Thứ Ba, 4 tháng 4, 2017

Waching daily Apr 4 2017

Move into position!

Yoshino Province, 1876

1 st Company, form a battle line on me!

Pay attention, it will save your life!

2nd Company, form on 1 st Company.

3rd and 4th Company, form up behind.

Fill in on command!

- Where's Hasegawa? - He refuses to fight against Katsumoto.

- Cover down! - Captain Algren.

We are not here as combatants.

- Then who's gonna lead them? - Their own officers.

- Let's move to the rear. - We'll be there presently.

Fix bayonets!

- Mr. Graham, accompany me to the rear. - Yes, of course.

Sergeant Gant, report to the rear and see to the disposition of the supply trains.

- Did you hear my order? - l did indeed, sir!

Then you will obey it. Now!

No disrespect intended, sir, but shove it up your ass.

- Load! - Load!

Samurai come.

You'll be fine, son.

- Assume firing positions! - Assume firing positions!

Fire on my order only!

Hold your fire!

Hold your fire!

Reload!

Hold the line!

Fire at will!

Lieutenant, fall back!

Zeb!

For more infomation >> Battle in The Fog Part-1 - The Last Samurai-(2003) Movie Clip HD - Duration: 5:07.

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UNACKNOWLEDGED TRAILER A DOCUMENTARY TO EXPOSE THE BIG, FAT, UGLY UFO LIE - Duration: 3:11.

UNACKNOWLEDGED TRAILER A DOCUMENTARY TO EXPOSE THE BIG, FAT, UGLY UFO LIE

The trailer for the upcoming documentary Unacknowledged is out and it�s awesome.

The wave of recent movies revolving around extraterrestrials proves the world is interested

in this subject like never before, but when it comes to aliens and UFOs, the hidden reality

is far stranger than anything Hollywood producers can come up with.

Scheduled for release on May 9, Unacknowledged is a documentary that tackles the world�s

greatest UFO secrets.

The film was written and co-produced by Dr. Steven Greer, one of the most prominent figures

in the field of UFO and extraterrestrial research and it promises to lift the lid off real UFO

discoveries that the United States Government has been keeping secret for decades.

Unacknowledged will feature behind-the-scenes interviews with high-ranking officials and

witness testimonies.

The documentary also promises to show ample UFO footage and documents, 80 percent of which

have never been revealed before.

Dr. Greer�s interviews reveal that behind the deep secrecy that surrounds the UFO enigma

lie the dark interests of the Military-Industrial complex.

In support of the controversial statements it makes, the documentary will present briefings

with top Pentagon personnel, the Director of the Central Intelligence Agency and presidential

advisor John Podesta.

In the documentary�s trailer, Dr. Greer discusses the Roswell crash landing, deep

black budget programs and false flags.

A staple presence in all serious UFO documentaries, Stephen Greer has appeared in features such

as Sirius, The Day Before Disclosure and Thrive.

He is also the founder of CSETI (Center for the Study of Extraterrestrial Intelligence)

in 1990 and the Disclosure Project in 1993.

Both organizations are working towards the disclosure of suppressed UFO information.

Unacknowledged will be narrated by Giancarlo Esposito, best known for playing Gus Fring

on Breaking Bad.

See the trailer from the link in the article link below

in our description.

For more infomation >> UNACKNOWLEDGED TRAILER A DOCUMENTARY TO EXPOSE THE BIG, FAT, UGLY UFO LIE - Duration: 3:11.

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On Monday Morning Trump Told America To Watch This What This Man Said On Fox… Democrats Want It DELE - Duration: 2:34.

OH MY GOD!

After Obama Gave Kill Order For Bald Eagles, Look What Trump Did To Save Them!

By Paris Swade

If you didn�t know, Obama hated America while he was President.

He even passed a law that allowed for Bald eagles to be killed or injured in the thousands

by the high-speed turbines on wind turbines.

Here is how it potentially happens:

Obama passed new regulations that allows for these companies to kill 4,200 of these birds

per year, according to the Washington Times.

THEN TRUMP STEPPED IN�

Trump tweeted the following in 2014.

Now, look what Trump is doing to solve this issue.

President Trump is now signing an Executive Order to rescind former President Obama�s

plan to curb global warning, including the one that targeted bald eagles, according to

PBS.

Trump is chipping away at the crappy legislation of the Obama era and will scrap wording about

climate change from the orders.

THANK GOD FOR TRUMP!

U.S. Chamber of Commerce President Thomas J. Donohue said that he was glad Trump was

taking �bold steps to make regulatory relief and energy security a top priority.�

�These executive actions are a welcome departure from the previous administration�s strategy

of making energy more expensive through costly, job-killing regulations that choked our economy,�

he said.

SHARE THIS IF YOU LOVE TRUMP AND LOVE OUR BALD EAGLES!

Thanks for reading and thank you for getting Trump in office to fix Obama�s messes.

For more infomation >> On Monday Morning Trump Told America To Watch This What This Man Said On Fox… Democrats Want It DELE - Duration: 2:34.

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Dream League Soccer 2017 | Best Freekick Ever! - Duration: 0:21.

BEST FREEKICK EVER SCORED!!

For more infomation >> Dream League Soccer 2017 | Best Freekick Ever! - Duration: 0:21.

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[PRİVATE 1000 S.] " Doublejeu " Chapter 2 Part 6-7 Miraculous Ladybug Comic / Çizgi Roman - Duration: 1:54.

For more infomation >> [PRİVATE 1000 S.] " Doublejeu " Chapter 2 Part 6-7 Miraculous Ladybug Comic / Çizgi Roman - Duration: 1:54.

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VOCÊ MEXEU NO MEU BUTÃO/ PARODIA Nego do Borel ft Anitta Wesley Safadão - Você partiu meu Coração - Duration: 3:15.

For more infomation >> VOCÊ MEXEU NO MEU BUTÃO/ PARODIA Nego do Borel ft Anitta Wesley Safadão - Você partiu meu Coração - Duration: 3:15.

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"PAPER CHASE" Crazy Trap Beat Instrumental 2017 | Dope Hiphop Freestyle Rap Trap Type Beat | Free DL - Duration: 3:28.

"PAPER CHASE" Crazy Trap Beat Instrumental 2017 | Dope Hiphop Freestyle Rap Trap Type Beat | Free DL | The Beat Channel

BUY 1 GET 1 FREE ON THEBEATCHANNEL.COM (UNTAGGED & INSTANT DELIVERY)

For more infomation >> "PAPER CHASE" Crazy Trap Beat Instrumental 2017 | Dope Hiphop Freestyle Rap Trap Type Beat | Free DL - Duration: 3:28.

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Top 10 Being John Malkovich Quotes - Duration: 3:40.

"Justice." "Mercy."

"Clemency."

I literally don't understand what those words mean.

I must say, I was intrigued by your voice.

And the funny thing is, Mr. Malkovich,

my voice is probably the least intriguing thing about me.

While we enjoy the pleasures of an uneasy love and abandon ourselves to fornication,

we were spared God's severity.

Flattery will get you everywhere, my boy.

Sometimes

my thoughts are betrayed by the movement of my body.

It's just a matter of practice

before Malkovich is nothing more than another puppet hanging next to my work table.

Yeah, there's the truth, and there are lies and, art always tells the truth,

even when it's lying.

As the poet said,

"The puppeteer's voice need not merely be the record of man. It can be one of the pillars, the props,

"to help him endure and prevail." And I believe that.

You don't know how lucky you are, being a monkey.

Because consciousness

is a terrible curse.

Tell me, Craig, why do you love puppeteering?

Perhaps it's the idea of becoming someone else for a little while.

Being inside another skin,

thinking differently, moving differently, feeling differently.

I think the world is divided into those who go after what they want and then those who don't,

I mean, The passionate ones, the ones who go after what they want,

well,

they may not get what they want.

But,

at least they remain vital. You know, So when they lie on their death beds, they have,

few regrets.

And the ones who don't go after what they want,

well,

who gives a shit about them, anyway?

For more infomation >> Top 10 Being John Malkovich Quotes - Duration: 3:40.

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On Going Off The Grid - MGTOW - Duration: 29:02.

For more infomation >> On Going Off The Grid - MGTOW - Duration: 29:02.

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أفضل و أقوى 10 ألعاب الجرافيك لسنة 2017 - Duration: 6:34.

Top 10 Games Graphic 2017

For more infomation >> أفضل و أقوى 10 ألعاب الجرافيك لسنة 2017 - Duration: 6:34.

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GHSP Application Webinar - Duration: 53:51.

Hi Everyone!

Welcome to the Global Health Service Partnership!

Sorry for the couple of minute delay here getting set up.

I'm very excited to be doing this with you all today--thanks for joining us!

My name is Joye Wagner and I am the Recruitment and Placement Specialist for the Global Health

Service Partnership.

I work here at Peace Corps Headquarters.

Today's presentation is actually a follow up one from another webinar that we did in

September.

I wanted to mention that because the two combined are meant to cover the program in it's entirety.

The last webinar we did was an alumni panel.

We had two physicians and a nurse talk in-depth about their experiences sharing their challenges,

their successes, the meaningfulness of the program to them.

We were also joined by Dr. Vanessa Kerry who is the founded and CEO of Seed Global Health

(our partner).

I would recommend that everybody watch that as well.

For this particular session, I am going to be covering that application process in detail

and I am going to be going through a PowerPoint presentation and then I'm actually going to

pull up the application itself and walk you through the different steps of the application.

So with that, I'm going to turn the screen over to the presentation and we'll get started.

For the agenda today, we are going to start off with a brief introduction of the program

overview, go into detail on the application process--that's going to be from A-Z, in terms

of all of the steps that are involved from the point of application to when volunteers

actually swear-in during an orientation--then as I mentioned we'll go through the application

itself and I'll cover program benefits.

So to talk a little bit about the partnership, this is a public-private partnership that

began in 2012.

A very unique partnership for the Peace Corps.

It is implemented by the Peace Corps and our partner of course is Seed Global Health and

we are funded through PEPFAR (that is the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief).

Just to give you a little bit of background leading up to 2012, PEPFAR started in 2005

and it put billions of dollars into HIV/AIDS research and care and due to the extreme deficit

of doctors and nurses and other healthcare professionals around the globe.

Part of the core mission around HIV/AIDS strategy is to build stronger health systems by training

local healthcare workers who can not only provide competent care and treat patients,

but also as importantly (if not more importantly) build up a cadre of doctors and nurses to

teach as well to expand the number of healthcare professionals on the ground.

That initiative and that effort lead to this public-private partnership.

It's the first federal program of it's kind for medical and nursing international service

and Peace Corps, as many of you likely know, has been around since President Kennedy started

the agency in 60's.

We have a very rich history of preparing and training American volunteers overseas for

international development work and Peace Corps continues to play that role in this partnership.

Seed Global Health is a non-profit and as I mentioned it is founded and run by Dr. Vanessa

Kerry.

In addition to leading Seed Global Health, she's also currently a physician at Mass General

and she also serves as the Associate Director of Partnerships and Global Initiatives at

Mass General.

Seed partners with countries to help them overcome critical shortages of health providers

and build strong sustainable health systems.

This program places (in a nutshell, I'll go into much greater detail later) it places

physicians and nurses overseas on one year assignments to serve as visiting faculty in

medical and nursing schools.

In the partnership, Seed provides the much medical and nursing technical expertise to

support that work.

They are also, in addition to providing the medical and nursing technical expertise, their

also our partner in site selection, applicant recruitment and screening, orientation and

training, field support, and monitoring and evaluation.

They really do work lock and step with us every part of the way.

Our partners overseas are medical and nursing institutions in Malawi, Uganda, Tanzania,

Swaziland, and Liberia.

Swaziland places nurses only.

Each partner institution applies for and requests volunteers and indicates to us what their

priorities are in terms of medical and nursing specialties.

They identify the need.

They also identify counterparts, which is a very important element of the program.

Counterparts are key host country nationals.

Someone who is identified on staff, usually a faculty member who serves as the primary

colleague or point of contact for the volunteer particularly early on to help with integrating

into the clinical and educational setting.

Our partners also provide housing for volunteers and they also provide the scope of work.

To talk a little bit about the requirements of the program, everyone must be a US Citizen

as with all Peace Corps programs.

All of our volunteers have to have an active US clinical license and experience teaching

in a classroom or clinical setting and working in a resource limited area is highly desired.

