward you as a non-achieving man, but it will be the same type of pity that she has for those abandoned dogs she sees on commercials, not the love a man desires: respect that contributes to her desiring you sexually.

Women don’t have the same burden of performance men have. This isn’t whining, nor is it being condescending to women or saying that women have no responsibilities. It is a recognition of the created differences between men and women and the sexual dynamics between us. Men are created with a unique burden of performance. The man is responsible for the mission of the world. God appointed him to guard and keep the garden. Sin entered the world and the whole human race fell into sin through the man, not through the woman (Rom 5.12). The woman is called to be a faithful helper of the man, but the man owns the primary responsibility for the mission.

These differences affect our intersexual dynamics because they are a part of who we are and what God expects of us as men and women. One aspect of the difference between us is captured by some in the phrase, “Women are. Men become,” a phrase used even by lesbian first-wave feminist Camille Paglia (who, quite frankly, has many good things to say because she still understands that there is such a thing as men and women). To be sexually attractive to a man, women just have to be. God has given them pretty much everything they need for initial attraction. Even transitioning into womanhood is effortless and clearly defined; womanhood is granted. When a female begins her menstrual cycle (“gets her period”), she is considered to be a woman. Womanhood is defined by her natural biological progression. This is not to say that women have no responsibility at all to cultivate their womanhood. Women have the responsibility to add character to their physical attractiveness so that their beauty is more than skin deep (1Pt 3.3-4). It is this character that will cause her husband to cherish her even when her physical attractiveness fades (Prov 31.30; “beauty is vapor” not “vain;” it appears for a time and vanishes away; see Jms 4.14; this is the “everything is vapor” theme that Solomon picks up in Ecclesiastes). Womanhood is given, but it must be cultivated, developed, and maintained. In some respects, women have it easier the younger they are and more difficult as they grow older, which is the opposite of men, especially in terms of attraction. Women tend to be more attractive to men physically early in life (their twenties), and men to be more attractive as they get older (their thirties) because of their achievements. (Remember, we are attracted to one another for different reasons.)  Women don’t have to achieve anything in the beginning to be attractive to a man or even to be a woman. They just pass right into it naturally, and everyone acknowledges it.

We can understand this with the principle of “different glories for different bodies” that Paul talks about in 1Corinthians 15. There is one glory of the sun and another of the moon; there is one glory of the woman and another glory of the man. Women are given a glory early that must then be cultivated and men must wait for their glory. Man’s glory is only granted after a process of death and resurrection. This fits with the order and manner of our creation. The woman is the glory of the man (1Cor 11.7), but he must endure death (“sleep” and being ripped in half) to receive this glory. The woman is created as the glory of the man. She is the glory of the man in her given createdness. As with any gift of glory (responsibility, beauty, rule) God grants, there is a corresponding responsibility to be a good steward and cultivate it. She is created as the glory of the man in order to give glory to the man. The woman must cultivate this glory throughout her life as she and her glory move through life’s changes, the old glory passing away (vapor) and moving into new expressions of glory. But even in this cultivation, the man bears responsibility for the cultivation of his glory, the woman. The woman is created as part of the garden and, therefore, his responsibility to guard and work. He has the responsibility to cultivate her glory because she is his glory. She must be a “responsive soil” and play her part, fulfilling her God-given responsibilities. But in Ephesians 5, Paul places the sanctification–the beautification–of the wife upon the husband, looking back to those original garden commands. Working with a faithful husband, she must receive the gifts given to her by her husband and cultivate her given glory. However, she begins with a gift of womanhood without achievement.

(It can be tempting to get into binary thinking when dealing with the responsibilities of men and women. When some hear that the man has responsibility for the cultivation of the woman’s glory, they interpret that as, “If anything goes wrong with the woman, it is the man’s fault. She bears no responsibility.” Others, knowing that the woman is also a morally responsible agent will go to the opposite extreme: she bears all of the responsibility. This type of hardline binary thinking in human relationships is almost always wrong. The man is responsible to be the man and give to the woman everything that she needs to cultivate her femininity. The woman is responsible to receive the gifts from the man humbly and gratefully. She is to take what the man gives her, glorify it, and give it back to the man for his glory. Think of this in terms of conception and birth. The man plays his part and gives the gift of seed to the woman. She gratefully receives the seed, nurtures it through gestation, and then gives birth to a child, increasing the man’s (as well as her own) glory. The woman is responsible to be the woman God created and commanded her to be in response to the man. If she is rebellious toward the man and his gifts, she is responsible for her sin. If the man is rebellious with regard to his responsibilities, he is responsible for his sin. When either the man or the woman refuses to take responsibility, the other is always hurt in the relationship. Now, back to the main thought…)

