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The Art of Forgiveness - Jared Wilson

June 17, 2025
00:00

Have you ever struggled to forgive someone who has deeply hurt you? This powerful episode with Jared Wilson, recorded during our 2025 Love Like You Mean It Cruise, delves into the profound connection between forgiveness, love, and God's grace. We explore how forgiveness isn't just a feeling, but a conscious act of love – a "relational grace" that mirrors the undeserved blessings God pours out on us. By embracing the radical gift of forgiveness as a powerful way to reflect God's love and grace in our relationships, even when it feels difficult and costly, we're reminded that by forgiving others, we not only free ourselves but also make God known in the world.

Speaker 1

It feels like a death. I'm losing something to forgive you. That's why we don't want to do it. Or we just find it so difficult to do. I want to do it. The spirit's willing. The flesh is weak.

Why is it so hard to forgive? Because it's going to cost us something. It feels like a little death. I got to put aside comfort. I got to put aside a sense of rightness. I feel like I'm letting you off the hook. That doesn't seem right.

I gotta die to myself to be able to do this.

Speaker 2

Welcome to family life today, where we want to help you pursue the relationships that matter most. I'm Ann Wilson.

Speaker 3

And I'm Dave Wilson. And you can find us at familylifetoday.com. This is Family Life Today.

All right, so today we get to listen to a cruise talk that Jared Wilson gave last year on the cruise, which was awesome. But guess what? We're sailing again this February.

Speaker 2

Hey, we're going to be on the ship February 14th through the 21st on the brand new MSC World America ship. It's brand new and it's.

Speaker 3

It's amazing. Last year was incredible. And you won't believe this, but the boat is 90% sold out for next year for February.

So here's the deal. You've got to get signed up right now. This is the month we give you a discount. Dennis and Barbara Rainey are going to be on the boat this year. Bob Lapine, we got 10th Avenue North.

Anyway, it's a fabulous week in the sun. It's a marriage retreat for a week on a boat. And I'm telling you, you don't want to miss it.

Speaker 2

So book now and you can go to familylife today.com or.

Speaker 3

Or you can call 1-800-358-6329 to get more information.

And don't forget, the special pricing ends June 30th.

And just to give you a little taste of last year, here's Jared Wilson from the cruise last year talking about the difficult art of forgiveness.

Speaker 1

Forgiveness is a love. It's a gift of love. And you might say, I mean, I have forgiven people that I don't love or that I don't feel loving towards, but I forgave them. But we have to remember that love isn't a sentimental idea. Love isn't just a romantic category. As wonderful as the romantic category of love is, love is a gift. And because love is a gift, that means love is meant to be given. So to be forgiven is to be given love, to be given a kind of love. Forgiveness is how we demonstrate, in fact, the relationality of grace. Grace can remain for us sometimes just sort of a doctrine, a concept, an ideology, an idea. But it's when we take the concept of grace and we sort of press it out horizontally across the room to others. That's relational grace. Relational grace is God's grace put into Christian action in relationships.

Perhaps you've heard the definition of grace as not getting what you deserve. Anyone ever heard that? Grace is when you don't get what you deserve, like because of our sins, because of our failures, because of our flaws. None of us deserves free blessings, free favor. Well, relational grace is when we don't give others what they deserve, and instead we give them the blessings they don't deserve. Why would we do that? It doesn't make a whole lot of sense when we do that. Because that's what God did for us. And this is the connection that John makes in our passage here about love. We're to give love to others not because they're lovable or because they deserve it, but because God loved us. The grace of love that we give to others is predicated, it's founded on the grace of love that God gives us.

So let's read 1 John, chapter 4. We're gonna read verses 7 to 21. "Dear friends, let us love one another, because love is from God. And everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. The one who does not love does not know God because God is love. God's love was revealed among us in this way: God sent his one and only Son into the world so that we might live through Him. Love consists in this: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent His Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins. Dear friends, if God loved us in this way, we also must love one another. No one has ever seen God. If we love one another, God remains in us and his love is made complete in us. This is how we know that we remain in him and he in us. He's given us of His Spirit, and we have seen and we testify that the Father has sent His Son as the world's Savior. Whoever confesses that Jesus is the Son of God, God remains in him and he in God. And we have come to know and to believe the love that God has for us. God is love. And the one who remains in love remains in God, and God remains in him. In this love is made complete with us so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment. Because as he is, so also are we in this world. There is no fear in love. Instead, perfect love drives out fear because fear involves punishment. So the one who fears is not complete in love. We love because he first loved us. If anyone says, 'I love God' and yet hates his brother or sister, he is a liar. For the person who does not love his brother or sister, whom he has seen, cannot love God, whom he has not seen. And we have this command from him: that the one who loves God must also love his brother and sister." This is the word of the Lord.

