I watched an episode of Border Security the other day
that made me reflect on the principle of the Gospel that grants us everlasting
freedom. This is the principle is forgiveness.
In this particular episode I watched a British citizen
being denied entry into Australia because he had a brush with the law seven
years ago and had served 18 months in jail as a consequence. He was pretty
devastated about this refusal but more so because he claimed sorrowfully that
this one transgression in his life was going to follow him around for the rest
of his life despite the fact that he has learnt from that experience and has
strived ever since to be a law-abiding citizen. I could see how demeaning it
was for him to be still considered ‘a criminal’. I wondered if he would ever
see himself as a good person again.
My first thought was, indeed a criminal conviction is
something that you are never free from. Once you are a criminal, you pay the
price for the rest of your life. My second thought was, I wish I could shout
from the rooftops that there is someone who does not only forgive wrongdoing
but remembers it no more (D&C 58:42)…..that there is someone who can make
you clean again and grant you freedom forever.
I thought about all my weaknesses and ‘earthly
indignities, as I call them, and how sensitive I have become over the years to
any wrongdoing, and I could not imagine a life without repentance and
forgiveness.
I knew someone years ago who had left his wife to live
a homosexual lifestyle. A few years later I saw him and his forgiving wife at
the temple. It was a success story of repentance and forgiveness like no other.
I reflected back then too on the amazing grace of our God who has secured our
freedom from sin and paid the price of justice we could never pay ourselves.
Imagine the loss of souls if there was no forgiveness.
Without it we would become nothing. Consider Alma the Younger who
suffered the godly sorrow asked of every repentant sinner, an intense sorrow
which lasted for three days and which cast him into the very 'gall of
bitterness' (Alma36:18).
Obviously’, the Saviour
didn't require more than that of Alma. He did not require him to live in
the past or the future beating himself up for what he did. What He did
require of Alma was for Alma to become a great man. A man who would be an
instrument in His hands to convince others of His great power to save.
Alma, who in his youth went about with the intent to destroy the Church became Alma who led the Nephite armies in battle, who sat naked with Amulek in dungeons, who was spat upon by the unrepentant, who dumbfounded an anti-christ, who baptised thousands of souls unto repentance (Alma 4:4,5), who the Lord in the end took up unto himself (Alma 45:19). Alma certainly did become that great man that the Lord needed. Could he have ever become a great man if he had not been forgiven? I rather think he would have spent the rest of his life thinking he was worthless.
I
am in awe of the ‘Man of Sorrows’ who had promised forgiveness ‘though our sins
be as scarlet’ even before he had felt the burden of our infirmities (Isaiah
1:18). I am in awe of His mercy and His love. The older I get the more I feel
the overwhelming reliance I have on His salvation. He has made my earth life
possible and my eternal life a surety because of His forgiveness of my
humanity. I am in awe of His ability to liberate the beauty in me.
- CATHRYNE ALLEN
(Art: I Will Comfort You by Jay Bryant Ward)
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