The lines of manhood aren’t so clearly defined for the man. In contrast to the created glory of the woman, the glory of young men is their strength, and the glory of old men is their grey head (Pr 20.29). Both of these are achieved over time. Yes, a man’s looks may be initially eye-catching to a woman, but he must perform or achieve to attract or increase that attraction. Women are attracted to men they perceive to be high value, and high-value men are achievers in some form or fashion. Women are attracted to men that other men respect (which comes through achievement, who have proven themselves) and other women desire. We are not attractive for just “being.” Two guys can be equally physically attractive, but if one is the quarterback of the football team and the other an under-achieving video gamer, take a guess who will be most attractive to the ladies.

Unlike women, our manhood is not closely joined to our biological progression. The transition into manhood has been different from culture to culture throughout history, many cultures having rites of passage. But one thing is consistent: puberty is not the entrance into manhood. Males are seen as awkward, horny boys. Manhood is not given. It is achieved. The man must endure a test of some sort, be approved by other men, and then accepted into the fraternity of manhood. (Unfortunately, these cultural rites of passage have been lost in Western Culture. Families may have these rites of passage, but they are not consistent throughout our culture.) To be attractive to a woman and to sustain that attraction, a man must perform. He must prove himself to the woman, satisfying her hypergamous desire that the man to whom she will commit herself is “above” her and can provide for and protect her. He must satisfy her hypergamous question, “Is this the best that I can do?” Men create value in the eyes of women through achievement and, with it, respect. As I have mentioned before, when we lose our physical prowess, the wisdom or other strengths that we have gained through the years (for example, financial success, notoriety, wisdom) keep us a “high-value man.”

As you might guess, these truths can be teased out of God’s original creation. God created the man and gave him a mission of dominion. He is working before the woman comes along. There is no praise for the man for what he has done yet. He hasn’t accomplished anything yet worthy of praise. However, when God creates the woman, the man awakens and the first words of a man recorded in Scripture are poetic praise of the woman. The woman just appeared, and the man broke into song. The woman in her sexual agency just is, and that is her primary power with a man.

Quite frankly, a woman only has to take off her clothes and let you know that she is available to gain power over most men. Consider Harlot Folly in Proverbs. She is a perversion of this power, but she is perverting the power God gave her. She doesn’t show the young man all of the things that she has achieved to draw him in (the opposite of Lady Wisdom, who has prepared the house for a feast). She is “dressed as a harlot” (Pr 7.10), indicating through eye appeal that she is inviting sexual advances. She aggressively kisses him (Pr 7.13). She talks to him about the place where they can have sex (Pr 7.16ff.). She can capture the young man with her eyes (Pr 6.25). Harlot Folly continues misusing female power today through pornography, earning money through “Only Fans” pages, and, many times, taking off all of her clothes to make political statements. (Many links could be provided for all of these, but, for obvious reasons, I won’t link them.) Women are, and the sexual agency that they have naturally, especially in their youth, is their primary power with men.

Men, on the other hand, must “man up,” which means that they must be strong and perform. There is no equivalent common phrase for women. When people say “woman up,” it just comes off awkward and silly because we know it doesn’t fit. Men become. Men can’t merely take off all of their clothes and have the same power over women. Generally, men like this are the idiots who streak at ball games for a good laugh (and probably because they were dared or lost a bet). Men must prepare fields outside, establishing that we can provide, and then we can build a house with a woman (Pr 24.27). Men are expected to perform if they are going to be respected and attractive.

Women despise weakness in their men, some because it stirs up latent fear that she is left vulnerable and, related, because she is now thinking, “This is not the best that I can do.” Women will mock men’s pain (unless it is a mother with a son), comparing it to their own in menstruation or child-birth; “Men are such whiners. If you had to go through a period or childbirth….” They will make fun of us because of our “man colds.” Granted some men deserve to be made fun of because they are being wimps, but it is true that viruses do affect men more severely than women due to our differences (cold and flu viruses are different in men and women; COVID-19 disproportionately harms men more than women, even killing more men than women). Many times, there is not a lot of sympathy from women (or from other men!) because men are expected to be strong and perform. A woman needs a strong man, and her man’s weakness, his lack of performance, is a threat to those needs being met.