Father, we thank you for this word. We ask that you would bless our time together. Father, help us to take the theoretical and make it actionable. Help us to embrace not just a doctrine of grace, a doctrine of love, a doctrine of forgiveness, but to embrace the mandate. And, Father, to do that, we need your Holy Spirit empowering us, filling us, anointing us. Father, help us to end this week empowered by your presence to love and forgive. And it's in your Son's name we pray these things. Amen.

Just a little background on the letter. This letter is written by the same John who wrote the Gospel of John, John's gospel. This is the disciple John. He followed Jesus for three years. He was one of the apostles of the early church. But John was not just a disciple of Jesus; he was a very close friend of Jesus. If you remember, Jesus had, of course, a community of disciples who began to grow and gather around him. Those who had pledged allegiance to Jesus, who decided to follow him. But within that community of disciples, there were the 12, right? The 12 disciples. Those were his closest followers, his closest friends. They became the apostles sent out on mission after the ascension of Jesus. But even within that 12, do you remember, there were three that it seemed like Jesus spent even more time with and would show special things to: Peter, James, and John. He's always pulling aside Peter, James, and John. They get to come with him up the mountain. They get to see the transfiguration. He's spending extra time with Peter, James, and John. They seemed like his circle within the circle, his closest friends within his closest friends. But then even within that three, there was John. And it seems like John is maybe, if Jesus has a best friend, would be Jesus's best friend. The Gospels refer to John as the beloved disciple, which is kind of interesting. Like he didn't love the other ones. You know, the disciple whom Jesus loved, as if he didn't love the other. Well, he did love all his disciples, but he just seemed to have a special, closer relationship with John.

So John, who's writing this now, is working from a place of up-close knowledge, relationship, and personal experience of the love of Jesus. Many scholars think that one of the purposes of this letter that John is writing is to help the recipients, the church that's receiving it, navigate the threat of a heresy called Gnosticism. And I don't know if you're familiar with that term, the early heresy of Gnosticism; it still endures today in some forms, but it was a heresy that promoted a kind of enlightenment through esoteric knowledge, like a special knowledge. Like some people are enlightened and some aren't, and you have to have the secret code to be able to get this sort of secret knowledge.

One thing that Gnosticism sort of taught was a downplaying of physical matter. They would say that physical matter is cursed, it's broken, it's evil. And so in the early heresy of Gnosticism, they would deny, for instance, the incarnation. They would say God didn't really become a man; he just sort of appeared to be a man. He just sort of almost like an illusion of some kind, because God could not put on flesh because flesh is inherently evil or inherently dirty. So they downplayed those sorts of things.

So here we have John, who says in his Gospel, the Word was made flesh, the Word became incarnate, he put on skin, the Word walked and prayed and fished and ate breakfast with us. This John, with this knowledge, is adamantly opposed to the concept of knowledge that comes apart from the incarnate, risen, ascended Jesus Christ. And so we'll see how his emphasis on love then is not grounded in esoteric or mystical conceptions of love, sentimental, romantic, purely emotional views of love. But his idea of love and forgiveness, by extension, is grounded in the incarnational concept of love as the grace of God who came in Jesus Christ, the Son of God in the flesh.

Now you may notice as you look through this passage, or as I read through it, the word forgive and forgiveness don't exactly appear in the passage, but the concepts are there. We look again, especially at verses 17 and 18: "In this love is made complete with us so that we may have confidence in the day of judgment, because as he is, so also are we in this world. There is no fear in love. Instead, perfect love drives out fear because fear involves punishment." Now what is forgiveness but the removal of punishment, the removal of judgment, the foregoing of vengeance? So John is implicitly putting forgiveness into the framework of this relational grace. And he does that by grounding it in the goodness of God and the good news of Jesus Christ.

So we're gonna see in this passage at least three facets of forgiveness that help us navigate the difficult art of forgiveness. So John starts by showing us first that forgiveness displays the grace of God's person. We make God known, even make God, in a sense, feel real when we love and forgive others. Our love reflects the grace that comes from God's very self. Look at verses 7 and 8: "Dear friends, let us love one another, because love is from God. And everyone who loves has been born of God and knows God. The one who does not love does not know God, because God is love." Whoa.

