Prayer, Plain and Simple

Recently in Prayer for forgiveness Category

Thursday November 5, 2009

Thanksgiving Prayer: Forgiveness

"Sin" is a nasty and out of fashion word. There, I wrote it. "Sin." Completely politically incorrect. Say "sin" in a crowed movie theater and you'll likely incite a stampede for the door. Say "sin" in an actually movie and you'll never work in Hollywood again. We can say anything else in this culture and be yawned at. But we can't say "sin" and mean it.

Yet avoiding the problem described by the "S" word doesn't make it go away. At all. We know that actions bring reactions. We know and accept that we must take responsibility for our choices. The consequences of what we say and do always come back to call us to account. Shall we say the word together... "Sin."  

I can feel the resistance growing out there... Okay, let's change the game. How 'bout if we call it... "Karma" instead? There, does that feel better?

Granted, our American version of the idea behind Karma is simple to the point of simplistic. What we generally mean when we throw the word into a sentence say, "Wow, I just got hit by a car. Must be bad Karma from when I beat up my brother in 2nd grade..." does not do justice to its deeper, nuanced Eastern philosophical meaning. Forget ever understanding it fully. If you attended a traditional western school, your mind has been permanently incapacitated from ever grasping the Hindu and Buddhist use of Karma. In our frame of reference it's simple reciprocity. We reap what we sow; What goes around comes around; For every action there's an equal and opposite reaction. Sorry to any students of the East, but that's about as much as you'll get from the average American trying to leverage the vision of Karma. Think "Earl" as in "My Name is Earl." He's as sophisticated as most of us get.

Back to the "S" word... Karma can be a way for us to partially understand "sin" a little better. The law of sin also holds me accountable for all my foul actions. Sin also demands a real accounting. Either way, whether I call it Karma or sin, at the bottom line, I'm doomed. If I must recoup for all my actions and make up for them, I'd be bankrupt. I can never do good fast enough. Nor can I work my way to salvation. I need an out, a loophole, a pardon. I need... [New word] "forgiveness." Yes, I need someone to pay my debt, my sin debt, my Karmic debt.

The good news: It's already done! I only need to accept the gift, then send a thank you note!

As thanksgiving draweth nigh, we're posting suggestions about ways to leverage prayer to make the holiday come to life. Today, I suggest a simple prayer thanking God for forgiving us of the debt we own to his Universal Bank of Reciprocity.  

Psalm 103 begins: "Praise the LORD, O my soul; all my inmost being, praise his holy name. Praise the LORD, O my soul, and forget not all his benefits..." Not forgetting the benefits that are ours by right is the first step toward true Thanksgiving. And the first benefit David, who penned this lyric, mentioned: "Who forgives all our sins..." Forgiving us of the consequences of our actions is benefit #1. It's a huge one. God, in Jesus takes a debt that isn't his and gives us blessings that were not ours. It's a life swap. For that, we should be truly thankful!

God, thank you that I do not have to pay all the moral debt I have accrued. I acknowledge that you have taken my place and in that place have given to me all your freedom and joy and purity. With all the things I've done in my life, I should never expect true goodness in return. But you do not count my sin against me. You take the weight on yourself. Knowing that I know I can give you.... [name something you need to dump] and in return I accept your pardon. It isn't fair; but you are good. Thank you! Thank you!"

If you'd like to learn more about forgiveness and the principle of "dumping your Karma" on Jesus, go to www.dumpyourkarma.com, and then pick up my new book, The Karma of Jesus.   

Tuesday September 29, 2009

A Christian Prayer for Yom Kippur 2009

Today marks the climax of the holy Jewish celebration of Yom Kippur, the traditional Day of Atonement - the chance for forgiveness and for God's great, merciful gift of holiness. Christians too honor this heritage introduced to us by our Jewish forbearers. We also recognize God's unbending standard of rightness, our inability to keep that standard, and our need for God's merciful grace to avoid his judgment of our failures.

 

Yom Kippur represents an opportunity to "reboot" our lives, to make a clean slate, as God himself covers our failure and pays the debts we cannot meet. Christians believe that Jesus himself is the "completion" of Yom Kippur. In fact we understand the crux of our faith, the death of Jesus on the cross, against the backdrop of this holiday.

 

Next month I will release a new book dealing with this very topic called "The Karma of Jesus." Here's an excerpt that touches on the way Christians assimilate Yom Kippur into our understanding of Jesus and of God's grace.   

            Jesus saves?

Ancient Jews anticipated the possibility of total and complete salvation. Every Autumn Jews celebrated Yom Kippur, the Day of Atonement. Many still do. Like many religious ceremonies Yom Kippur originally involved the slaughter of animals. Ancient people believed that life resides in blood. By ritually killing animals they believed they could exchange its life for the debt they had incurred by their own moral failures.

On Yom Kippur Jewish priests sacrificed one goat and used its blood to cleanse sin. They then imposed a very different destiny on a second goat. Instead of killing it, the lead priest placed his hands on the creature's head and began to recite - in detail - all the failures the entire nation had committed in the previous year. Imagine a public reading of the "naughty" ledger of Santa's list.

This confession, they believed, transferred their corporate guilt onto the poor goat - their "scapegoat." Once they completed the ritual, they drove the poor beast into the desert symbolically bearing their load of shame and blame out into desolate places.

Could it be that Jesus took up both roles, the sacrificed life that paid for the dire consequences and the "scapegoat" that carried them in himself and out of reach of the rest of humanity?

Are you in need of God's pardon? Working harder at being perfect won't suffice. Consider Jesus, and the gift of forgiveness and holiness he offers. Here's a Christian prayer for Yom Kippur:

"God, I cannot meet the standards of purity and rightness you have established. I recognize that Jesus has met those standards and that he offers to exchange his perfection for my imperfection. I accept the promise you have made to me (I John 1:9) that if I confess my sin, you will forgive me and cleanse me from all impurity. I do this now. And I thank you that I can, here and now experience a true day of atonement, standing right before your eyes, not because of what I've done, but because of what Jesus has done, on my behalf."

Advertisement

Search This Blog

feed icon Subscribe

RSS Feed

Receive updates from Prayer, Plain and Simple

About Prayer, Plain and Simple

A pastor and a journalist guide daily conversations with God about broken dishes, breaking news and everything in between.

Pastor Mark Herringshaw's Website
Six Prayers

About the Authors

Mark Herringshaw
is writer, speaker, spiritual life coach and pastor at North Heights Church in St. Paul, Minnesota.
» Posts by Mark Herringshaw
Nicole Symmonds
is Beliefnet’s Prayer editor and also covers Christianity.
» Posts by Nicole Symmonds
More »

Archives

Advertisement


About Beliefnet

Our mission is to help people like you find, and walk, a spiritual path that will bring comfort, hope, clarity, strength, and happiness. More about Beliefnet.

Legal

Copyright © Beliefnet, Inc. and/or its licensors. All rights reserved. Use of this site is subject to Terms of Service and to our Privacy Policy. Constructed by Beliefnet.

Advertisement

Report as Inappropriate

You are reporting this content because it violates the Terms of Service.

All reported content is logged for investigation.