Your weakness says something about her. As I mentioned in another letter, self-deprecation, embracing and praising your weakness, tells women that you are not high value. If you are married, your wife takes it as an insult. This was expressed in an episode of Duck Dynasty when Jase lost his wedding band. As he and his wife, Missy, were shopping for a new one, she wanted Jase to get a flashy wedding band that said, “Stay away. I’m married.” Jase said something to the effect of, “There are only about twelve women who would look at me and say, ‘That’s worth a shot.’ They are probably all in prison.” Missy responded, “What does that say about me?” You insult her by not being a high-value man, a man that many other women would want.

Men show high value through the display of some type of accomplishment. The PUA (Pick Up Artist) community understands this principle of portraying having achieved high value but, like Harlot Folly, twists this power. They take cheap short-cuts to sexually attract women through “peacocking.” Much of their peacocking is juvenile and silly to us, but they dress in very flamboyant ways to demonstrate some type of value. Because it is cheap and superficial, because they are “empty suits,” not able to sustain a truly manly performance that achieves anything substantive, their relationships are unhealthy and fizzle. But again, to some women–some of them very attractive–they display some type of value, looking the part … at least for a while. Nevertheless, they have hit on something that attracts women, and it is something that is proven time and again. Men who demonstrate status or who are accomplished in some fashion are more attractive to women. Many rock stars have groupies, women who hope that they will choose them, and they will use their sexual agency hoping to secure the prize. High power men in society attract women. Even pastors and other high-profile teachers in the church can have women throwing themselves at them. Stories abound like this.

Aaron Renn talks about this aspect of the attraction phenomenon in his newsletter The Basis of Attraction. He charts the different ages in which women and men are most attracted to one another in his newsletter The Truth About Online Dating. It is consistently proven true that men become more attractive to women as they grow older, the peak being somewhere in their mid-thirties. This is the time when they are the most established and have at least begun to accomplish some of their financial or status success. If you are going to sustain attraction from a woman, you must bear up under this burden of performance and command respect through what you do.

The burden of performance can’t merely be “a performance;” that is, it can’t be an act. This is not something you put on for a while to “get the girl” or, if you’re married, “get sex.” If you consider the burden of performance a technique so that you relax once you achieve the immediate goal, then the relationship will not be sustained in a good and healthy way. This performance must become who you are. It may begin by doing things that “aren’t you,” which means that you are not comfortable with them or you want to remain slothful and not do what you ought to be doing. But as with all changes that must take place in mind and body, you discipline yourself to do what you should do, and then you become what you are supposed to be. You change the way you think and act by the way you discipline your mind and body.

This performance is nothing more than what God has called you to do in fulfilling your masculine vocation in dominion, your mission: work and make the world fruitful. This performance is your masculine responsibility. You must not only fulfill these responsibilities, but they must also become what you love. The burden of performance is not a technique. This is who you are.

When done right, there is a beautiful synergy between a woman’s hypergamy and a man’s burden of performance. We need one another, and these characteristics of male and female move us to complete one another and the mission God gave us. Hypergamy drives men to perform to maintain desire from women in general and his wife in particular. When the man performs, the woman is drawn to him to complete his mission. It is a dance with the man in the lead. This synergy can’t be achieved by “reason.” As a man, you can’t talk a woman into a good relationship with you, laying out all of your qualifications. Some confident talk about yourself may help. But in the end, you must do in order to make her feel, and because she prioritizes emotion over rationality (see the previous letter about the differences in the way men and women think), she is looking to feel something.

Conversely, when she perceives you as weak, whether physically, emotionally, or psychologically (you lack courage, determination, mental stamina, etc.), you lose respect (not the every-once-in-a-while bad day, but a sustained, characteristic weakness). One way this expresses itself is being “needy.” We have needs, and those needs are well known to women. We have a need for food. We must eat to live. But food must not become our master, an idol from which we seek life. We have a need for sex. We don’t need sex like we need food, but our drive for sex is sometimes as strong (stronger?) than our drive for food. But we must not be mastered by our desire. That is the way you fall to temptation when Harlot Folly comes around. We have needs, but women who can manipulate you through your needs will, in the end, not respect you because you are weak. You must master your needs so that you cannot be manipulated by Harlot Folly’s temptations or your wife threatening to withhold sex because she is angry with you or testing you to see if you have your stuff together. You still have the need, to be sure, but becoming “needy” is pitiful and weak. You are like a city broken into and left without walls (Pr 25.28). Being mastered by your appetites so that you will resort to any kind of action to satisfy them is neediness that is weakness. When you are in a healthy relationship with your wife, when she is seeking to be a godly wife, she will know your needs and want to meet them; whether it is fixing a sandwich or having sex. When you are being a man for her, she will be happy to help you in any way that she can.

