Isaiah 1:18 (NIV)
18 “Come now, let us settle the matter,” says the Lord. “Though
your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow; though they are red
as crimson, they shall be like wool.
Religion has reason on its side; there is all the reason
in the world why we should do as God would have us do. The God of heaven
condescends to reason the case with those that contradict him and find fault
with his proceedings; for he will be justified when he speaks. [Matthew Henry]
Back in the days when everyone used typewriters there was
a little thing called Wite-Out. Wite-Out dates to 1966 when an insurance-company
clerk named George Kloosterhouse teamed with a guy who waterproofed basements
to develop their own correction fluid. They originally called it "Wite-Out
WO-1 Erasing Liquid."
You can still buy the product. Wite-Out isn't perfect. If
you made a mistake on the typewriter, you'd have to take the paper out or get
it raised up a little bit and then dab it with the Wite-Out, paint over the
mistake, and then blow on it and let it dry. Then you could type right over it
as if the mistake had never been made.
When electric typewriters came along, some genius
invented something even better than Wite-Out—the self-correcting typewriter.
Now wouldn't it be great if someday down the road somebody invented
self-correcting people? Wouldn't it be cool if there could be a self-correcting
husband or wife who would say the wrong thing and then just back up and say it
over again right? "You know, you're just like your mother. Oops! Let's
just erase that and start over." Wouldn't it be great if every spouse or
friend or parent or child came with self-correcting technology?
But the human race isn't self-correcting. In fact, we're
self-destructing. But in his grace God gave us one of his most amazing
inventions—the gift of forgiveness. In a way, it is more powerful than
Wite-Out. At the cross Jesus not only covered sin, he also absolves it, pays
the penalty for it, and removes it as far from the east is to the west. [John
Ortbreg, "Unchanging God in a Changing World," Menlo Park
Presbyterian Church]
Instead of starting over or self-correcting, let us see
if we can catch our problems before we commit them. Let us stop and reason with
ourselves to see if our words will be right. But even if we can’t, we can learn
to correct our mistakes through apologies, acceptance, forgiveness and whatever
else it takes to make things right.
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