For physicians, they must be board eligible or board certified in a clinical specialty

and those priority specialties include internal medicine, family medicine and pediatrics,

and OBGYN.

However, it's important to note that we do accept applications from all specialties.

We get this question a lot and for physicians also have had applications and placements

for psychiatrists, general and orthopedic surgery, anesthesia, pathology, cardiology,

emergency medicine, pulmonary critical health and infectious disease.

For nursing, nurses must have a BSN and at least three years of clinical experience and

a question here that we often get is whether or not the clinical work done as part of their

degree counts towards this requirement and it does not.

Clinical work done as part of a degree program does not count towards this three year requirement.

Nurses with an advanced degree and specialized board certification are preferred and we have

listed the advance degrees and board certifications here for you.

Specialties for nurses include community health, graduate studies, medical/surgical mental

health, midwifery, pediatrics, advanced practice and sub specialties such as anesthesia and

critical care.

Again, just to reiterate, we accept applications from all specialties and sub specialties and

if anybody wants to ask further questions on that i'll provide contact information at

the end of this session.

The majority of our nursing candidates do have an advanced degree and primarily because

of the teaching that is done at the BSN level, but not all candidates have an advanced degree.

We often get asked whether physician assistants or candidates with an MPH only qualify for

the program and unfortunately they don't.

Everybody must be a practicing physician or nurse or an eligible board certified and with

that US clinical license.

I think it's important to note that there is no upper age limit.

I often hear from people when I attend medical conferences and sit at an exhibit or booth,

people will come up to the table and say "I thought I was too old to do this program,

don't primarily younger people do the Peace Corps?"

That is definitely not the case (with many of our Peace Corps programs not just GHSP)

There absolutely is no upper age limit.

A lot of our volunteers are either approaching retirement or retired and just to give you

some stats for the last group that went this past summer July 2016.

The youngest volunteer was 27.

The oldest volunteer was 75.

The average age of the cohort was 49.

Let's talk a little bit about the model.

As I mentioned at the onset, the program places physicians and nurses on one year assignments

to serve as visiting faculty in clinics, wards, and OR's.

Teaching is done at the bedside and in the classroom.

Of course, in addition to teaching, our volunteers mentor and work closely with faculty peers

and role model!

I think it's important to note that role modeling is a very important aspect of this program

and something that our volunteers frequently talk about in terms of the importance and

the impact that they made on their partner institutions and the communities they lived

in.

One of the critical differences in the mission with this program, and I think one of the

reasons why we do receive a lot of applications from highly qualified people that are really

dedicated to global health, I often hear that one of the reasons why people choose our program

is because of the difference in our mission in that we do focus on education and capacity

building and believe strongly in the importance of integrating into the community and building

trusting and meaningful relationships with the healthcare providers that you work with

and the students that you teach.

For physicians, they are classroom instruction to undergraduate and post-graduate trainees,

so medical students and residents.

Time is spent in the classroom and on the medical wards, and then for nurses, depending

upon the nurses educational preparation and clinical expertise, the role that they serve

varies typically bachelor prepared volunteers with clinical instruction or presenting expertise

serve as clinical instructors in the clinical arena.

They may be called on to assist in the classroom or skills lab.

Masters prepared, advanced practice nurses teach in the classroom and the clinical area

and may participate in curriculum and program development.

For our Ph.D and VMP volunteers, they serve across the teaching research service and policy

domain as needed.

The application timeline, this is what it looks like currently.

Each year the application opens in May, so for this 2017 cohort the application opened

in May of 2016.

Interviews begin in August and will continue through the Spring, so they will continue

long after the application closes.

As this is a partnership program, there are two interviews to the process.

The first is done by myself and is more a focus on cross-cultural adaptivity, dealing

with stress, dealing with conflict.

The second interview is typically done by a program alumni, a SEED staff member, well

I should say that SEED employs alumni members across the country to interview candidates

part-time and they match applicants up by specialty.

The people doing the interviewing will either be SEED employees or program alumni.

In addition to the interviews, we collect references and then after the interview the

next process is to begin the medical clearance and that's kicked off by filling out what's

called the Health History Form--fairly short, easy form that will determine the type of

follow up Medical exams and paperwork that our applicants need to have done later on

in the process.

For those candidates that are selected to serve in the program, well I should say the

application deadline is December 5th.

Our applications will close on December 5th.

Invitations start on January 1st and they continue through April.

The invitation in general is an initial offer to serve in the program, it is not country

specific, it's an invitation to the program as a whole and then after invitation that's

when the majority of the work comes into play for applicants in terms of going through the

medical process and the legal clearance process.

We send a lot of instructions via email to guide candidates through that.

In short, candidates have a physical and dental exam at a minimum and submit paper work based

upon the health history form.

Also, do a fingerprint check.

That's part of the background check and legal clearance process, and then everybody also

gets a Peace Corps passport and visa regardless of whether or not you already have a passport

or visa for the country you are invited to.

Country placements are typically announced in the Spring and at that point after country

placements are announced we provide a whole list of country specific information.

That's the welcome book, there's a Peace Corps Welcome Book for each country we serve in.

GHSP has a comprehensive handbook that will go through the program policies.

It will answer an enormous amount of questions that candidates have.

We'll actually send that out in advance of the country announcements.

And then, terms of references are provided to each invitee that details the scope of

their work at their partner institution.

We also get together with our in-country Peace Corps staff to do country calls so those are

basically calls where we bring all the invitees together with our Peace Corps in-country staff,

so that's typically the Country Director and the GHSP program manager.

Often they will have currently serving volunteers in on that call.

It's a conference call and it's an opportunity for our applicants and our invitees to ask

all of those country specific questions that they still have remaining after having reviewed

the welcome book and the GHSP Handbook.

We also, to the extent possible, will put invitees in touch with the currently serving

volunteer that they may be replacing, as well as in touch with their counterparts.

We often get asked the question, "Can I request a preference for which country I am sent to?"

To that, I always say that we have highly qualified candidates that many of them have

experience overseas, some of that experience can be in the countries that we work in and

by all means we would encourage candidates to share with us your interest and what's

driving that request to go to that particular area with the caviar that the placement process

is primarily driven by specialty in terms of matching candidates up with the academic

partner institution that best matches their clinical expertise.

That specialty and clinical expertise is what drives where our candidates are placed.

Medical clearances can also play a role here.

Sometimes people will clear medically for certain countries and not others and if that's

the case, they would receive priority placement for the country that they are able to serve

in.

In line with those driving factors, our program staff would also take into account any interests

that applicants may have.

After the country placements are announced at that point it's really a matter of getting

ready for departure, which this year is going to be July 10th, and that is not your departure

to your country of service, that's the departure to the D.C. orientation.

The D.C. orientation is the first official start date of the position.

It's a part of the year-long commitment.

It typically lasts a little under two weeks, it's about a week and a half.

It's in Washington D.C, so everybody comes together initially in D.C. and the objective

of the D.C. orientation is to provide technical training on tropical and infectious diseases

and other health conditions that are common in GHSP countries.

The orientation prepares volunteers to be effective lecturers and clinical educators

in new cultural environments and resource limited settings.

It gives volunteers an opportunity to learn more about Peace Corps history, approach to

development and how their work fits in with the culture and how these principles of development

can enhance the success of the volunteer.

It's also meant to allow volunteers to develop working understanding of program monitoring,

evaluation, and reporting responsibilities during service.

It's also a time to promote relationship building for collaboration and support during service

between volunteers as well as with other Peace Corps and Seed Global Health staff.

Just to give you an idea of some of the clinical sessions that are held during orientation

in D.C., clinical management sessions are done on diarrheal illnesses, malnutrition

and rehydration, respiratory illnesses, malaria, tropical dermatology, common parasites, palliative

care, current pedagogical frameworks to medical and nursing education and much, much more.

Dr. Jim Scott is actually the individual who facilitates and coordinates the training.

He is one of the advisors for Seed and on faculty with GW Medical School.

He was previously the Dean of GW Medical School and he's also a former Peace Corps volunteer.

He ensures that the orientation is absolutely excellent and we receive a lot of positive

feedback on that from our volunteers.

After everybody finishes orientation they fly together to their country of service and

that is followed by an in-country pre-service training that usually lasts about three weeks

and that's run by the Peace Corps office which is located in the capital of each of the countries

that we go to.

That will be overseen by the current Country Director and facilitated by the GHSP Program

Manager, the Peace Corps staff member that we have in each of our Peace Corps offices.

That covers everything from language training to Peace Corps policies on Safety and Security,

cross-cultural adaptation, and there is also a homestay involved.

Then of course, in terms of the ongoing support that I should note that's provided in addition

to this D.C. orientation and the in-country orientation, Seed provides an extensive amount

of on-going technical, educational, and clinical support throughout the year of service.

So, let's go through some of the benefits.

Transportation is provided to and from country of service.

All of our volunteers receive a living allowance and a professional allowance.

The living allowance is given in the local currency and that's done as a direct deposit

to a local bank account that our Peace Corps staff will help volunteers set up as they

arrive in-country.

There's comprehensive medical care and malpractice coverage.

Each of our Peace Corps offices has a medical Peace Corps medical officer who is responsible

for the medical care for all volunteers and that person would coordinate any care that

you might need including medicines.

This is of no cost to the volunteer.

There are no co pays and in the event that there were to be an emergency of any kind

or if care were needed that could not be provided in-country then the cost of travel to a neighboring

country or back to Washington D.C. would of course be fully covered and included in the

medical insurance plan.

Volunteers receive vacation time.

24 days of vacation time a year, they accrue two per month that's of course beyond weekends,

and also in addition, volunteers can use professional time.

You wouldn't necessarily have to use vacation time for work related activities, such as

attending a conference.

There's also professional development time as well that's afforded to volunteers.

The readjustment allowance is $450 a month.

Accrues on a monthly basis and comes out for a full year of service to be $5,400 total

after the year.

Loan deferments and partial cancellations are also a significant benefit.

A lot of volunteers do have financial debt and so any federal student loans can be deferred

and some can be partially cancelled.

I'll get into more detail on the spouses with the next slide, but spouses are another significant

benefit of the program, a unique aspect of the program.

Then, Seed offers in addition to the ongoing clinical and academic support that I mentioned,

a debt repayment award program and this is really meant to offset the financial costs

of doing the program.

Volunteers do have their day to day living expenses covered through the living allowance.

Really, the program is designed so that you don't have to use your own money at all to

do this--you don't have to come out of pocket.

But having said that, it's of course not enough money to cover any existing financial debt

that you may leave behind.

In order to offset that and ensure that financial debt is not a variable for service, Seed as

the private part of the public-private partnership does annual fundraising and awards up to $30,000

per candidate for debt repayment.

It does not have to be student loans.

It can be other types of financial debt.

A common usage of that can be mortgage payments, to cover volunteer mortgage costs.

Our partner institutions provide housing and local transportation.

To get into a little bit more detail about the benefit of couples, this is, I think,

a big benefit.

It's a big draw for many of our candidates that want to do overseas global health service

but don't want to leave their significant other behind.

You can serve with your spouse or domestic partner.

There are a couple of options, either the significant other can accompany you at their

own expense and live with you, or they can apply to serve as a Peace Corps Response volunteer.

In terms of how that process works, there is a specific application online that's open

only to the spouses or domestic partners of GHSP volunteers.

You're not applying to a Peace Corps Response specific position or country, it's a general

application, only open to GHSP spouses.

Initially, our candidates spouses will apply and then at the point of invitation when the

GHSP candidate is invited to the program and matched to a partner institution, at that

point that's when the process really kicks in for the PCR spouse.

For candidates who qualify to serve as Peace Corps Response volunteers, when the GHSP candidate

is matched to the country of service, the in-country Peace Corps staff will at that

point canvass the area and look for a partner organization that is line with the GHSP spouses

professional qualifications and experience.

Essentially, they are looking to match the spouse to an organization that is within geographical

proximity to where the GHSP candidate will be serving.

If anybody has any additional questions on that they can e-mail me after this and I'll

be happy to go into more detail.

As I mentioned, the application deadline is December 5th and I have a link here to the

application itself.

I'll be switching over to the application in a moment to walk you through that process

screen by screen.

Also wanted to provide this alumni webinar link that I mentioned at the beginning of

my presentation and then if there are any questions that people would like to ask that

are not addressed during the Q&A that we will do at the end, feel free to e-mail us anytime

at GHSP@peacecorps.gov.