Don’t think that these intersexual dynamics operate formulaically or mechanically. There are times that you will be all that you are supposed to be as a man and your wife will not do these things for you because she is in rebellion. Yahweh was the perfect husband to Israel, and Israel was an unfaithful whore (see, for example, Ezekiel 16). As men, we certainly have the responsibility to perform in our masculinity so that she has no excuse not to respond to us positively, but, again, it is not automatic. Both the man and woman have responsibilities.

I can’t caveat and balance everything that I am saying here, but I do want to give you some caution. We must be careful here not to think that we will lose attractiveness to our wives if something happens to us physically that we can’t control. There are certainly many women out there who, at the first sign of weakness in their men, ditch them to go find another. This is hypergamy gone wild. Rollo goes through a whole list of “hypergamy doesn’t care” that characterizes many women. Covenant commitment reins in hypergamy so that she must be committed for richer or poorer and in sickness or in health. This is good. (The same is true for man’s desires, especially when he becomes attractive through his performance and is tempted by other women.) The covenant of marriage puts boundaries on how a woman tries to satisfy her hypergamy, but it doesn’t eliminate her hypergamous impulses, nor should it. She expects her man to be strong. Even if he endures some physical disabilities, for example, he needs to remain mentally tough. Think of the military men who have come back from battle with missing limbs, yet their wives remain with them. They have earned respect and, many of them, remain or at least get to the place in which they are mentally tough.

You have a burden to carry as a man, sometimes it seems heavy and at other times it seems lighter, but it is always a burden. You must continue to grow in your masculine prowess, whether that is in intellect, strength, wealth, skill, mental fortitude, or other ways, not just for attraction (though that is a benefit), but because this is a burden God has given you as a man.

For Christ’s Kingdom,

Pastor Smith

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By In Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom, Worship

Easter: The Garden Feast

In the beginning, God gave man a project; he was to be fruitful and multiply, filling the earth and subduing it (Gen 1.28). To complete this project, man would be dependent upon God to give him gifts along the way. One of the first gifts God gave the man was the woman. She was his helper. His other gifts involved food. There was a multitude of trees that would provide food for man, but there were two special gifts of food in the middle of the Garden: the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. The man and his wife were invited to the Tree of Life to eat freely. There God would grant them the gift of life, confirming them in their relationship with him forever. The Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil was forbidden at first but would be granted at a later time. They needed to grow up for a while before they could handle this “strong food” (see Heb 5.11ff.). This food would grant them wisdom and authority to move the dominion project forward. They weren’t ready for this food in the beginning. (For details on this, see Two Trees & A King.)

The man and woman disobeyed, ate from the wrong tree first. Their eyes were opened. God came in the “spirit of the day” to commune with them at the trees and uncovered their sin, pronouncing curse and promise. They were then graciously exiled so that they would not have access to the Tree of Life. Cherubim with flaming swords were stationed at the east entrance of the Garden to guard the Garden (the responsibility originally given to Adam).

God’s intention was not to keep man barred from the Garden forever. He wanted man to draw near to him, to live forever, and grow up to have authority over the creation so as to make it what God intended it to be. The only way for this to happen was for another Adam, a sinless Adam, to endure the flaming swords of the cherubim, eat of the Tree of Life, and then be granted the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil by the Father so that he might have all authority over creation to move it to goal.

Luke’s recording of that first Easter Sunday shows us how Jesus remedied Adam’s sin.

The scene opens with women, helpers, coming to the garden tomb. Jesus isn’t there. He is risen. Two men, whom we later learn are angels (Lk 24.23), are there with “lightning clothes.” They are the cherubim who guard the Garden. Even though they are terrifying to look upon, they are welcoming of the ladies. There is no reason to fear. The faithful Adam has passed through their fire, protecting the woman. Having endured the flame, he was granted the fruit of the Tree of Life. He is risen. He lives. He will live forever, confirmed in his righteous standing with the Father. In his one act of obedience in submitting to death, he secures the forgiveness of sins and access for his bride to the fruit of the Tree of Life.