Now I ask for your permission to do a little bit of Bible teaching. I'm gonna ask your permission to do a little bit of theology. Is that okay? It's not the whole sermon, but just the first part of the sermon. Okay, a little bit of theology. I know you didn't come on the cruise ship to do doctrine, but here we are. John grounds love in God's very person. This means that love must be a really big deal. Love must not just be a glorious thing, a weighty thing that we sing songs about. It must be an indispensable thing. Because if God himself is love, we should not think lightly or sentimentally about love any more than we should think lightly or sentimentally about God.

A couple of doctrinal notes. So first, John telling us that God is love is telling us what God's very nature is. And it's telling us that God has a triune nature. What does it mean for God to be love? It doesn't necessarily mean that God is simply loving. God is loving, but that's not necessarily what it means. Judaism, Islam, Mormonism, all of those teach a God who loves, at least occasionally. But when Christians teach that God is himself love, they are saying that real love itself has its origin and its essence in God's very person. And this cannot be true unless God is a trinity.

If you just think about it, a solitary, non-triune God cannot be love. He might learn to love, he might yearn for love, but he cannot in himself be love. Because love requires an object. Real love requires relationship. And so the doctrine of the Trinity explains how God is love. We finally see how love is part of the fabric, even of creation, because it's part of the Creator. It's essential to the eternal need. Nothing Creator God. From eternity past, the Father and the Son and the Holy Spirit have been in relationship with each other. The Father loves the Son, the Son loves the Father, the Father loves the Spirit, the Spirit loves the Father, and so on and so forth. They've loved each other. That loving relationship is bound up in the very nature of God himself. So that if God were not a trinity, but merely a non-triune divinity of some kind, he could neither be love nor be God. Because if he was alone, if he was not triune, he could not be love. But if he was alone and thus needed someone or something to love, he would be deficient in character. And God is not deficient in character. He would be imperfect; thus he wouldn't be God.

Michael Reeves, a theologian, says this: "Yes, the Trinity can be presented as a fusty and irrelevant dogma, but the truth is that God is love because God is a Trinity." If you've ever wondered, I mean, why do we even believe this? Like no other religion believes this thing? I mean, maybe the Bible kind of says it, maybe, but I mean, can we downplay it? Can we just kind of put it in the background? It's kind of complex. It's hard to explain. You know, every time we try to teach it to kids, we wind up in some kind of heresy of some kind. You know, it's a pretty tricky sort of thing. No, we've got to forefront, number one, because this is who God is. But also because the Trinity is not some weird religious aberration that we have stupidly clung to. It's the answer to the deepest longing of the human heart. The Trinity answers history's oldest desire. It even clarifies the question for us. It makes us go deeper than ethereal feelings, sentimental notions. Emotions come and go; emotions wax and wane. But our God lives forever. So this puts us on solid ground with the idea of love that we have been chasing forever. The love that does not change, the love that does not fade, the love that does not go away. The Trinity explains love because love is grounded in God's triune nature.

Second sort of doctrinal note here, John telling us that God is love is a reminder that we cannot define love outside the framework of the holiness of God. This means we aren't free to define love however we want to define it. There's a major slogan that's popular right now. I'm sure you've heard it: "Love is love." You heard that? Love is love. No, God is love, which means that there's no behavior that God forbids, no kind of sexual immorality, whether homosexuality or adultery or any kind of fornication or lust. None of that is love. Because God is love. And because God is love, love must be grounded in his holiness and defined by his commands. Because love is from God, we're not at liberty to pervert love or redefine it. Whenever we do that, we're not actually loving. And when we're not loving, we're not showing that we are born of God or that we know God. So mainly what John is telling us is that we make God known when we reflect godly love. When we reflect godly love, we display the grace of God himself.

Speaker 3

This is family life today. And we are listening to a message that Jared Wilson gave on the Love like you mean it cruise last February. We'll be sailing again next February. But man, this is powerful.

Speaker 2

Really good.

Speaker 3

That's the kind of stuff you get on the boat and we're only halfway done. So let's go back in here the rest of Jared's message.

Speaker 1

Forgiveness displays the grace of God's pardon. What are we really doing when we forgive each other? We are showing the grace that God has given in the Gospel of Jesus. When we put others before ourselves, we display the grace of the Son who set aside his own glory to serve us, even to die for us. Love displays the grace of the Gospel of God's forgiveness in the cross, which is God's pardoning sinners in the good news of Jesus Christ.

Verses 9 through 11: God's love was revealed among us in this way. How do we know God loves us? John says, this is how we know God loves us. God sent his one and only Son into the world so that we might live through Him. And love consists in this: not that we loved God, but that he loved us and sent His Son to be the atoning sacrifice for our sins. Dear friends, verse 11: if God loved us in this way, we also must love one another. How was God's love displayed to us? God sent His Son to die for us. This is John, in a sense, plagiarizing himself from his most famous verse, John 3:16, right? This is how God showed love to the world. He sent his only begotten Son, that whosoever would believe in him would not perish, but would have everlasting life.