There should be on the right hand side a box for everybody watching this webinar to submit

questions.

Please feel free to submit any questions that you may have.

I've also weaved in a content and answers to some of the questions that were asked at

the time that people signed up for this event.

With that, I'm going to open up the application, bear with me one moment.

Hold on, one moment.

What I'll do is take this down

and show you how to navigate to the application itself.

If you just do a Google Search for "Peace Corps GHSP" This is our website.

The website can be a little bit confusing if you're not familiar with it.

This apply now button on the right hand side is actually a link to the two year program,

so you want to scroll down for information that is specific to GHSP.

We also have a link here to Seed Global Health's website and I would encourage everybody to

visit their website.

It's full of information including a number of wonderful volunteer blogs that they frequently

update.

That's another great way to learn more about the work that's being done in the field.

You would click "apply now".

Now I already started an application because I wanted to show everybody the process of

what it looks like to save an application and log back in.

Rather than click "Apply to Peace Corps Response position" which is what you would do if you

were applying for the first time, rather than do that, if you had already saved your application

to finish at a later date, you would click on the home button here, which is a bit counter

intuitive.

Here is where you would log in to access that application.

Okay, so if you look here on the left hand side, right under "saved drafts", this link

will take you to the position description so you want to scroll to the right where it

says "continue".

I'm going to get us back to the initial screen.

This is how you would navigate between the screens if you wanted to go back and change

any information.

Here is the first page that you would see when you start the application.

Initially you would state that you are at least 18 years of age, that's a legal requirement

of the program, everybody must be 18 and be a U.S. citizen.

A lot of these are self-explanatory so I'm not gonna go through each and everyone in

detail.

I'll just really point out the ones that I think warrant additional information.

You can state how you heard about Peace Corps Response and that question, i'll just go back

to that one because it's important in terms of how we track where candidates are learning

about the program.

Where it says "how did you learn about Peace Corps Response" it's also asking how you learned

about GHSP.

Of course, contact information, basic details about your social security number and birthday.

Here you have the option to either enter CV or upload it.

All of our candidates would upload, it's much easier and much cleaner process, fairly self-explanatory.

Here you would enter your education, highest level of study.

I should note that it's a little counter intuitive that you need to scroll down, so what you

see at the top here is not the extent to what's included on the page and if you forget that,

you'll inevitably not fill in a box and it'll prompt you--it'll tell you that there are

blanks on the page.

So you'll realize that you'll have to scroll down.

Here we ask for details on your license, so you'll need to have that information handy

before you start the application.

There's questions on any language ability that you have, here you can note whether or

not you are interested in serving with your spouse.

You can say yes to this, whether your spouse will apply to Peace Corps Response or not,

and even if you're unsure but you think it's a possibility, you're welcome to say yes to

this question and it's something you can change at a later date.

We ask about dependents here because candidates are welcomed to bring their spouse with them

but they are not able to bring their children with them, so that is a part of the program

that is addressed in the application.

Because you cannot serve with your children, if you have any dependents under the age of

18, then we would just have to make sure that you have thought that through and have prepared

your family and your children for your departure of one year and we'll discuss that further

during the interview.

Then here you can enter details on your dependents.

There's a question on military status because people cannot use the Peace Corps to get out

of any military obligation, so to ensure that doesn't happen this question is asked.

We, as I mentioned earlier, do a legal background check and so questions are asked on whether

or not candidates have a history of arrest or other legal incidents.

I should note that while it's rare that we have candidates that would have any information

for this section.

If you do, the background check will pick up anything that has been ex punched, so we

also ask for, even something as a minor as a traffic violation or something that was

ex punched, because it will come up in the background check.

For information on the legal status and history is entered here.

There's a question on intelligence background.

The Peace Corps has a long standing policy of excluding individuals who have worked in

any kind of intelligence activity related work or have been employed or connected to

an intelligence agency from doing Peace Corps service, so that question comes up here.

Questions on racial and ethnic data are used to make sure that we are doing a good job

in terms or reaching out to all the diverse segments of the population.

We always strive to have a very diverse applicant pool and we can track our progress on that

by the information that's provided here.

This is just the Privacy Act that goes through guarding your personal information.

Paperwork Reduction Act Burden Statement.

And then certification at the end.

And then the submit button.

That is, in a nutshell, the application.

You can see that it is not very long.

I'm gonna switch back over to.

You can see that the application is not very long, it usually takes about 25 to 30 minutes

to complete.

There is a couple of screens that didn't come up when I went through the application.

I'm not sure why that is so I'll just tell you some of those areas that you'll also fill

in when you do the application.

There's a section for an essay which is meant to capture your overseas experience if you

have any, your teaching classroom experience if you have any.

It's requested that you would write two to three paragraphs on that and I would encourage

everybody to really take their time and our candidates, our applicants do.

The main reason being that is a fairly short application, not too time intensive and so

we really do relay quite a bit on that essay to get a better feel for the quality of the

candidate and the skills that she or he brings beyond the resume.

There's also questions on board eligibility and board certification and the specialties

of our candidates.

One thing I wanted to mention there is that we do have candidates that apply that need

to take the boards after first starting the program and so that is something that sometimes,

depending upon the location of the exam, the timing, we do have candidates that use professional

leave to go take their boards.

So at this point, we have about ten more minutes for any questions.

If there is anything that I didn't cover that anybody wants to ask, right now we don't have

any questions, so in terms of if I were to just think of about some of the common questions

that we get I went through a number of them during the session.

We get a lot of questions on the process of applying with a spouse and serving with a

spouse.

One question that often comes up is the balance between teaching in the classroom and clinical

work that is done in the field, and so I would suggest that everybody look at the webinar,

the alumni panel webinar.

They go quite a bit into detail on this.

It's something that varies site by site and person by person, so there is no one answer,

but it's a discussion that happens during orientation.

It's a discussion that happened during the last alumni panel.

Ultimately, as I said when I talked about the program objectives, what makes this program

unique is a focus on education and teaching.

The work that our volunteers do in the field, the clinical work that they do in the hospital

setting, the patient care that they provide is meant to be in the context of teaching.

The reality is that one of the reasons this program exists is that there is a dire shortage

of health care professionals.

Our volunteers are teaching and working in hospitals that are severely understaffed and

that often results in some pressure to step in.

It's something that Seed staff will help our volunteers work through in terms of striking

that balance of whether or not they're going to take calls after hours, whether or not

they're gonna come in on the weekend, you know really pushing to answer calls provided

that there are learners available so that there is clinical supervision involved when

the patient care is occurring.

Again, I would look at the webinar that we did to learn more about that.

I received one question, can DO's serve or is it only MD's?

That's an excellent question.

We have both.

Both are welcomed to apply and do apply.

It looks like, if there's no other questions, I think I'll wrap it up because I received

a list of questions before putting together the presentation and we've in the majority

of what was asked into the presentation.

I just got one more question, "If I applied last year and didn't get selected, what can

make me stand out this time?" and this is coming from an RN with 30 years of experience.

So, we receive, we welcome candidates that are not initially placed to apply again.

That's a dialogue that we have with candidates at the time that we notify them that we were

not able to find a placement.

I would start of with that.

I would start of by saying that candidates are always welcomed and encouraged to reapply.

What we would typically advice, and this is of course gonna depend upon the skills of

the candidate, we would advice that candidates get more experience either teaching in a classroom

setting or additional overseas work, working with limited resource populations, as well

as with working with limited resource populations and working in limited resource settings here

in the States, it doesn't have to be overseas.

Overseas work as well as stateside work would benefit candidates.

I've also been asked to note that we have a limited number of spots for BS's and nurses,

so that is an important thing to mention.

I had brought up when I went through the program requirements that nurses with a BSN only are

welcomed to apply but the majority of the positions that we do have really do require

an advanced degree in order for the candidate to be successful in that academic and clinical

setting.

The majority of our nursing candidates do have advanced degrees.

"Are expenses for D.C. orientation covered?"

So, yes they are.

Expenses are covered for transportation to orientation to D.C., there's a daily per diem

that is given to cover any food expenses that are not provided during the sessions.

We would often provide meals during the orientation, and we also cover baggage as well.

I should also note that this extends to, of course, any spouses that apply to serve as

Peace Corps Response volunteers.

They are also welcomed to attend orientation.

I would say about a third of the sessions would be relevant to the PCR candidates.

The other clinical sessions they would be more than welcomed to sit in if they were

interested in doing so and they would receive the same set financial benefits, they would

have their flights covered, daily per diem, and their baggage would be included as well.

So, unless there are any other questions, so we have another one that's come in.

"What technical support for teaching is provided?"

That's a great question.

I think, first of all, the technical training, I went into the technical training in depth

that occurs during Pre-Service Orientation and Orientation here in D.C., the on-going

technical training that is provided by Seed Global Health, because they are the organization

that is providing that training, I feel they would be the best place to answer that question.

That can be facilitated through either e-mailing me or e-mailing Seed Global Health directly

through their website, but they have a whole host of methods that they use to support volunteers

throughout their year of service.

They do on-going e-mail and phone conversations, Skype conversations with candidates.

They have a resource learning library.

They provide a lot of materials to volunteers prior to departure and provide on-going support

during service to help volunteers with curriculum design and also with patient care.

If anybody has more specific questions than that we can get those answers out to you,

you can just send an e-mail to GHSP@peacecorps.gov.

Ah!

Also each volunteer is matched with a Seed clinical mentor for the year.

In addition to everything that I just mentioned, every volunteer has a specific point of contact,

a clinical mentor at Seed that works with them throughout the course of the year.

That information just came in from our silent participants from Seed Global Health that

are currently watching this session.

Okay!

I'm gonna close it now because we are at the hour, so I want to thank everybody for getting

together today and learning more about the Global Health Service Partnership.

This will be recorded and posted up online as a YouTube link, so if you want to view

this again at a later date.

Share it with any other colleagues or friends or family, you will be able to do so.

We will be sending that link out to everybody that has signed up for our list serv, well

you would be on that list serv because you signed up for this event.

You will be receiving the link usually in about two weeks we are able to get that out.

And remember to apply by December 5th, at the time that our applications will close.

Thanks so much again and have a good day.

For more infomation >> GHSP Application Webinar - Duration: 53:51.

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Mind Terrorist - Dystopia - Duration: 2:58.

Our clock is still ticking in empty streets. We spit out all reason to act from within.

The mass is growing, we build to last. One voice, one man, together as one.

Hope for me is when I used to see determined all people defending their beliefs!

Life for me is when my nation is free! The time for salvation has come for you and me!

Free yourself, just free your mind. Fight for your own dreams, for a better kind. Come on!

Take a step, now hold your back. Our words and souls will turn into attack.

Hope for me is when I used to see determined all people defending their beliefs!

Life for me is when my nation is free! The time for salvation has come for you and me!

Stand behind is like to live inside. My breath, your fear, what's left to hide.

Let your senses and join our line. Now think, just try, erase this time. GO!

Hope for me is when I used to see determined all people defending their beliefs!

Life for me is when my nation is free! The time for salvation has come for you and me!

Hope for me - Live for me - Sing with me! Dance with me - Cry with me!

Bleed with me - Die with me! Our nation will be free!

Dystopia means the end of humanity!

Beyond the world a fight goes on, NOW!

For more infomation >> Mind Terrorist - Dystopia - Duration: 2:58.

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The Walking Dead ll Get up and go to war - Duration: 2:21.

For more infomation >> The Walking Dead ll Get up and go to war - Duration: 2:21.

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Kong Division — Through the Ages - Duration: 7:59.

I never need an excuse to talk about King Kong, but the release of a new film seems

as good as any!

With total monster-movie saturation on the horizon, I've turned my focus back to the

birth of cinema's greatest beastie:

My love for the 1933 films knows no bounds, and I've been fascinated by the enduring

power of this character, and how he has manifested throughout the past eight decades.

His first appearance was so undeniably perfect, the ripples of its influence continue to this day.

And yet, each reimagining chose to focus on a different facet of this endlessly appealing character.

The Toho films of the 1960s, along with no less than three animated series over the years,

lean heavily on the base appeal of a giant ape named Kong set against the fun and games

of that era's monster craze.

The Dino De Laurentiis 1976 remake and its 1986 sequel attempted to preserve the original

story's major beats, while populating it with updated characters and situations.

In terms of far-reaching interpretations, there was even a 1998 straight-to-video animated

musical adaptation featuring songs written by the Sherman Brothers, which chose amplify

the show-business framing of the original film.