But the story is not over.

On the same day, two disciples take a trip to Emmaus. One’s name is Cleopas, who may be the Clopas mentioned in John 19.25, the husband of Mary. It is quite possible that this may be a man and his wife on this road. Jesus joins them to walk and talk with them. Their eyes are closed. They don’t know who he is, neither do they understand what has happened over the past few days. Jesus leads them through a Scripture study concerning how Messiah must suffer to enter his glory, his reign as king. Their eyes are still closed. When they arrive at the house, Jesus sits down with them and, with an unmistakable connection to the events of the night of his betrayal, he takes bread, blesses it, breaks it, and gives it to them. When they receive the food, their eyes are open, not to see their nakedness and be ashamed, but to see and understand Jesus and his work. Jesus gave them the fruit of the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. It was time.

But that’s not the end.

Their eyes are opened for a purpose. Jesus has received all authority over creation so that God’s original plan for creation can move forward. The dominion project will move forward now through the proclamation of the gospel that Christ died, was buried, and rose again. They must proclaim repentance and the forgiveness of sins to all the nations. Because sins have been forgiven, because sin’s power has been broken through the resurrection, we can now complete what God called us to in the beginning.

From the Garden man was cast

Kept from the Tree of Life;

The flaming swords he shall not pass

Because of his dark vice.

He grasped at wisdom’s vesture

So like God he could be;

Now subject to the serpent

He lives on beastly.

Creation over which he ruled

Is now bowed beneath the curse;

In hope it is subjected,

‘Til God assuage its hurt.

A faithful man takes up the task

To be creation’s king;

He passes through the flaming swords

Enduring sinlessly.

In death he conquers death

Forgiving Adam’s sin;

And eating from the Tree of Life

The world shall live in him.

The Father gives him wisdom’s fruit

He eats it for to reign;

Creation’s King is now enthroned

To free creation’s pain.

In bread and wine he shares

The fruit of both the Trees;

That we may live and reign with him

To see creation free.

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By In Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Holy Saturday: Wait

The nature of man’s first sin was impatience. He grasped for God’s promise of wisdom and authority before the time he was ready for it. The Father would have delighted to give his son, Adam, all that he needed at the right time, but if Adam didn’t grow to the place that he could handle it, eating from the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil would be destructive. And it was.

Patience. Waiting for the proper time. There are times that we are called to wait, to be longsuffering, to endure. God’s promise delays. We grow impatient. The pain. The injustice. The suffering. We thought that living in obedience would mean God would be quick to deliver. But he waits. We are not ready. There are lessons to learn. We must wait.

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By In Theology, Wisdom

Good Friday: You Shall Surely Die

The Garden had become a place of death. Two cherubim with flaming swords were stationed at the east gate, ready to strike and put to death anyone who sought access to the Tree of Life in the midst of the Garden.

God never intended to keep man out of the Garden forever. God desired communion with man; for man to draw near to him with no veils in between. But man sinned and was cut off from this nearness to God.

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By In Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Maundy Thursday: The Food of Love

On Palm Sunday, the anointed but-not-yet-coronated king entered the gates of Jerusalem to the shouts of “Hosanna,” save us, now, we pray, “Blessed is the King who comes in the name of the Lord.” They were echoing the declaration of the Father at Jesus’ baptism and Transfiguration. Jesus is God’s Son, the last Adam, the king of creation, the one to whom the dominion mission was given. Unlike the first Adam, Jesus did not grasp authority ahead of time. He waited on the Father’s timing and the gifts that the Father would give him in order to fulfill his task faithfully. Also unlike the first Adam, Jesus began with a sin-wracked world that lived under the dominion of death without resurrection. The King’s mission was to provide the forgiveness of sins, which would release the world from the dominion of sin and death, granting it life, and then pick up the dominion project to move the world from glory to glory.

Forgiveness of sins is fundamental to the creation moving forward into the glory that God destined for it in the beginning. In order to get right what Adam got wrong, Jesus would have to go back to the two trees in the midst of the Garden of Eden: the Tree of Life and the Tree of the Knowledge of Good and Evil. He would have to eat from both of them in the right way and order.

