Me, myself, and lies
“That filled a
void in my relationship with you, thank you.” My brother, responded to my most
recent column about my relationship with Mom with this brief comment that
warmed my heart. But my column had also opened an uncomfortable box of memories
which I’d become very adept at closing off.
Like Pandora’s
box, I wondered what to do with them once they’d been released. I didn’t like
what these memories said about me. Somehow, they managed to cloud out all the
good I’d done and replace it with a picture of a self-centered, grasping, young
woman who often put her own desires ahead of others.
Mom laughed when I
described my experience. “Stop the pity party, only you think those things.”
Whether this is
true, and I believe the truth lies somewhere in between, I realized forgiveness
is difficult to give and especially be received, by ourselves. It is as if we
see ourselves in a fun house mirror through the unreliable lens of our faulty,
one-sided memories.
Perhaps that is why God created mercy. It
doesn’t have to be received because it simply exists. With divine mercy Jesus
asks us to respond to his forgiveness and unwarranted mercy by saying, “Jesus,
I trust in you.”
We can because God
sees what we cannot see in ourselves. Because God created us in his own image, we
are beautiful and good and most of all, love. Because Jesus, the Word of God,
spoke us into existence, he calls us beloved child, precious and redeemed.
Thomas Merton
wrote, “No matter how low you may have fallen in your own esteem, bear in mind
that if you delve deeply into yourself you will discover holiness there.” That
holiness was placed there by God. Nothing we do will remove it. Our actions may
cover it with shame, fear, hate, but when we turn back to God and receive his
forgiveness all that offending dirt is wiped away.
In God’s eyes,
once we are forgiven, our sin is gone from his memory as ‘far as the east is
from the west’. If only we could do the same for ourselves.
Sometimes when I
look back, I see wasted years when I pursued careers, people, and things that I
now realize were not meant to be mine. And I am filled with regret for those
lost years. It seems I hold onto my shame and fear and hate as a talisman. A
memory keeper, to remind my how unworthy I am of God’s love, his redemption,
his welcoming embrace. And that is exactly the purpose of those self-defeating
emotions.
If we can be
convinced that God really hasn’t forgiven us, this keeps us from entering God’s
embrace. We remain outside of experiencing the healing of God’s love for us.
Mercy is the gift
which offers unwarranted forgiveness to clean our wounds and heal them with
God’s love. Grace is the comforting balm that soothes our battered hearts.
When we feel the
desire to hold onto our shame, fear or hate after we have sought God’s
forgiveness, we need to say, “Jesus, I trust in you.” Then let go of the pain
and embrace God’s love.
We have not lived
perfect lives. Yet everything which has occurred, God has used for our good, to
make us stronger, wiser, humbler. We are better now because our eyes are fixed
on the one whose love burns away the detritus of our past.
When we allow God to heal us, we extend that
healing to others. When we give to someone else out of the goodness we received,
our giving is a creative act. We create from something old, something better. This
is how God works, this is the resurrection and the life that came after death, this
is the love that redeemed sin, and a world filled with hate is born again into
love.
Nothing is ever
lost when we give it to God.
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