You've reread the story of the Prodigal son so many times you can almost quote it. You're clinging to the hope that someday, your wayward child will "come to himself in the pigpen" and it will all be over. You lie in bed and weep as you imagine the day your child shows up on your doorstep, broken and repentant, begging forgiveness and ready to embrace the life you know God has for her.
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But what if it doesn't happen like that?
What if the half-hearted attempts to "clean up his act" do nothing more than straighten up the outside, but you see no humility, no true heart change, no real repentance? What if that arrogant face still sneers at you, still blames you and everyone else for the horrible life decisions he alone has made? What then?
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What do you do with your sack full of rage, your broken dreams, your wounded family? Is this all you're going to get? What about the beautiful dream of complete reconciliation?
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Forgiveness doesn't come all at once. No matter how much we may want it to or how hard we may try, forgiveness isn't necessarily a one-time thing. You may have to work at it for years before God completely takes the bitter sting away. Don't feel bad about yourself if this is the case, as long as you are working at it. Just don't quit too soon. You will miss out on the peace of God.
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In our case, I prayed daily for the strength to forgive. I would think I'd done it, only to learn something else--a lower level to which our daughter had sunk that I hadn't known about. And it would all come rushing back.
We had known nothing about the extent of the evil activities in which our daughter had been engaged until it all came to a head and we kicked her out. Over the next few months, the revelations came one at a time, each one more shocking until I thought I couldn't take any more.
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I would find things, hear something from a former friend who thought I already knew, see a photo, find a journal under her mattress. And each time, the shock would send me reeling for days. When I thought I knew where the bottom was, there was always a deeper hole.
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The anger was eating me alive. It's easier to forgive someone when they "get it." When you see real agonized repentance. When someone says, "I'll do anything to make this right," as the Prodigal said to his father. Forgiveness is so much easier when you've been vindicated by the one who harmed you.
But forgiveness is not dependent on the offender's attitude. The truth that kept coming back to me was that Jesus forgave the men who were nailing him to the cross--while they were doing it! They weren't the least bit sorry. He even excused them to his Father by saying, "They know not what they do."
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And our children "know not what they do" to us, to their families, or to themselves. They may not "get it" for years, but God gets it. God knows how badly you've been hurt and he wants the hurting to stop.
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You have to let go of the hurt and anger.
.This has been one of the most difficult steps I've taken, but God has miraculously lifted this burden of rage from my heart and I have forgiven my daughter, even of the things I still don't know about and don't want to know. Much of what she did was directly harmful to us, and that stung more than the things she did to herself. But if Jesus could forgive the men who crucified him while they were in the act, who am I to withhold forgiveness, even though my child may still be hurting me?
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God's gift of forgiveness is his gift to YOU. By forgiving, you remove the barrier that looms between your broken heart and the One who can best comfort it. You can now run freely, without guilt, to his side and find the rest and peace that your child has stolen from you. And you can also look forward to the good that God will bring from your suffering, because he is now free to bless you and use you without having to try to work around your enormous load of pain.
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Don't confuse forgiveness with reconciliation. It's nice if they work together, but that's not always possible. Forgiveness does not condone further sin, nor does it restore trust, respect, and friendship. Great sin has great consequences, apart from forgiveness. A child who is still caught in the tangle of rebellion will often try to use your offer of forgiveness to further manipulate you. We allowed this to happen early on, thinking we were showing mercy when all we were doing was enabling.
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Forgiveness is what takes place in your heart, but you can still require a faithless child to earn back your trust through a very slow process. The difference is that you are no longer controlled by your hurt and they lose the power to control you by their actions.
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None of this is the slightest bit easy. I had already experienced painful events: my parents' deaths three years apart and my younger child's crippling accident. But none of that compared to the excruciating pain of losing a child through an act of her own will.
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But God is bigger than our hurts and if we work with him, he can turn even something senselessly painful into something good. Our daughter has cycled in and out of our lives for the last 15 years, still embroiled in self-harming nonsense. Through forgiveness, we can continue to extend love and welcome to her, although she chooses to avoid us most of the time.
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Our other children have learned much from watching their sister's poor choices. Having seen the effects of evil up close, want nothing to do with it. They have each developed into wise and God-honoring young men and women. One more way God can use bad things for good.
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If you've been helped or encouraged by these posts, then He's already turning the darkness into light. And it's not over yet. "All things work together for good to those who are called according to His purpose." If you are one of His, He wants your pain, your ruined family, your shattered dreams about the life you thought you would have. He can twist your molten life into a work of art and no wayward child has the power to stop that.
My final post will hopefully let you see further down the road to some of the ways God is using this for good in my life. May it give you hope for your situation as well.
Just read through your entire posts last night. Your story sounds similar to ours. The duplicity exhibited by both our children was most challenging, because you wonder where the truth lies. We are currently struggling with how to best deal with our 21-year-old, single, vagrant,unrepentant, manipulative daughter. Communication is difficult with her, yet she is angry that we don't call regularly or help her in any way. Tough times, but seeking how to best reflect Jesus.
ReplyDeleteHi Lesley, I hope something you read brought you hope or encouragment. I want to encourage you further by reminding you that God can and will bring good out of this if you keep it totally surrendered to Him. My ministry and calling has been tremendously deepened and broadened because of what we went, and are still going through. Ask, expecting, that God will be glorified through it and He promises that He will. I will pray for your family. Sometimes that's all you can do.
ReplyDeleteI just came across your blog this morning while in the midst of a crisis where I was searching for God's wisdom on how to deal with my prodigal son. He is visiting us from out of town and I have been blind sided by my motherly emotions! Thank you so much for sharing your heart, the wisdom you have gained through your pain and the truth that can only come from our Creator! I am undone... This has been a washing I really needed! Some of what you said was hard and it broke me in a sense. But like God's word shatters the rocks I believe your testimony has shattered my heart. I have been blind in some areas, thinking I was completely free and healed since he left our home 4 years ago.... I know now that there are still some roots of that "clinging to the tattered boat as it sinks"...or "holding on to that helium balloon" feeling like I have been justified. What great analogies! I am a visual learner so these have really helped me!
ReplyDeleteHe will be here for 3 more days and I I just want to do the right thing in God's eyes, even if its hard. I have been talking to him about his soul but the reality that if God is not calling him and he is not seeking the Lord really hit me hard today...I have been trying to do God's work. I know now that it isn't up to me but I have to let go of ALL of my hopes, dreams and expectations and get out of the way for God to break his pride. I think of Nebuchadnezzar and how God made him like an animal for 7 years to break his pride... ;)
Anyhow, thank you again for your faithfullness! I have been blessed today and will carry your advice and godly instruction in my heart. My husband will read this too. And I know my pastor will agree with you!
I will keep you in my prayers as we keep pressing forward to what lies ahead. And just like the godly woman in Proverbs I will pray that you continue to smile at the future because you know that it's in God's merciful hands!
Your sister on this walk
Barbara
HI Barbara,
ReplyDeleteThank you for commenting. I'm glad this has helped you. I have enjoyed watching the Lord use this painful event in our lives to bring more glory to Himself and growth to us.
"Forgetting what lies behind and reaching forward to what lies ahead...press on toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus." Phil 3:13
Blessings as you trust Jesus to bring good from this heartache.