(This inexplicable gem is rare piece of little-known Kong history, and deserves its own episode.)

Peter Jackson's 2005 film may be one of the only remakes in the history of film that

can be described as loving its source material too deeply.

Yet even in the most faithful of adaptations, something of his soul seems to have been left

in 1933.

Even its own sequel, the magnificent SON OF KONG, released the same year from the same

artists, knew it couldn't hold a candle to their original achievement, wisely choosing

to explore the ramifications of that story, from the regrettable to the intentionally

humorous.

Beyond the variances in historical specificity, there must be more universal qualities that

made him so immediately an icon of our culture.

This question has stuck with me:

What, exactly, is the timeless essence of Kong?

Pragmatically, looking at the raw contents of his various appearances throughout the

years, one could cynically argue that it's simply that base, animalistic boyhood appeal

of a giant beast wreaking havoc.

(Which may be the only observable family value between the films in his canon.)

Combine that value with an otherwise exemplary production, and it might account for a film

of above-average performance ... but that doesn't feel right.

Kong is another beast entirely.

As I've discussed in a few of my previous pieces of cinematic analysis, I believe that,

in the absence of bygone mythologies, we've all become collectors of functioning mythological

fragments from our popular culture.

And for me, Kong is no exception.

At the time of its release, critics were apparently too distracted by the technical wizardry on

display to give these themes any consideration.

Variety called it "purely an exhibition of studio and camera technology – and it

isn't much more than that."

The slightly more generous New York Times titled their review "A Fantastic Film in

Which a Monstrous Ape Uses Automobiles for Missiles and Climbs a Skyscraper."

That was the title.

It would be be several decades in the wake of the film's colossal success before the

deeper virtues of the film would be mined:

In 1972, French philosopher and critic Roger Dadoun observed the physical gigantism of

Kong, contrasted against the socially small position of Ann Darrow, writing, "King Kong

is presented there, in a luminous poster, like The Eighth Wonder of the World.

Faced with such a prodigy, who would wonder about the furtive gesture of an unemployed

woman stealing a fruit?"

In 1974, American film critic Gerald Peary considered the film a "Political Fantasy,"

drawing parallels between the Carl Denham character and President Franklin D. Roosevelt.

I find little to agree with in his interpretation, which plays almost entirely on the first and

final acts of the film to the exclusion of its dynamic centerpiece.

It's an amusing read that is a testament to just how unique our individual views can

be on the same work of art.

In 1975, in response to Peary's analysis, David N. Rosen interpreted Kong, the character,

as a reflection of the Depression era in which it is set.

In his words, "Kong symbolizes this possibility, the threat of the masses 'losing their chains'

in a revolutionary upheaval."

His broad analysis also touched upon the imagery of scaling the Empire State Building, which

I dare not repeat here.

You've got to read that one for yourself.

In 1984, American Philosopher Noël Carroll examined Kong through the lens of Social Darwinism:

"The prehistoric imagery and the condensation of the jungle and the city draft the Darwinian

metaphor of the struggle for existence as the sign of modern, competitive, urban life."

In 1988, Author J.P. Telotte proffered a Freudian reading of Kong as a representation of "culturally

prohibited ... urges" against the open love of Jack and Anne.

He further applies the film to his theory of the "imperative of seeing -- our desire

to see things we are not supposed to."

He writes, "Kong suggests the danger in this insistent seeing, a possibility that

we might 'spoil' or violate the world in trying to look beyond our normal boundaries."

I particularly admire this reading for the degree to which it incorporates the film's

self-referential frame of show-business as a core element, which most other interpretations

have discarded entirely.

In modern analysis, the film has been popularly accepted as a refutation of Colonial Values,

with a variety of possible racial and historical interpretations therein.

These range from the revelatory to the critical, and largely ring true when considering the

classically tragic trajectory of the title character and overall structure of the film.

It is, undeniably, a cautionary tale.

But even a good-faith subtextual reading of the film that codes Kong as a symbol for black

men through the eyes of white America, feels like a reduction of the film's timeless

interpretive potential.

Any work of art can sustain multitudes of interpretations, but the undeniable transcendence

of certain works into our shared pop-culture mythology, in my mind, requires a resonance

with primal themes that run deeper than historical allegory.

Unique to the original version, and of central importance in my eyes: until the final moments

of the film, the only person to understand Kong through any lens of empathy is ... the

audience.

What begins as a pompous adventure gradually reveals itself as a fable representing the

perennial tragedy of the human ego.

The feeling of not being understood is a touchstone of the human experience.

Deliciously, the humans in this story are merely supporting players for us to experience

this truth through a beast who proves himself to exhibit more humanity than they do.

On his island he is King.

Man rips him from his Eden, from the ancient wisdom of the undisrupted, into the grid-divided

realm of a man-made city.

Climbing in vein to reclaim his lost status, he is shot down as all souls are snuffed out

in the uncaring systems of mechanical progress over nature.

In our lives, we all face this crisis of spirit.

The mythological imagery and externalized actions associated with the fall of Kong harmonize

with that internal experience.

What do you think?

What has sustained the echo of Kong's roar so very loudly since 1933?

More importantly, what does the King of Skull Island mean to you?

For more infomation >> Kong Division — Through the Ages - Duration: 7:59.

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Underverse XTRA scene/Vostfr (no Voice) episode 1 (RESTE JUSQU'A LA FIN DE LA VIDEO !) - Duration: 9:12.

For more infomation >> Underverse XTRA scene/Vostfr (no Voice) episode 1 (RESTE JUSQU'A LA FIN DE LA VIDEO !) - Duration: 9:12.

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Storytelling: Google's Chief Evangelist Shares His Thoughts - Duration: 1:04.

Humans communicate to stories and this

is how we are able to express ideas very

powerfully as I learn from one of my

close master mentors make a point tell a

story and if you look at parables from

Jesus to the Buddha to the Mahabharata

story so people communicate this is how

we communicate to children we don't show

them slides and bulleted powerpoints we

tell them stories one of the ways by

which you can be effective is how you

communicate and articulate your ideas so

what comes out of your mouth in the form

of words and how we express it is how

people will understand and receive you

and therefore work on that one skill

which is an extremely learnable skill

and try to be one of the best in that

field an organization like Toastmasters

can help you so simple advice go join

Toastmasters and practice every week

you

For more infomation >> Storytelling: Google's Chief Evangelist Shares His Thoughts - Duration: 1:04.

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Reasons to Forgive, Part 2 (Selected Scriptures) - Duration: 45:02.

Now, last Sunday night we talked a little bit about forgiveness.

This is a big subject, but it's a subject that we need to get our arms around in a practical

way.

Forgiveness is very, very important to us.

Forgiveness is essential to life as a Christian.

And I'm giving you a list of principles that demonstrate the importance of forgiveness.

Last week we looked at the first one which really leads the parade.

Forgiveness is the most godlike act a person can do.

You're never more like God than when you forgive.

Obviously we celebrate the forgiveness of God.

We understand the forgiveness of God.

It is God overlooking our sin.

It is God overlooking our guilt.

It is God giving us a promise that we are forgiven of all our sins, past, present and

future.

We enter into an undeserved, unearned condition of complete and total forgiveness by the sheer

grace of God.

That is the model for our forgiveness.

We forgive out of grace, not because somebody earned it.

We offer forgiveness freely, unconditionally, without restraint, without restriction.

And with that offer of forgiveness, we abandon all animosity, all anger, all hatred, all

desire for retaliation, all desire for vengeance, all bitterness.

And this will guarantee for us a life free from the root of bitterness that it talks

about in the book of Hebrews, free from carking anger and hostility that eats away at the

joy of the soul.

Forgiveness is the most godlike thing you can do.

And He is the model.

You forgive and you forgive again, and you forgive again, and you forgive again.

As we learn from our Lord's words to Peter, "You forgive seventy times seven, seventy

times a day."

As often as you're offended, that's how often you forgive.

This is the same kind of thing that our Lord Jesus talked about in the Sermon on the Mount

when He said, "Love your enemies."

How do you love your enemies?

Well, the first thing you need to do is to get past their sin, get past their offense.

They're your enemies which assumes that they have done something to violate you, to wound

you, to injure you, to affect you negatively.

If you're going to love your enemies, bound up in that love is forgiveness.

It doesn't guarantee that you're going to have a relationship with them that would be

a model relationship.

But then again, when God forgives us, that doesn't necessarily mean that the relationship

we have with God is everything it should be.

We continue to sin against Him.

He continues to forgive us.

The relationship will only be what it should be in the glory of heaven when full and complete

perfection has come, absolute holiness and righteousness has taken over our lives and

then a complete reconciliation is effective.

The second thing we said about forgiveness, not only is the most godlike thing you'll

ever do, but you must remember that it's not murder which is forbidden by the sixth commandment.

It's not murder only which is forbidden by the sixth commandment.

The sixth commandment says, "You shall not murder."

But our Lord said, "You've heard it said that you shall not murder or you'll be guilty of

the court," Matthew 5:21 and 22, "But I say to you, if you hate someone in your heart,

you're guilty of murder."

First John, we remember, 1 John 3:15, "Everybody who hates his brother is a murderer."

Our Lord went for the depth of the meaning of the commandments, the Decalogue.

We must understand that while we perhaps wouldn't even imagine murdering somebody, wouldn't

think about murdering somebody, if our hearts are full of hate to the degree in the words

of Jesus that we denounce them with epithets like "Raca" or "You fool," you are equally

guilty.

You are to love your enemies and you are to love your neighbors as you love yourself.

You are to seek to see the image of God in them.

You're to be gracious to them.

Anything less than that, any anger or bitterness constitutes, in effect, a defacto heart murder.

Your lack of forgiveness is a kind of desire for their harm.

Thirdly, we said last time, that you need to remember, and this should motivate all

of us to forgive, that whoever has offended you, has offended God greater.

Whoever has offended you has offended God greater.

And if God who is the most holy has forgiven the greatest offense, cannot we who are the

least holy forgive the least offense?

It seems to me to be a very obvious principle.

We understand it because we looked at Psalm 51:4, "Against Thee, Thee only have I sinned,

and done this evil in Thy sight."

David understands that His sin is against God.

"He cries out to God to be forgiven, wash me, purge me.

Give me back the joy of Thy salvation.

Then I will show transgressors Your ways.

Then I will be useful to You."

And, of course, that forgiveness came to David and David even said it this way, "Blessed

is the man whose sins are forgiven, whose iniquities are covered."

And so the issue is that if God who is most offended can be totally forgiving, cannot

we who are least offended be forgiving?

If God who is infinitely holy can forgive, cannot we who are anything but holy forgive?

So we forgive because we are never more godlike than when we forgive.

We forgive because God forbids anger and hate and attitudes of vengeance.

And we forgive because God who is most offended forgives, and sets the standard for us to

forgive.

And number four, and this is where we wrapped it up and we'll make a comment about this

and then move on.

It is only reasonable, and it's connected to the last point, it is only reasonable that

those forgiven the greater sins forgive the lesser ones.

No matter what a person does against me, or does against you, it does not rise to the

level of an offense against God.

The degree of the offense is directly related to the degree of holiness of the one offended.

God is the one who is most offended, as we just pointed out.

God is the one against whom the greater sins have been done.

And when He completely forgives all of these sins that we have committed, are committing

or will commit completely, this ought to set a standard by which we are willing to forgive

others.

We have been forgiven an unpayable, inconceivable, incalculable debt, should we not forgive the

small offenses that come against us?

And in order to make that point, we went to Matthew 18, let's go back to that because

we're going to see a couple of more points there, and that is the area where Peter is

talking to our Lord about forgiveness.

In verse 21 he asks Him, "How many times shall my brother sin against me and I forgive him,

up to seven times?"

The rabbi said three, he doubled it, added on, thought the Lord would commend him.

"Jesus said to him, 'I do not say to you up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven.'"

And then He went from there to tell a story about why it is so critical to forgive lavishly,

to forgive extensively.

And the story is familiar to all of us.

It's a story about a king who is emblematic of the Kingdom of Heaven and he had some men

who had been given responsibility and he gathered these men, these would have been high-ranking

officials who were given the responsibility to collect taxes and to turn what they had

collected in to the monarch.

They had been given a piece of the responsibility for the income of the king from the kingdom.

And when it was time for the accounts to be settled, there was one, according to verse

24, who owed him ten thousand talents, that is a massive amount of money...massive amount

of money.

