“Bear with each other and forgive one another if any of you has a grievance against someone. Forgive as the Lord forgave you.”Colossians 3:13
I. What Jesus Taught About Forgiveness
“For if you forgive other people when they sin against you, your heavenly Father will also forgive you.But if you do not forgive others their sins, your Father will not forgive your sins.”Matthew 6:14–15
Forgiveness Is a Command
Matthew 6:12, 14–15 – Forgiveness is essential to the Lord’s Prayer and Christian life. We cannot expect to live in grace if we withhold it from others.
Forgiveness Must Be Radical and Repeated
Matthew 18:21–22 – Jesus says, “seventy times seven.” Forgiveness is a continual act of obedience, not a one-time event.
Forgiveness Reflects the Kingdom
Matthew 18:23–35 – The Parable of the Unforgiving Servant. To receive mercy but refuse to extend it imprisons our hearts in bitterness.
Forgiveness Precedes Worship
Matthew 5:23–24 – Reconciliation is more important than religious acts. Forgiveness creates a clear path between our hearts and God’s altar.
II. Forgiveness Brings Freedom
Why We Must Forgive
Hebrews 12:15 – Bitterness defiles many.
2 Corinthians 2:10–11 – Unforgiveness gives Satan a foothold.
Psalm 32:1–2 – There is joy and healing in releasing the debt.
Forgiveness Frees Us to Heal
Luke 23:34 – “Father, forgive them…” Jesus models forgiveness in suffering.
You forgive not because they deserve it, but because you need to be free.
III. Divine Forgiveness vs. Human Habit
“When one thinks of how Christ forgave you, it should make us much more generous with forgiveness.” – David Guzik
God’s Way Man’s Way
Holds back His anger for a long time. (Psalm 103:8) Reacts with immediate anger and cut-off.
Reaches out to bad people. (Romans 5:8) Refuses reconciliation with those of bad character.
Makes the first move. (1 John 4:19) Waits until the offender begs or proves themselves.
Forgives knowing we’ll fail again. (Psalm 103:14) Only forgives if the wrong won’t be repeated.
Grants full adoption. (John 1:12) Rarely restores offenders to honor or trust.
Bears the penalty Himself. (Isaiah 53:5) Demands the offender bear the consequences.
Keeps reaching out despite rejection. (Luke 15:20) Stops reaching after one rejection.
Requires no probation period. (Luke 15:22–24) Imposes a trial period before restoration.
Restores completely with honor. (John 21:15–17) Believes tolerating is enough generosity.
Trusts again and gives co‑laboring. (2 Corinthians 5:20) Refuses to trust former offenders.
IV. Forgiveness vs. Reconciliation
“If it is possible, as far as it depends on you, live at peace with everyone.”Romans 12:18
Forgiveness Reconciliation
Takes one person. Takes two people.
Frees the forgiver. Frees both when mutual.
An act of the heart. A process of rebuilding.
Can happen privately. Requires relational interaction.
Doesn’t require change. Requires repentance and change.
Doesn’t equal trust. Rebuilds trust gradually.
Happens in a moment. Happens over time.
Releases pain. Restores relationship.
V. What Reconciliation Requires
Repentance – 2 Corinthians 7:10
– Genuine sorrow and turning from sin.
Honesty – Ephesians 4:25
– Truth spoken in love, no distortion.
Changed Behavior – Luke 3:8
– “Produce fruit in keeping with repentance.”
Mutual Desire for Relationship – Amos 3:3
– Relationship occurs when both agree to walk together.
Safety and Boundaries – Proverbs 4:23
– Emotional, spiritual, physical safety must be protected.
Time and Patience – Ecclesiastes 3:1–8
– Healing has a season; trust must not be rushed.
Support and Counsel – Proverbs 15:22
– Reconciliation flourishes under wise accountability.
Grace and Humility – Colossians 3:12
– Compassion, kindness, humility on both sides.
VI. When Reconciliation Is Not Safe or Advisable
“Be as shrewd as snakes and as innocent as doves.”Matthew 10:16
Warning Signs:
No Genuine Repentance (Matthew 3:8) – Apology without change.
Continued Abuse or Manipulation – Reconciliation re-opens harm.
Denial of the Harm – Without acknowledgment, trust can’t grow.
Pressure to Reconcile Quickly – Healing bypassed is healing postponed.
Lack of Accountability (Proverbs 12:15) – Reconciliation without oversight becomes unsafe.
Repeated Violations (Proverbs 26:11) – Patterns that repeat show unreadiness.
Unequally Yoked Values (2 Corinthians 6:14) – Reconstruction is impossible if one rejects Kingdom values.
VII. Final Reflection and Application
Who do you need to forgive, even if reconciliation is not possible?
Where are you withholding forgiveness until someone “deserves it”?
Are you confusing forgiveness with trust or restoration?
Are there boundaries you need to clarify to walk in freedom?
“Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.”Ephesians 4:32