
📖 "Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you."
Ephesians 4:32

This Christmas, what may matter more than gifts is the quiet exchange of apologies, the brave work of making peace, the holy act of forgiving, and the gentle journey toward healing.
In the Hebrew Scriptures, peace is shalom, not merely the absence of conflict but the presence of wholeness, harmony, and right relationship. Christ enters our fractured spaces to restore shalom, mending hearts with mercy stronger than offence. When we choose forgiveness, we mirror His grace, offering a gift that costs us something yet frees us profoundly.
Wrapped parcels delight for a moment, yet restored hearts linger long after the lights are packed away. Forgiveness softens what pride has hardened, reconciliation repairs what distance has torn, and healing begins where love dares to speak first.
At the manger, God did not send an object or an idea. He sent Himself. Jesus came clothed in humility, laid in straw, drawing near to the broken-hearted with mercy strong enough to restore what sin and sorrow had fractured. Healing so often begins where pride bows low and grace is allowed to speak.
Forgiveness is not pretending the wound never mattered. It is the holy decision to place the weight of justice into God’s faithful hands, releasing our hearts from burdens they were never meant to carry. When truth is spoken gently and apologies are offered without defence, peace is given room to grow. Love becomes the language that leads the conversation.
📖 “Be kind to one another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you.” — Ephesians 4:32 (NKJV)
Paul’s words are not sentimental. They are rooted in the cross. We forgive not because it is easy, but because we have first been forgiven. Mercy flows outward when it has been received deeply. Reconciliation may not always restore what once was, yet it opens the door for what God longs to heal now.
In the Hebrew Scriptures, peace is shalom, not merely the absence of conflict but the presence of wholeness, harmony, and right relationship. Christ enters our fractured spaces to restore shalom, mending hearts with mercy stronger than offence. When we choose forgiveness, we mirror His grace, offering a gift that costs us something yet frees us profoundly.