Should have been able to give him what he owed him, but he didn't have any money at

all to repay, verse 25 says, so he had taken all the money, he had collected it ostensibly

and then he had spent it on himself.

And the Lord commanded him to be sold, along with his wife and children, and all that he

had and repayment to be made.

The king said, "Sell them all into slavery and I'll get what I can.

I can't get what I'm owed, but I'll get what I can out of them."

Well the man falls down on the ground, says, "Have patience with me and I'll repay you

everything."

He is frightened, he is uncovered, he is exposed.

You just give me an opportunity and I'll pay it all back.

Verse 27, "The lord of that slave felt compassion, released him, forgave him the debt."

Just really a stunning story.

There was usually a surprise element in the prolonged stories that Jesus told.

This is that.

The shock of being forgiven a ten-thousand-talent debt.

And then verse 28 says, "That slave went out, found one of his fellow slaves that owed him

a hundred denarii," that's...a denarii is a day's wage for an average worker, a Roman

soldier or average workman.

So that's maybe three or four months work.

"Seized the man who owed him that, began to choke him and said, 'Pay back what you owe.'

He fell on the ground and gave the same speech, 'Have patience with me and I'll repay you.'

But he was unwilling, went and threw him in prison till he should pay back what he was

owed."

This is scandalous.

The man has been forgiven an incalculable debt, just because he asked.

So anybody listening to the story, namely the disciples who really are the audience

in this portion of Matthew's gospel, the eighteenth chapter, is directed at the disciples, may

well have been in the house of Peter and our Lord may have been holding one of the little

children from Peter's own family there in Capernaum when He gave all of this.

Now they would have been outraged at the kind of behavior where a man is forgiven something

that's incalculable and then goes and strangles somebody and throws him in the debtor's prison

for a minor debt that could be paid back.

And our Lord is teaching us a principle here, you can't accept the full forgiveness of God

and then yourself be an unforgiving person.

You can't accept the fullness of God's total forgiveness of all your sins of all your life

and then choke somebody mercilessly because that person has offended you.

There's nothing uglier, nothing worse, nothing more regrettable and nothing more inconsistent

than a Christian running around with no forgiveness for someone who has offended them....just

totally inconsistent.

Now, I want to take you to a fifth point.

This comes right out of this in the same context.

The one who does not forgive will not enjoy the love of other Christians.

The one who does not forgive will not enjoy the love of other Christians.

There is a price to pay for being a bitter, unforgiving person.

And we see it here in verse 31 of this parable, "When his fellow slaves saw what had happened,

they were deeply grieved and came and reported to their lord all that had happened."

They're outraged at the conduct of this man who has been totally forgiven and who will

not forgive.

They want to be distanced from him.

An unforgiving person is an unwelcome member of the fellowship.

An unforgiving person is leaven, bad influence, bad influence on young believers, bad influence

on older believers, alienation from others in the life of the church.

This is a person that people don't want to be with because this is a person being unable

to forgive is equally unable to stop talking about the person they will not forgive and

the offense committed against them.

This is typical of an unforgiving person.

And so, friends turn away from the unforgiving person.

We might be seeing here almost a form of church discipline because these other fellow slaves

go directly to the king to complain about this behavior.

They in a very real sense turn the case over to the Lord.

Church discipline should fall on the unforgiving person.

If you know an unforgiving person, if you are an unforgiving person, somebody should

come to you or you should go to the one you know to be an unforgiving person and say,

"By the way, you're in sin and you need to repent of that sin."

And if the person repents, you've gained your brother, according to Matthew 18 earlier in

the chapter.

And if the person doesn't repent, then the next step is to take two or three witnesses

and point the sin out again, be there to observe whether or not there is repentance.

And if the person still doesn't repent, tell the church, the church goes after the person.

If the person still doesn't repent, then put them out of the church because they're an

evil influence and they're behaving like a non-Christian because it's so inconsistent

for a Christian who has been forgiven to be unforgiving, you treat them like a non-believer.

There's a serious downside within the fellowship of the body of Christ for an unforgiving attitude.

It also makes people want to keep their distance from you because they're afraid of what will

happen to them if somehow you cross the line that offends them and you become one of those

people in their category of those with whom they would like to gain vengeance.

Number six, and it's still in the same story here, failure to forgive results in divine

chastening...failure to forgive results in divine chastening.

We should forgive the moment the offense is rendered against us, instantaneously, never

cultivating vengeance, retaliation, hostility, hatred, anger, bitterness.

But if we fail to forgive, if we do not forgive, watch what happens.

"Then summoning Him...the Lord, the king, the master...said to him, 'You wicked slave,

I forgave you all that debt because you pleased with me, shall you not also have had mercy

on your fellow slave in the same way that I had mercy on you?'

And his lord, moved with anger, handed him over to the torturers until he should repay

all that was owed him."

Torturers...what would that be?

Stress, hardship, illness, difficulty.

Like James 2:13, "Judgment will be merciless to the one who shows no mercy."

This is not the judgment of hell.

This is not final judgment.

This is the judgment of divine chastening.

Matthew 5:7 gives us the opposite, "Blessed are the merciful for they shall obtain...what?...mercy."

What you give, you get.

You give mercy, God grants you mercy.

You're unforgiving and you will come under divine chastening.

That leads to a further expansion of that.

Number seven in my list, the one who doesn't forgive will not be forgiven, so that this

chastening which comes on the sin of unforgiveness is extended until forgiveness is rendered

and forgiveness will be rendered when forgiveness is offered by the individual.

Go back in Matthew to chapter 6 where this is the point and a very familiar one to us.

Matthew chapter 6 verse 12, this is the disciples' prayer, "Forgive us our debts as we also have

forgiven our debtors."

How brash would it be to ask you to forgive us our debts while we're not willing to forgive

our debtors, right?

It's the same basic point we've just made.

And then down in verse 14, "For if you forgive others for their transgressions, your heavenly

Father will also forgive you.

But if you do not forgive others, then your Father will not forget your transgressions.

And now the chastening that comes on you because of lack of forgiveness becomes a sustained

chastening.

If we forgive, we will be forgiven."

God deals with us as we deal with others.

"If we don't forgive, we won't be forgiven."

Now we're not talking about eternal forgiveness.

We're not talking about justification.

We're not talking about whether or not we have a standing before God through the righteousness

of Christ imputed to us, that's settled already.

Future blessing is settled, right?, at salvation.

We're not talking about eternal forgiveness here, we're talking about temporal forgiveness.

This is not eternal forgiveness related to our justification.

This is temporal forgiveness related to our sanctification.

This has nothing to do with the issue of eternal blessing, future blessing.

It has everything to do with the blessing now.

Through the years as a pastor, I certainly have found the emptiness, the dryness, the

insipid dullness, the lack of joy, lack of power, trouble in marriages and families and

in life that is very often due to the attitude within the heart of a person, a believing

person of vengeance and bitterness and anger and hostility and hatred.

And because that person will not forgive, they never come under the blessing of temporal

forgiveness from God.

People like this may seek Christian counseling, hopefully they seek it here.

The first thing that all of our people who have ever been trained in biblical counseling

confront is sin and a dominant sin that you are going to be exposed to when you counsel

people is the bitterness and the anger and the hatred that dwells in their heart that

essentially has cut them off from blessing.

Life's hard enough, you make it much harder if you don't forgive.

So we really circle through all of these aspects.

We are to forgive because it is godlike to forgive; because forgiveness is inherent in

the second commandment because to hate is equal to murder; because the most holy is

the most offended and He forgives and sets the model for us who are the least holy and

the least offended; because He has forgiven us the greater sins, how can we not forgive

others the lesser sins?; and because we forfeit the joys of fellowship, we forgive; and because

we place ourselves under the chastening of God and He will not forgive us to bless us

until we forgive others.

A few more compelling reasons to forgive.

Number eight, the absence of forgiveness renders us unfit for worship...unfit for worship.

It's not just as simple as rolling in on a Sunday morning in a casual attitude and thinking

that just no matter what's going on in your life God is just waiting for you to show up

and offer Him worship.

For example, Matthew 5, backing up in Matthew again to Matthew 5, "Therefore...verse 23

says...if you're presenting your offering at the altar, you're coming to worship."

This is pre-cross so we're still talking about the temple and that was the form of worship.

But if you're going to go to the temple and offer your offering ostensibly to worship

God, to give honor to God and glory to God and there you remember that your brother has

something against you, you remember that there's something wrong in a relationship.

There's a lack of forgiveness.

There's an unresolved conflict.

"Leave your offering there in front of the altar, go first, be reconciled to your brother,

then come and present your offering."

Now this goes to the very extent of pursuing reconciliation, but I think that's essentially

what you always have in mind when you forgive someone and when you ask for their forgiveness.

I had as conversation like that just a couple of days ago.

It was brought to my attention that I had seriously offended someone, someone that I

care greatly about and have for a long time.

And I called this gentleman and I asked his forgiveness cause I don't want to...I don't

want to be in violation of this command from our Lord and be unfit to worship.

And so I asked if he would forgive me those offenses.

And in return he asked if I would forgive him for his offenses.

You step out of that situation with a reconciliation.

And it isn't first and foremost because you want to have a good relationship with that

person, it's first and foremost because you want to have a right relationship with God.

No one should draw near to God with the intention to worship Him if there's an unsettled bitterness

or grudge with someone else, regardless of whose fault it is.

If there's anger or unforgiveness, it needs to be resolved, as much as is within your

heart and there are times when you go to someone and say, "I want to make it right," and they

don't want to do that.

They want to harbor and hold on to their bitterness.

But as much is as possible, you seek to express your own heart and seek forgiveness and seek

to give forgiveness.

Number nine, this too very practical...not to forgive is to usurp the authority of God...not

to forgive is to usurp the authority of God.

I guess you have to ask yourself if you're unwilling to forgive, who made you the judge

of all the earth?

Are you better than God?

This is the ultimate ego trip, you know, I think.

Anybody that won't forgive has a serious misconception of who they are.

You're presuming to take the sword of divine judgment out of God's hand and flail around

that same sword as if you had the right to wield it.

What audacity.

Romans 12...Romans 12 verse 14, "Bless those who persecute you.

Bless and do not curse."

Then verse 17, "Never pay back evil for evil to anyone."

Verse 18, "As far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men."

Verse 19, "Never take your own revenge, beloved, but leave room for the wrath of God for it

is written, 'Vengeance is Mine, I will repay,' says the Lord."

You don't need to get your pound of flesh out of everybody.

There are people who have this illusion that they are supposed to be the judge.

God is too slow.

God appears indifferent.

God appears weak.

He appears uninterested in this situation that has so profoundly offended me.

That is really a kind of blasphemy.

In the first place, you're a sinner yourself, right?

And there would be lots of people who would have every right to hold a sword over your

own head.

But the truth of the matter is, vengeance belongs to God.

I will promise you that I have found comfort in that.

I am more than happy when offended to give complete forgiveness from the heart with all

my might and leave the retaliation and the reciprocation to God who perfectly understands

the issue.

He has the highest standard, mine is lower.

His justice is pure justice, perfect justice, mine is impure and imperfect.

His authority is unlimited, I have no authority.

He is impartial, He is absolutely impartial, I am not...I am not omniscient.

I don't see the end from the beginning.

I can't read the motive.

I am ignorant.

I am short-sighted.

I see nothing beyond today.

I skew everything that happens to me in my own favor, and the longer I chew on something

I didn't like, the bigger it gets and the more unrelated to reality it is.

I am not the person to be making the judgment, neither are you.

We're not qualified...not at all.

Well there's one final point to make along this line, number ten, and this is something

to think about.

I remember years ago when I was thinking through these things and I was teaching the book of

Philemon which is the great story of forgiveness where the Apostle Paul asks Philemon to forgive

the runaway slave Onesimus and take him back.

And I had thought about all the things that I put in my little list so far to you, and

then one other thing struck me like a bolt and sort of pulled everything together, and

it's this: the injuries against you, the offenses against you are the trials that perfect you.

If you respond with vengeance, you are literally interrupting the best work that God can do

in your life.

You need to be offended.

Your pride needs it, your self-will needs it, your independence needs it.

All the difficulties that you have in life, all the offenses that come against you, you

need to learn to embrace those offenses.

All the criticisms, all the injustices, all the persecutions, all the mistreatments, all

the misunderstandings, all the misrepresentations, all of those which look to you to be wounds

and severe attacks are, in fact, the very trials that perfect you.

