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An aging, once
beautiful movie actress decided that she wanted a series of
portraits taken by the same photographer who had shot some
wonderful pictures of her some 30 years earlier. After a considerable
search, he was located and commissioned to take the pictures.
When he delivered the proofs to her she went into a rage and
screamed out in dismay, ”These pictures don’t do me justice.”
The patient photographer explained that she had been 30 years
younger when he took those beautiful portraits that she remembered.
Then he suggested to her that she didn’t want justice, she
needed mercy.
We, too, had better
not demand justice, for we are in need of mercy. ”If thou,
Lord shouldest mark iniquities, 0 Lord, who shall stand?”
asked the Psalmist. Strangely enough, we seem to have a double
standard, for we want others to receive justice while we hope
for mercy.
We’ve all seen
another driver go right through a stop sign without even slowing
down and wished that there had been an officer there to apprehend
the offender. Yet which of us has not, at some time, absent
mindedly driven right through one before we realized we had
failed to stop. On that occasion, we hoped that no one saw
what we did.
Our Lord has told
us to ”do to others as you would have them do to you. Be merciful,
just as your Father is merciful. For with what measure you
use, it will be measured to you.”
If there is one
great lesson that Jesus has tried to drive home to us it is
this one: He wants us to be merciful. His parable about the
king who called his servants before him to settle accounts
and found a man who owed him millions but was unable to pay
illustrates this point very well. Remember that when he begged,
the huge debt was forgiven, yet he went out and confronted
his fellow servant and demanded payment of a small debt. He
even grabbed the man by the throat and choked him. Because
he showed no mercy, he was re-arrested and brought before
the king who said, ”You wicked servant, I canceled all that
debt of yours because you begged me to. Shouldn’t you have
had mercy on your fellow servant just as I had on you?” In
anger, his master turned him over to the jailers to be tortured,
until he should pay back all he owed. This, said Jesus, ”Is
how my Heavenly Father will treat each of you unless you forgive
your brother from your heart.”
The parable of
the beam and the mote underlines this same important lesson.
Jesus’ conclusion was, ”Thou hypocrite, first cast out the
beam out of thine own eye; and then shalt thou see clearly
to cast out the mote out of thy brother’s eye.” In some of
the newer translations, the mote is called a speck and the
beam a plank. Our sins so obscure our vision we cannot clearly
see to correct our brother. Yet how human to focus on other’s
shortcomings instead of our own.
We really are going
to be judged by the same standard that we have used toward
others. Based on this, we have to acknowledge that the mercy
of God may be extremely limited when it comes time for us
to stand before our Lord. God has told us that He has unlimited
mercy, for David says, ”As far as the east is from the west,
so far hath he removed our transgressions from us.” We, ourselves,
are the ones who limit the amount of mercy He will show toward
us by how merciful we have been to our fellows.
We need not only
to know this, but we need to live what we know in our daily
dealings with others. ”Be ye therefore merciful, as your Father
also is merciful.”
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