We didn't invent love. God did. And he demonstrates his inventive grace by the grace of the Gospel of Christ's cross. Why does loving the unlovable often feel so difficult? Why does it so often necessitate a kind of dying to ourselves? It feels like a death. I'm losing something to forgive you. That's why we don't want to do it, or we just find it so difficult to do. I want to do it. The spirit's willing, but the flesh is weak. Why is it so hard to forgive? Because it's going to cost us something. It feels like a little death. I have to put aside comfort. I have to put aside a sense of rightness. I feel like I'm letting you off the hook. That doesn't seem right. There's just something that doesn't sit well. I've got to die to myself. I have to die to myself to be able to do this. This is exactly what Christ has done. He dies to forgive.

Real love is cross-centered love. John explicitly connects our love for each other with the Son of God's atoning sacrifice, and he's adamant about it. If God loved us in this way, we also must love one another. In Ephesians 4:32, Paul puts it this way: be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ, God forgave you. In Colossians 3:13, he says, bear with one another, and if you have a complaint against another, forgive each other. As the Lord has forgiven you, so you also must forgive.

Why love? Because God loved us. Why forgive? Because Jesus forgave us. To hold on to unforgiveness is to assume that we deserve the grace that God gave us. I can't forgive them. That's too big. But I'm sure going to enjoy the grace God gave me. I mean, of course he would have died for me. I'm a good person. If you're a good person, Jesus would have needed to die for you. Jesus didn't die for good people; he died for sinners. So to hold on to unforgiveness is to hoard grace, to be stingy with the grace that God has so lavishly given to us. To hold onto unforgiveness is to hold that grace cheaply, as if Christ's death and resurrection aren't precious enough to cover the cost of our forgiving others.

When we hold on to unforgiveness, when we are graceless, it's like looking at the cross and saying, that's not that big a deal. That's not worth what it might cost me. If we withhold forgiveness, we hold the cross in contempt. But loving this way feels like death, doesn't it? Forgiveness feels like death.

This is from a Christian writer by the name of Sheila Dugal. She shared her story at the website for Gospel Centered Discipleship. This is what she says: seven months pregnant with our second son, I sat at the desk in our living room, devastated by the letter I had just read. My husband didn't want to be married anymore. I remember standing on the patio of the home that my husband had purchased with his portion of our divided assets months after we separated. I was bouncing our 8-month-old on my hip and keeping my eye on our two-year-old while he showed me all the things he was finding at Daddy's new house. Hot tears spilled, my throat tightened. I loved this man. I wanted our family whole, but instead it was broken, and I felt my heart could literally be bleeding out of my chest, she later writes.

When my husband told me he wanted out of our marriage while I was weeks away from giving birth to our second son, bitterness stood at the door, ready to take me in her arms and poison me and anyone I rubbed against. Vengeance visited my thoughts daily, enticing me to use the power I had to make my husband pay. Fear tried to deceive me into enabling my husband by making excuses for him and blaming myself. And I'd be lying if I said these three insidious visitors don't come knocking to this day, she says. That was nearly 19 years ago, and by the grace of God, my husband and I have reconciled. We're entering our 30th year of marriage.

But forgiving my husband did not guarantee reconciliation. Forgiveness is not reconciliation. It takes one to forgive; it takes two to reconcile. When we set out to forgive others in obedience to Jesus, we aren't promised that those we forgive will respond rightly. We may forgive and keep our distance from the person who wounded us. There were many days while my husband and I were on our way to divorce when I had to ask God, how am I to love this man like Jesus has loved me? When this divorce is final, how am I supposed to forgive him and treat him with undeserved kindness when I have to drop off our boys at his house?

While walking through those damaged years in my marriage, I learned to turn away from bitterness and vengeance and instead bear the pain with a tender heart. Entrusting the Lord with all my rightful anger and fear cleared a path between my husband and me. By God's grace, my husband turned towards repairing our relationship on that path, and I'm so glad he did. But even if he never did, I would still have tasted the goodness of the Lord in learning to forgive.

As Dugal says, forgiveness doesn't always lead to reconciliation. In fact, I think that's one of the things that makes forgiveness really difficult sometimes, isn't it? The person that we're trying to forgive, they're not sorry for what they did. It's not like they're begging for forgiveness. Maybe they won't even acknowledge they did anything wrong or that they did anything in the first place. And I'm supposed to forgive that? Sometimes we get into trouble because we confuse the categories. Reconciliation requires two willing parties: an offender who's repentant—not just saying they're sorry, but is actually changing their behavior, going the opposite direction from the hurtful direction they had been in—and someone who forgives, the offended party.