First Peter 5:10, "After you've suffered a while, the Lord make you perfect...perfect."

After you've suffered a while, the Lord make you perfect.

James 1 verse 3, "The testing of your faith produces endurance.

Let endurance have its perfect result."

The testing of your faith produces endurance, that is an enduring, strong faith.

You want that, so let it happen.

"Blessed is the man who perseveres," verse 12, "under trial for once he's been approved,

he'll receive the crown of life which the Lord has promised to those who love Him, therefore

consider it all joy, brethren, when you fall into various trials."

The best illustration of this is in 2 Corinthians 12...2 Corinthians 12, we've talked about

it through the years.

This is by way of reminder.

In verse 10, Paul makes an amazing statement.

"I am well content with weaknesses, with insults, with distresses, with persecutions, with difficulties

for Christ's sake for when I am weak, then I am strong."

He had learned through his suffering that it was the trials that God used to perfect

him.

He has just talked about one of them.

In verse 7 he says, "To keep me from exalting myself because of the surpassing greatness

of the revelations, he had personal visits from the ascended Christ and a visit to heaven

which he referred to in the opening of the chapter, too wonderful to even be spoken of.

But because of these revelations, he would be tempted to exalt himself.

So there was given him a thorn in the flesh.

His flesh would rise up and be proud and so literally there's a sphere...the word "thorn"

is a stake with a sharpened end.

There was a stake rammed through his otherwise proud flesh, a messenger of Satan, an angelos

of Satan, a satanic angel, a demon.

I believe this was the demon that was leading the destruction in the church at Corinth which

was breaking his heart.

Why did the Lord let a demon get into the church in the form of false teachers, embodied

in false teachers to disrupt this church to which he had given so much of his life?

To keep me from exalting myself.

Isn't it an amazing thing to think about, that the Lord would even give a demon, empowered

false teachers the right and the opportunity to go into a church and tear into that church

if the end result would be the humbling of its pastor?

So, I prayed...he says in verse 8...three times that it might leave me.

I prayed on three different occasions...Paul is saying...I asked the Lord to stop this

by His great power, shut down this demonic operation that is tearing into this church

that I love.

And He said to me, "My grace is sufficient for you, I'm not going to stop the trial,

I am going to ramp up the grace for power is perfected in weakness."

You're not weak enough, Paul, you're not weak enough.

You've had too many visions, you've had too many revelations, your flesh tends to too

much pride, you need to be humbled.

And the way to humble you most readily is to humble you at the point of where you see

your greatest success, to have the church turn on you.

Any of us who are in ministry wonder why most of the criticism that comes against us comes...well

it comes often from within the very church from where we are shepherding.

But if it's not inside the church, it comes from other churches and other pastors and

other Christian leaders, certainly it comes against me from those sources.

Rarely does persecution come to me from the world.

Rarely do lies and slander and evil speaking come against me from the world.

Almost ninety-nine percent of the time it comes from inside the church.

And it can be heartbreaking and you sometimes want to rise to defend yourself against these

things.

But you learn like the Apostle Paul that this is all part of the Lord's humbling you when

you have been blessed.

So, He says to him, "My grace is sufficient for you for power is perfected in weakness."

The less you trust yourself, the more useful you are to Me.

So Paul's response, "Most gladly therefore I will rather boast about my weaknesses so

that the power of Christ may dwell in me."

Folks, the bottom line, what I'm saying in this, is this...your injuries, the offenses

that come against you, the lies that come against you, the misrepresentations that come

against you, the accusations, the persecution that comes against you, all of these things

constitute the trials that God uses to perfect you.

That's what you want, that kind of perfection.

God is at work and He's making you strong through the offenses that can make you angry.

But if they make you angry and bitter and hateful and vengeful, you're just getting

weaker and weaker and weaker and you're in a position to be cut off from the fellowship

of other believers because they won't want to be anywhere around you and you're putting

yourself in a position to forfeit the temporal blessing of God that comes with the forgiveness

that comes with your forgiveness.

God is at work making you strong and making you holy through these very things.

So, be very little concerned about personal injury, okay?

Be indifferent to it, even within the family, even within the marriage, even within the

circle of friends.

Be much more concerned about your own personal holiness and understand that by those wounds

and injuries that come more deeply from those that are close to you, being wounded in the

house of your friends is the toughest to deal with, but embrace those.

Be much concerned about the personal holiness that they produce.

So when offenses come against you, which could tempt you to be unforgiving, be immediately

forgiving because your far more concerned about the work of holiness that the Lord is

doing in your life than you are about the offenses.

I guess summing it up, an anonymous saint wrote long ago, "Revenge indeed seems often

sweet to men, but it only is a sugared poison.

Its aftertaste is bitter as hell.

Forgiving is sweet, it enjoys peace and the consciousness of God's favor.

By forgiving, it gives away and annihilates the injury.

It treats the injurer as if he had no injured and therefore feels no more the pain and sting

that was inflicted.

Forgiveness is a shield from which all the fiery darts of the wicked one harmlessly rebound.

Forgiveness brings heaven to earth and heaven's peace into the troubled heart."

So pursue forgiveness, for God's sake, for your sake, for the sake of the church.

Let's pray.

Father, we thank You tonight again for a wonderful evening of fellowship together.

We thank You for faithful congregation of people who love You, who are not simply caught

up in the details of Scripture but have come to love the One who is the theme of Scripture,

even Your glorious trinitarian self.

We thank You for the love of the truth that marks this congregation.

And if it is true, and if it is so that we love the truth, written and incarnate, then

we will embrace its demands joyfully.

That means we embrace forgiveness.

We instantly and unconditionally and freely forgive, waiting in some cases hopefully for

the other person to come and seek a full reconciliation.

But from our standpoint, we forgive.

Help us to learn that last lesson, to embrace the wounds, who embrace the attacks, to embrace

the misrepresentations to embrace the things that were said unkindly, unfairly, unjustly,

the merciless injuries, to embrace them, offering immediate forgiveness, knowing that these

wounds are the very trials that You use to perfect us.

And may we, like the Apostle Paul, then rejoice in insults and distresses and suffering and

persecution for when we are weakened by those things, that's how You make us strong.

Lord, again we thank You for Your truth.

We thank You for Your Holy Spirit, left to ourselves we wouldn't have the power to live

this way but because the Holy Spirit was poured out on the day of Pentecost and ever since

that day every person who is in Christ is a temple of the Spirit of God.

We thank You that the Spirit lives in us, enabling us to be obedient and to live lives

that are marked by grace, mercy and forgiveness.

This too is a clear demonstration to the watching world that Christ is in us, for we forgive

even as He forgave us.

Use us this week, Lord, even as we think about next weekend, to come across some folks that

we can bring to hear the glories of the resurrection.

Thank You for a wonderful day and for a time of worship and praise that we've been able

to offer You, in Christ's name.

Amen.

For more infomation >> Reasons to Forgive, Part 2 (Selected Scriptures) - Duration: 45:02.

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Macka B - Rasta Tell Them - Duration: 3:50.

rastafari a tell dem nuff tingz

dem a gwaan like dey nah waan a hear

a long time rasta tell dem jah

a long time rasta tell dem bout di ganja n now dem realize it is di cure fi di cancer yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time ras seh ital vegeterian n now dem realize di meat a mash up di children yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time rasta tell dem bout di salt

n now dem affi cut it out di blood pressure start o hoy

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time ras seh babylon is fallin n now look in di west mi seh di whole a dem is bawlin yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time rasta tell dem long time ago

long time rasta tell dem i hope dem listenin now

jah

sum a mi lyrics from a long time ago di way di world a run mi coulda taught dem no

rasta know said a so it a go go

jus lissen how mi lyrics dem flow, jah mi do a chune called who a di terroriss

wen mandela dey a prison back inna di 80's mi tell dem im a hero n a dis dem a dis

now everybody hav mandela ras di greatest mi do a chune called di invasion

bout di europeans n dem colonization an look dem now between dem n di asian

dem still a tek di minerals outta di afrikan land

mi nah waan no big macis a chune pan mi bass 20 years ago mi tell dem seh dem did a nyam horse

n look dem now mi seh wat com to pass nuff a dem a nyam de horse wid di reggae reggae sauce

long time rasta tell dem long time ago

long time rasta tell dem u know seh a di truth

u know seh a no lie a nuff tingz dem hear from rastafari

u know seh a di truth dem juss cyaan deny

n nuff tingz dem hear rastaman prophecy seh sum nuh waan fi hear

i don't know why dem prefer to rely pon a guy inna tie

di wordz of I an I a pass dem by

wait till dem find out about King Selassie

long time rasta tell dem a long time ago

a long time rasta tell dem i hope ya listenin now, jah

a long time rasta tell dem bout di ganja n now dem realize it is di cure fi di cancer, yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time ras seh ital vegeterian n now dem realize di meat a mash up di nation, yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time rasta tell dem bout di salt n now dem affi cut it out di blood pressure start o hoy

a long time rasta tell unu yo

a long time ras seh babylon is fallin n now look inna west mi seh di whole a dem is bawlin yo

a long time rasta tell unu yo

For more infomation >> Macka B - Rasta Tell Them - Duration: 3:50.

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Reasons to Forgive, Part 1 (Selected Scriptures) - Duration: 49:26.

I want to talk to you tonight and next Sunday night about the issue of forgiveness.

It probably doesn't come up as often as it should in our discussions from the pulpit

here because it is a very, very important issue.

What makes it an important issue in the church, and we're talking to believers tonight, we're

not so much talking about God's forgiveness toward us as we're talking about our forgiveness

toward each other.

But it is a very vital and a very essential and a very necessary component of life in

the church because the church, even at its best, is a collision of sinners.

We all understand that.

We are guilty of saying the wrong thing, and behaving in wrong ways.

We have all offended people.

We have all caused people to stumble.

We have all crossed the line of discretion into indiscretion and the way we deal with

people and treat people.

We have all showed preferential treatment at times.

We have all been less than considerate to people in need.

We have failed to give to folks what they need at the time they need it.

There are many, many points at which sinners collide in the church.

And because the church is a very intimate fellowship, only to be exceeded in its intimacy

by family, we borrow that image, don't we?, the image of a family.

We are seen as God's family and the intimacy then throws us together and we crash into

each other and our weaknesses are made manifest and so we are guilty from time to time of

offending.

It then becomes essential to the ongoing life of the church, the ongoing joy of believers

that we be able to deal with those offenses with an attitude of forgiveness...of forgiveness.

In the end, what finally destroys every relationship is an inability to forgive.

It isn't the offense that destroys the relationship, it is the inability to forgive that destroys

the relationship.

Offenses will come.

Even our Lord said that.

Offenses will come.

That's part of living life in a fallen world and dealing even in the church with the people

who have not yet been perfected.

How we deal with those offenses is what determines the nature of our relationship.

It is that way in a marriage.

It is that way in a family.

It is that way among friends.

It is certainly that way in the church.

Not only is this matter of forgiveness essential to the cohesiveness of the church, as it is

to the family and to marriage, not only is this the path to joy and satisfaction and

fulfillment in the family and in the church, that is collectively, but the inability to

forgive not only destroys relationship, it destroys the people who don't forgive.

It is not only destructive of relationships, it is self-destructive.

And Scripture makes it very, very clear that where there is a lack of forgiveness, there

will develop bitterness and out of bitterness come hatred and couple with hatred comes anger

and the end of hatred and anger and bitterness is the pursuit of vengeance.

Retaliation is sought and retaliation is never satisfied and vengeance is never really appeased

and consequently people live with the bitterness and it is deeper and deeper as they live with

it longer.

We live in a society that has made a virtue...or tried to make a virtue out of vindictiveness.

Three out of every four attorneys on the planet live in America.

They have to be here in order to take up all the litigation that comes from angry, bitter

people wanting to get every piece of flesh they can get out of anybody who has stepped

across the line, into the offense zone.

Even psychologists have said that forgiveness is not healthy.

That's right.

Forgiveness is not healthy.

You don't need to carry around that offense.

You need to get resolution and the best way to get resolution is to be vindictive.

Years ago I read a popular book called Toxic Parents and in this book Toxic Parents the

author has a chapter entitled, "You don't have to forgive."

She says that children who have been offended by the behavior of their parents must not

forgive their parents, they must heap on their parents full blame for their present problems

because their parents poisoned them by their toxicity.

And so she suggests that the new cry should be, "I am the victim, it's not my fault, I'm

not responsible, my parents did it to me."