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By In Theology, Wisdom

Two Trees & A King

As Jesus entered Jerusalem upon the colt, people were laying their cloaks on the road and proclaiming “Blessed is the king who comes in the name of the Lord!” (Lk 19.35-38) King. What does that mean? God himself defined this kingship at the beginning of history, and Luke guides us to see just what “king” means.

At his baptism, Jesus is declared to be God’s beloved son. Immediately following the record of Jesus’ baptism, Luke records the genealogy of Jesus that traces Jesus’ lineage all the way back to Adam, “the son of God” (Lk 3.21-38). Jesus is the second and last Adam, a truth that Luke’s apostolic companion, Paul, makes clear in his letters (Rom 5.12-21; 1Cor 15.45-49). Adam was creation’s original son of God. He was the image of God, the one was to live in the fullness of union and communion with God, the representative head of creation, and, as such, the one who had the responsibility as creation’s king to take dominion over the creation, moving it from glory to glory until the earth looked like God’s heaven. Adam was to cultivate the world, from gardens to culture, building houses and cities, being fruitful and multiplying and filling the earth. He was creation’s king (see Ps 8; see also Heb 1–2).

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By In Counseling/Piety, Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Pursue Peace (Part 2)

The goal of forgiveness is peace, the reconciliation of a relationship in some form, removing the enmity between two people, and having a healthy relationship in this new situation. Reconciliation post forgiveness may not restore the relationship to what it was before the sin occurred, but there can be genuine peace between the offender and the offended.

Offenses will continue to occur as long as we live in this mortal flesh. Consequently, forgiveness will always be a craft we must work at to pursue peace. However, pursuing peace is not limited to our actions after someone has sinned against us or we have sinned against someone else. We are taught to sing in Psalm 34 to “seek peace and pursue it,” a command echoed by Peter (1Pt 3.11) and Paul (Rom 14.19). As much as lies within us, we are to maintain peace in relationships by pursuing those things that make for peace.

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By In Counseling/Piety, Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Pursue Peace (Part 1)

The best defense is a good offense. We often hear this in the world of sports, but it is also generally true in all of life. Proactively pursuing positive, productive disciplines is better than defensively sitting around telling yourself not to engage in this sinful activity or not to think about that sin. What happens when I tell you not to think about a horse? The image of a horse comes to mind. The more you tell yourself not to think about it, the more you find yourself dwelling on it. Instead of defensively dwelling upon what we are not supposed to do, we need to be offensively pursuing what is good, true, and beautiful.

This principle holds true in relationships. Being prepared to forgive is necessary because offenses will come (Mt 18.7). But there are ways to take preemptive strikes against the sins that would destroy our relationship. We do this by pursuing peace. In this article and the next, I will give you some ways to do so in contrast with ways to destroy peace.

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By In Counseling/Piety, Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Why Must I Forgive?

“Why must I forgive? He did me wrong. He owes me. I deserve justice! It isn’t right that he sins against me, depriving me of my possessions and dignity, and then I am expected to cancel the debt. That’s not fair.”

These thoughts have probably crossed your mind before when dealing with a painful experience of someone sinning against you. But you are a Christian, and the Lord Jesus commands you to forgive your brother when he comes to you asking for forgiveness. If you don’t forgive him, God will not forgive you. Indeed, he will reinstate the debt against you for not forgiving your brother (Mt 18.21-35).

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By In Counseling/Piety, Discipleship, Theology, Wisdom

Forgiveness Is Not…

Most of us don’t like turmoil. When there is tension in our relationships, we want to resolve it so that we can live joyful and anxiety-free. To do that, there are times that we may be willing to short-circuit the process of reconciliation through not dealing adequately with sin. We have been told that, as Christians, we have the responsibility to forgive. Some trying to take this seriously, believe that this means that you release the person from all responsibility for his actions, the necessity for him to change, let him continue the way he is living, and you, being a good Christian, bear all of the scars and residual pain. Or maybe, because we don’t like the discomfort of the whole situation, we dismissively say, “I forgive you” to paper over the sin in the relationship so that we don’t have to do the uncomfortable work of working through it. However, if the goal of forgiveness is peace in a relationship–a healthy wholeness between individuals–then the process of forgiveness can’t be cheapened in these ways. As disciples of Jesus, Christians are called into a lifestyle of forgiveness which involves dealing appropriately with sin and seeking to restore a communion of peace with others.

There are some misconceptions concerning forgiveness that need to be cleared up.

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