Now, you can have one or the other. And if we have Christ, whatever situation we're in, we should be able to repent if we're the offender, even if we're not forgiven. Some of you in this room may have that experience. You might say, Jared, I'm not who I was, but I do not feel forgiven. My spouse has not forgiven me for that sin, and I walk in a climate of judgment all the time. The Lord will help you bear that, and we continue to pray that your spouse will forgive. But even if they don't, you continue to walk in that repentance.

Or you may be in this situation: I've got to choose to forgive every day. And every day it's an uphill slog to do that because my spouse will not even admit how much they have hurt me. Or they'll apologize and then they go right back into their old habits. They just keep hurting me and hurting me and hurting me. Well, you can repent even if the one you've hurt doesn't forgive you. And you can forgive even if the one who has hurt you will not repent. In fact, this is how you know that you actually love the person: when you're willing to do the right thing, regardless of the response.

But a relationship can't truly be restored until there's both repentance and forgiveness. Forgiving someone who has harmed you deeply, who's abused you, doesn't mean you have to keep putting yourself in harm's way or submitting to that relationship. Again, forgiving just means that you surrender the need for vengeance, that you've handed over what they deserve to God. God says, vengeance is mine, I will repay. And we say, you know what? I'm going to trust you with that.

Forgiveness is indeed a very difficult thing. It's a difficult art. And sometimes we have to make that decision every single day: choose forgiveness every day. But that's okay, because God has promised that his mercies will be new every morning. That hard task, you have to face that each new day. He's going to give you the strength that you need. In that new day, he will give you the power that you need to forgive, in the daily grace provided through God's Spirit and the gospel of Jesus.

Speaker 3

This is family life today. We're Dave and Ann Wilson. Been listening to Jared Wilson on the love like you mean it cruise from last February talking about forgiveness.

Speaker 2

That was a good reminder, wasn't it?

Speaker 3

Oh, I mean, of the hardest things. It totally is when you really been hurt to forgive. But it, it is the mark that identifies the difference that Christ makes in our life.

Speaker 2

And if you're still contemplating, should we go on that cruise, the answer is yes, go on the cruise. Sign up today.

We'll be sailing February 14th through the 21st. There's nothing quite like it.

We're going to talk about marriage, we're going to talk about our relationship. We're going to bring Jesus into it and how he can help us.

Speaker 3

And the whole boat is just us? Yeah, it's the entire boat. And it's 90% sold out right now. So if you're sitting there like, should we? I'm just telling you you're going to regret it if you don't go.

So sign up right now. You can go to familylifetoday.com or give us a call at 1-800-358-631. You can get more information there and you get a special deal right now till June 30th.

So, man, we'd love to see you on the boat. It's going to be a great week. You don't want to miss it.

Speaker 2

Family Life today is a donor supported production of Family Life, a crew ministry helping you pursue the relationships that matter most.

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About FamilyLife Today®

FamilyLife Today® is an award-winning podcast featuring fun, engaging conversations that help families grow together with Jesus while pursuing the relationships that matter most. Hosted by Dave and Ann Wilson, new episodes air every Tuesday and Thursday.

About Dave and Ann Wilson

Dave and Ann Wilson are co-hosts of FamilyLife Today©, FamilyLife’s nationally-syndicated radio program.

Dave and Ann have been married for more than 40 years and have spent the last 35 teaching and mentoring couples and parents across the country. They have been featured speakers at FamilyLife’s Weekend to Remember® since 1993, and have also hosted their own marriage conferences across the country.

Dave and Ann helped plant Kensington Community Church in Detroit, Michigan where they served together in ministry for more than three decades, wrapping up their time at Kensington in 2020.

The Wilsons are the creative force behind DVD teaching series Rock Your Marriage and The Survival Guide To Parenting, as well as authors of the recently released books Vertical Marriage (Zondervan, 2019) and No Perfect Parents (Zondervan, 2021).

Dave is a graduate of the International School of Theology, where he received a Master of Divinity degree. A Ball State University Hall of Fame Quarterback, Dave served the Detroit Lions as Chaplain for thirty-three years. Ann attended the University of Kentucky. She has been active with Dave in ministry as a speaker, writer, small group leader, and mentor to countless women.

The Wilsons live in the Detroit area. They have three grown sons, CJ, Austin, and Cody, three daughters-in-law, and a growing number of grandchildren.

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