Guilt for everything is pushed off on someone else and vengeance needs to be not only exalted

but exhausted.

However, the price of vengeance is extremely high..extremely high.

An unforgiving attitude, a bitterness that runs deep, a desire for vengeance that comes

out of vindictiveness or hate, or anger, will do several things.

Number one, it imprisons people in their past.

This is the price of an unforgiving heart.

It imprisons people in their past.

As long as people will not forgive, as long as people will not put the past in the past,

but continue to seek an unfulfilled level of vengeance, they are shackled to their past.

They are shackled to that past event.

The pain of that event is fed.

It is not only kept alive, it is fed until it becomes larger and larger.

Another way to look at it is, if you don't forgive things that have happened in the past,

you continue to pick at an open sore, you keep it from healing, you enlarge it, you

sentence yourself to the future feeling worse than you felt in the past when it happened.

You choose to love hate and hate dominates.

This unforgiveness then produces bitterness.

It becomes an infection and it is malignant, it harasses, it creates distorted memories

which create a distorted view of life.

Anger becomes out of control.

Emotions become unchecked.

People entertain ideas about revenge, every conversation becomes a forum for slandering

the people who have supposedly harmed you so profoundly.

Every conversation becomes an opportunity for defamation, exaggeration and outright

lies.

On the other hand, forgiveness frees a person from both of these categories of tragedy.

Forgiveness frees you to enjoy all relationships and to live with peace and tranquility in

your own heart.

Forgiveness is a very freeing reality.

Now Scripture exalts forgiveness for these reasons and for the one greater reason and

that is forgiveness honors God.

And I'll get to that in a moment.

But as far as I can tell, in the Bible there are at least 75 word pictures of forgiveness.

Relax, I'm not giving you all 75 of them.

But there are at least 75 figures of speech, or analogies that are used in Scripture as

word pictures of forgiveness.

Here are a few.

To forgive is to turn the key, open the cell door and let the prisoner free.

To forgive is to write in large letters across a debt, "Nothing Owed."

To forgive is to pound the gavel in a courtroom and declare the person, "Not Guilty."

To forgive is to shoot an arrow so high and so far that it can never be retrieved.

To forgive is to take out the garbage and dispose of it, leaving the house fresh and

clean.

To forgive is to loose the anchor and set the ship free to sail.

Again, a few more biblical pictures.

To forgive is to grant a full pardon to a condemned and sentenced criminal.

To forgive is to loosen a stranglehold on a wrestling opponent.

To forgive is to sandblast a wall of graffiti leaving it brand new.

To forgive is to smash a clay pot into a thousand pieces so it can never be put together again.

These are biblical pictures of forgiveness, very instructive.

Forgiveness is a marvelous, virtuous, liberating, loving attitude and act.

It makes sense to forgive.

It is healthy.

It is wholesome.

It is sensible.

It is freeing.

It brings peace.

It engenders love.

That is why Proverbs 19:11 says, "A man's foolishness is not to forgive.

It is folly."

One person has analyzed forgiveness in an interesting sort of prosaic way.

He writes this, "Only the brave know how to forgive.

It is the most refined and generous element of human virtue.

Cowards have done good deeds and performed kind acts.

Cowards have even fought and conquered.

But cowards never forgive.

It's not in their nature, their hearts.

The power to forgive flows only from a strength and a greatness of soul, conscious of its

own humility and security and able to rise above all the little temptations of resenting

every fruitless attempt to steal its happiness," end quote.

That's good human wisdom.

There is certainly truth in that philosophical viewpoint.

But we're compelled to a deeper discussion than that.

It's wonderful that somebody in the world recognizes that forgiveness is the noblest

of all virtues.

Forgiveness may be in the world, isolated to a very few, it may be a rare commodity.

It may even be so bold and so brave that it only belongs to those who would be deemed

as emotional heroes because it is so rare.

But it must not be rare among believers.

It is the most normal of all our behaviors as Christians because it is absolutely necessary

in a collision of sinners that marks and defines the life of the church and the home.

So I want us to look at some compelling, biblical, theological, spiritual reasons why we are

to forgive, for the sheer spiritual nobility of it and because it is a direct command from

God to us.

Now I'm going to give you some of these reasons tonight and next Sunday night.

We'll see if we can work our way through them in two nights, if not, we'll add a third after

Easter and a week later, or so.

But I want to start where you have to start.

Forgiveness is required of a believer because forgiveness is the most godlike act a Christian

can do.

It is the most godlike act a Christian can do.

No act is more divine than forgiveness.

Never are we more like God than when we forgive.

What do we mean by forgiveness?

Forgiveness is a verbally declared, personally given promise, a statement of undeserved,

unearned love that affirms that though I have been offended, there is no anger, no hatred,

no desire for vengeance, no bitterness, no retaliation.

Why?

Because there is no guilt, no blame held.

That's forgiveness.

This is a characteristic that belongs to God.

He is a God of forgiveness.

Obviously we could spend a lot of time talking about that particular attribute of God, His

forgiveness.

But let me just give you a few representations of it in Scripture.

In the thirty-fourth chapter of Exodus, God discloses Himself to Moses.

Verse 5, He descends in the cloud and the Lord passed by, in verse 6, in front of Moses

and proclaimed, "The Lord, the Lord God, compassionate and gracious, slow to anger and abounding

in loving kindness and truth.

Now there are some attributes of God, compassion, grace, slowness to anger, loving kindness,

truth, who keeps lovingkindness for thousands, who forgives iniquity, transgression and sin...who

forgives iniquity, transgression and sin."

When God introduces Himself to Moses and makes this appearance to Moses, He defines Himself

as a God who forgives by every definition of violation...iniquity, transgression and

sin.

In Psalm 32, the Psalm begins, "How blessed is he whose transgression is forgiven, whose

sin is covered, how blessed is the man to whom the Lord does not impute iniquity."

This is a blessing from God that He forgives, that He does not hold against us our sins.

In Psalm 85 the Psalmist begins, "O Lord, You showed favor to Your land, You restored

the captivity of Jacob, You forgave the iniquity of Your people.

You covered all their sin.

You withdrew all Your fury.

You turned away from Your burning anger."

And again in the Psalms, and there are other places, I'm only giving you illustrations.

Psalm 130 is a similar testimony to God's forgiveness.

"Out of the depths I have cried to You, O Lord.

Lord, hear me, let Your ears be attentive to the voice of my supplication.

If You, Lord, should mark iniquities, O Lord, who could stand?

But there is forgiveness with You."

Perhaps one of the most beautiful statements regarding the forgiveness of God is in the

first chapter of Isaiah, that wonderful statement in verse 18, "Come now, let us reason together,

says the Lord, though your sins are as scarlet, they will be as white as snow.

Though they are red like crimson, they will be like wool."

This is God's forgiveness.

And the sins were serious.

If you read the rest of the chapter, he paints a vivid portrait of just how sick and just

how sinful Israel was, and yet how ready His forgiveness is.

In 43 of Isaiah, and verse 25, "I, even I," God giving testimony to His own nature, "I,

even I, am the one who wipes out your transgressions for My own sake and I will not remember your

sins."

Wow!

Wiping them out, obliterating them from the record and even from His own memory.

Listen to Isaiah 55:6, "Seek the Lord while He may be found.

Call upon Him while He is near.

Let the wicked forsake his way and the unrighteous man his thoughts and let him return to the

Lord and He will have compassion on him and to our God for He will abundantly pardon."

His testimony is part of the instruction of God that came to the prophets as they pronounced

judgment at the same time they announced that where there was repentance, there was forgiveness.

Jeremiah 33:8, "I will cleanse them from all their iniquity by which they have sinned against

Me.

I will pardon all their iniquities by which they have sinned against Me and by which they

have transgressed against Me.

It will be to Me a name of joy, praise and glory before all the nations of the earth

which will hear of all the good that I do for them.

They will fear and tremble because of all the good and all the peace that I make for

it."

This is the heart of God, the New Covenant, a couple chapters earlier than that, namely

in chapter 31, celebrates the forgiveness of God with familiar words.

"This is the Covenant...verse 33...that I will make with the house of Israel after those

days.

I'll put My law within them and on their heart I will write it, I'll be their God, they will

be My people.

They will not teach again each man his neighbor, each man his brother saying, 'Know the Lord.'

They will all know Me from the least of them to the greatest of them, declares the Lord,

for I will forgive their iniquity and their sin.

I will remember no more."

This is the testimony of the Lord who gives the sun for light by day, and the fixed order

of the moon and the stars for light at night, who stirs up the sea so that its waves roar,

the Lord of hosts is His name.

The God of order.

The God who controls the universe is the God who forgives.

When you come, of course, in to the New Testament, then the forgiveness of God becomes manifestly

visible in the work of our Lord Jesus Christ.

The message of Christ is that God will forgive your sins.

The cross is where that forgiveness is purchased.

The rest of the New Testament then features the message of the gospel of forgiveness,

preached through the book of Acts, defined through the epistles and consummated in the

book of Revelation.

One of the great standout evidences of the forgiveness of God is in the fifteenth chapter

of Luke, a very familiar chapter to us, we've gone through Luke, the story of the prodigal

who sins greatly, picturing the sinner who sins greatly against God, who upon returning

is embraced in love and full forgiveness and this gives us a picture of the lavishness

of God's forgiveness...the lavishness of it.

This wretched, sinful, young man comes back, cannot do anything to purchase restitution

or restoration, or reconciliation, but comes and can only ask for mercy.

He receives everything.

He receives the robe, the ring, the sandals, full sonship.

This is the nature of God.

We see it in our Lord as He dies and says, "Father, forgive them for they know not what

they do."

And that very day, one of them was forgiven, who had mocked Him, a thief hanging beside

Him.

Another one was forgiven who had overseen the crucifixion, the Centurion.

Forgiveness extended further so that early in the book of Acts, there were some of the

priests who were so set against Him who were forgiven their sins, became a part of His

Kingdom.

This is godlike, to forgive.

You are never more like God than when you forgive.

That, of course, becomes a very evident message in the New Testament.

Matthew 5:44, "But I say to you, love your enemies."

And love your enemies means you are forgiving them.

"Pray for those who persecute you, so that you may be the sons of your Father who is

in heaven.

You're never more evidently like your Father than when you forgive."

It's a call to be godlike.

The Apostle Paul in Ephesians, in that wonderful fourth chapter of Ephesians, and that familiar

32 nd verse says, "Be kind to one another, tender hearted, forgiving each other just

as God in Christ also has forgiven you."

There again, you forgive because God forgives.

And you are to be...verse 1 of chapter 5...imitators of God.

Let me go over that again.

Be forgiving each other, just as God in Christ also has forgiven you, therefore be imitators

of God as beloved children.

Same thing that Jesus said in Matthew 5:44 and 45, "Be like your Father, be forgiving.

Walk in love just as Christ loved you."

You, of course, display Godlike mercy when you forgive.

Colossians 3:13 repeats the same thing, "Forgiving each other, whoever has a complaint against

anyone, forgive it, just as the Lord forgave you, so also should you.

And, by the way, Paul wrote both Colossians and Philippians from a jail where he was unjustly

and hatefully imprisoned.

He was practicing the very virtue that he was calling on believers to enact.

So, the first reason to forgive is that you are never more like God than when you forgive.

We'll come back to that point at a later point, and you will see how incongruous it is to

accept consistent, constant forgiveness from God and withhold it from other people.

But let me give you a second reason for forgiveness.

First of all, you're never more like God than when you forgive.

And number two, it is not murder only which is forbidden by the sixth commandment...it

is not murder only which is forbidden by the sixth commandment.

The sixth commandment says, "Do not murder," right?

Back in Exodus chapter 20.

Is that all it means, "don't murder," or does it mean something more than that?

Let's go back again to the Sermon on the Mount, Matthew chapter 5...Matthew chapter 5.

There are two verses here that I want you to look at, verses 21 and 22.

Now in this particular section of this sermon, our Lord is attacking the limited, superficial

interpretation of His commands that had developed in Judaism.

And that's what He is referring to here.

"You have heard that the ancients were told..."

In other words, you've been taught a certain thing by ancient rabbis, the rabbis and scribes

of old.

You have heard what they have taught.

You see the same thing sequentially, verse 27, "You have heard that it was said about

adultery..."

Verse 31, "It was said...and so-and-so...about divorce."

Verse 33, "You have heard that the ancients were told about vows..."

"You have heard...verse 38...about this matter of an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth."

Or verse 43, "You have heard that it was said you shall love your neighbor and hate your

enemy."

This is what you have heard.

You have been taught certain things about these issues.

In this case, you were told that the ancients were told, "You shall not commit murder and

whoever commits murder shall be liable to the court."

Now the Jews had long been well-informed and very serious about the matter of murder...unless,

of course, the victim was a prophet.

They were sadly eager to murder the prophets.

But apart from that, they understood the prevalence of crimes being a dishonor to God and one

of those crimes was murder.

They would even go so far as to affirm that if somebody commits a murder, they are liable

to the court and they understood the Old Testament rendered capital punishment as the appropriate

verdict to be pronounced on the head of a murderer.

That's what you've heard...that's what you've heard.

I want to take it further.

There's more than just that.

There is more intended by the sixth commandment than just murder.

"I say to you," and this is typical, "but I say to you," verse 21, "But I say to you..."

verse 28.

Verse 32, "But I say to you..."

Verse 34, "But I say to you..."

Verse 39, "But I say to you..."

Verse 44, "But I say to you..."

In each of these cases, He starts out with what they had heard and He tells them there's

a lot more there than you have heard.

"But I say to you that everyone who is angry with his brother shall be guilty before the

court and whoever says to his brother, 'You good for northing,'" that's one way to translate

that, "shall be guilty before the Supreme Court.

And whoever says, 'You fool,' shall be guilty enough to go into the fiery hell."

Jesus is saying, "Look, if you have hate in your heart, you're a murderer in your heart

and you're guilty before God for the murder though you never actually commit it.

Listen to 1 John 3:15, the Apostle John got the message.

He wrote, "Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer.

Everyone who hates his brother is a murderer."

Unforgiveness is a hate attitude.

It is a representation of hatred.

He sweeps away all their self-righteousness and unmasks their murderous attitudes.

If you say, as the original says, to someone, "Raca," that's a transliteration of the word,

it is simply introducing to us an attitude that is vicious.

It's a common epithet that really has no English equivalent.

It's sort of transliterated "Raca" this new NAS says, "You good for nothing."

I'm afraid that is a pretty mild interpretation of what that word meant.

It's a term of abuse, a term of derision, a term of contempt, a term of hatred, vicious

term.

And so is "you fool."

A fool was synonymous with being godless because the fool said in his heart there is no God.

You stupid fool, it's like pronouncing a curse on someone.

If you have that kind of attitude toward people, attitudes of abuse and derision, and contempt,

you are guilty enough to go to fiery hell.

You have to see that you need to forgive in the heart, as well as withhold the instrument

of murder.

You need to love and forgive or you're in sin.

If you're a Christian, you have the responsibility to forgive, to let loose all hate, all sense

of vengeance.

You need to release all of that attitude of abuse and derision and contempt and scorn

and hatred toward another person.

If that person is a Christian, then that person is literally Christ to you.

How you treat that person is how you treat Christ.

If that person is a non-Christian, he still bears the natural image of God and you do

no good to your relationship to either a Christian or a non-Christian by that kind of non-forgiving

hate and you certainly do no good to yourself by that attitude.

The death penalty is not just for murderers, it is for haters.

You don't mind honoring the image of God in yourself, how proud are you that you cannot

see the image of God in someone else?

You don't mind recognizing the Christ that is in you.

How terrible it is within the family of God that you don't recognize the Christ that is

in someone else.

You are angry at someone else's sins.

Are you equally angry at your own?

Are you so proud that you cannot see your own sins, but only the sins of others?

Hatred toward someone, an unwillingness to forgive someone, is to hold a murderous attitude

in the heart.

Any lack of forgiveness is selfish.

You need to deal with the pride in your own heart.

This is seriousness enough to say that that's sin enough if unforgiven to catapult a person

into the fires of hell.

No offense against you, no matter what it is, no offense against you is worth hatred

and unforgiveness.

Sometimes people want to debate that.

"Well, are you supposed to forgive everybody if they don't ask?"

Yes...yes.

You forgive immediately, you forgive instantaneously, you forgive totally, you forgive completely.

Whether or not you will ever have reconciliation and what that relationship will be in the

future is a matter of that person desiring that relationship to be what it should be.

But forgiveness, that comes immediately.

Let me give you a third reason why it is so important to forgive, because whoever has

offended you has offended God more.

Whoever has offended you has offended God more.

Ask yourself a question.

You say, "I was seriously offended, that person seriously offended me, they deeply offended

me, they scarred me for life because of the way I was treated.

Maybe it was my mother, my father, maybe it was somebody that dumped me, maybe it was

a former spouse, whatever they offended me so profoundly, they have scarred me so deeply,

the wounds are hard to get over.

Listen, if God who was far more offended by their sin than you and who is infinitely more

holy than you forgives, don't tell me you can't forgive.

Are you saying that to offend you is more serious than to offend God?

Is that the point?

"Oh I know God can forgive, but I can't."

Oh really, are you a higher court?

Are you a more holy person?

Well obviously not.

If God who is the most holy can forgive the greatest offense, can you the least holy forgive

the least offense?

Any wrong ever done is, first of all, against God.

Look at Psalm 51...Psalm 51.

This Psalm is tied to David's sin with Bathsheba committing adultery and murder, and he is

just devastated with guilt, condemnation.

It's tearing him up.

A parallel Psalm is Psalm 32.

He says it's effecting his physical body.

His body is becoming weak...that's what sin will do and guilt will do, it effects you

physiologically.

His life juices are drying up.

It's effecting the fluid that runs in his nervous system, it's effecting his blood flow,

it's effecting his saliva.

And he looks at this sin that he's committed against Bathsheba, this sin that he's committed

against Uriah, her husband, the sin that he's committed against his own family, his own

children, his own nation, but he looks past all of that and in verse 4 he says this, "Against

You, O God," mentioned in verse 1, "Against You, You only I have sinned."

All sin must be seen primarily as an offense against God, against the most holy, against

You I have sinned and done what is evil in Your sight.

All sin is against God.

The fact that it's against you or me is incidental.

It's incidental.

It's a minor detail.

It's immaterial, don't take it personally, don't let it ruin your life, don't let it

destroy your relationship, don't let it wound the church.

That's ridiculous.

If God forgives, who is the most holy, and is supremely offended, cannot we who are the

least holy and only minimally offended forgive?

We who are so unholy as to be in constant need of forgiveness from others and from God,

will we withhold that forgiveness that we so desperately need?

So we forgive and we forgive because God forbids anger, hatred, attitudes of vengeance.

And we forgive because He has forgiven who is most holy and most offended.

And we forgive because never are we more like the God we proclaim than when we forgive.

And if you call yourself a Christian, you are a child of God.

And if you are a child of God, then you understand that it is critically important that you manifest

godlikeness.

I'll give you one more and it's tied to the one I just gave you.

It is only reasonable that those who are forgiven the greater sins, forgive the lesser sins.

It is only reasonable that those who have been forgiven on a greater scale be willing

to render forgiveness on a lesser scale.

And what I mean by that is take a look at what you've been forgiven.

What has God forgiven you?

What?

All your sin, all your iniquity, all your transgression from the moment you arrived

in this world till the moment you exit, if you're His child, all is fully, completely

forgiven, all the past, all the present, all the future.

The grandness of this forgiveness is stunning.

Turn to Matthew 18 and let's see an illustration that will lead us to the secondary point that

if God can forgive us the greater, cannot we forgive the lesser?

This is really an unforgettable story in Matthew 18.

Peter is trying to find out how you're supposed to forgive people because he's living in this

collision of believers, he's understanding that it's so easy to offend.

They're wrangling about all kinds of things anyway, they must have irritated each other

on a daily basis.

They were together 24/7.

They were not very sanctified.

They were weak in faith and they all wanted to sit on the right hand of Jesus in the Kingdom.

So they were hassling for sure.

Peter comes, this is life, "Lord, how many times shall my brother sin against me and

I forgive him?

Up to seven times?"

Peter patting himself on the back as best he could by bending his arm around there,

because the rabbis said three times to forgive, and that's it.

You forgive the first time, you forgive the second time, you forgive the third time, after

that you don't give forgiveness.

Peter wanting to trump the rabbis and look like a hero doubled it and added one.

"Lord, shall we forgive seven times?"

Thinking he would probably get some kind of commendation.

Jesus said to him, "I don't say to you up to seven times, but up to seventy times seven."

Just took his number and multiplied it into infinity.

And one of the other gospels says, "Seventy times a day."

You just keep forgiving.

There's no end to it.

You forgive as many times as there's an offense.

That's how God forgives, isn't it?

I would venture to say that certainly the Lord has forgiven me seventy times seven,

seventy times a day, day after day, week after week, month after month after month of my

life, your life.

And then he tells the story that makes the point.

The Kingdom of heaven may be compared to a king who wished to settle accounts with his

slaves.

This would be a king who had allotted segments of his kingdom to certain underlings, these

are slaves at a very high level and their responsibility is to collect the taxes and

collect the income for the king from these various areas.

He brings these in to settle the accounts and when he had begun to settle them, one

who owed him ten thousand talents was brought to him.

That's an unpayable amount.

One person figured out that that would be...that would be equal to the entire gross national

product for Israel in a year.

Now this is just a massive amount of money.

This guy shows up and he has to give an account for this vast wealth which would have meant

that whatever his responsibility was, it was a grand responsibility and this kind of money

would only be accumulated over a long period of time.

It's now time to settle the account.

Verse 25 says he didn't have the money to repay.

Well what did you do with it?

That's a massive amount of money, squandered and wasted.

His lord commanded him to be sold, I'll get what I can out of him, along with his wife

and children and all that he had and repayment to be made.

All he could do was get what he could get.

So it's like a...it's like a bankruptcy in which the guy has nothing and you get only

what you can get.

And what could they get?

Well you could only get the slave price of these people and whatever possessions they

had, I'll get what I can...that's all I can do.

That would have been merciful.

Well the slave fell to the ground in verse 26 and prostrated himself before him and said,

"Have patience with me and I'll repay you everything."

Huh, how is that going to happen?

That's not possible.

"The lord of the slave felt compassion, released him, forgave him the debt."

Wow!

How wonderful, amazing.

Verse 28, "The slave went out, found one of his fellow slaves who owed him a hundred denarii,"

about three months wages, meager amount compared to what this guy had had.

He found somebody who owed him a hundred denarii, he seized him and began to choke him, saying,

'Pay back what you owe.'

So his fellow slave fell to the ground, began to plead with him," same exact words, "'Have

patience with me and I'll repay you.'

He was unwilling, went and threw him in prison till he should pay back what was owed."

Debtor's prison where you go and you work for pennies for years.

That's a very offensive behavior, isn't it to you?

I mean, that's about as ugly as you can get.

You've just been forgiven something equal to an unpayable fortune and you go strangle

a guy for three months wages.

That's repulsive.

Do you get the picture here?

This is what you do when you don't forgive someone.

So you don't mind receiving full forgiveness of an unpayable debt by a gracious God and

you're going to go choke somebody until you get the pound of flesh out of them, throw

them in a debtor's prison?

The model for forgiveness is the forgiveness that God has forgiven to us.

There are other points in that story and we'll pick that story up next Sunday night and go

from there.

That's enough for tonight.

We deserve condemnation.

We fall down before God and we receive complete forgiveness.

Then what do we so?

Go out and act in an unforgiving, ungracious, merciless, compassionless way toward other

people when we have received what we have received?

God has mercifully forgiven you, aren't you going to be able to forgive others?

He's forgiven you the vast unpayable debt, are you going to demand more out of someone

who offends you than God asked from you?

No judgment comes to you, why would you render vengeance on someone else?

Strong language and a strong call to forgiveness.

Well, that's enough for tonight.

Father, thank You for the time we've been able to share in talking about this.

We want to be known as those who eagerly, graciously, mercifully, compassionately and

lovingly forgive.

That's our desire.

We want to be like You.

We want to be beloved children, imitators of God.

We want to be as merciful and gracious as You are to us.

We want to obey the commands not only on the surface, on the behavioral level but underneath

in the attitudinal level.

May our lives, our marriages, our families and our church be a place where forgiveness

flows and we enjoy the freedom and the power of that forgiveness and the blessing that

comes from Your hand to a forgiving soul.

Continue, Lord, to draw us into the place of obedience that we might know the fullness

of joy, we pray in Christ's name.

Amen.

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