FORGIVENESS
From St. Mary's Bulletin
August 26, 2004
A small boy at a summer camp received a large package of cookies in the mail from his mother. He ate a few, then placed
the remainder under his bed. The next day, after lunch, he went to his tent to get a cookie, but the box was gone.
That afternoon a camp counselor, who had been told of the theft, saw another boy sitting a tree eating the stolen cookies.
He returned to the group and sought out the boy whose cookies had been stolen. He said, "Billy, I know who stole your cookies.
Will you help me teach him a lesson?"
The puzzled boy replied, "Well yes, but aren't you going to punish him?" The counselor explained, "No, that would make
him resent me and hate you. No, I want you to call your mother and ask her to send you another box of cookies.
Billy did as the counselor said, and a few days later received another box of delicious homemade cookies in the mail. The
counselor said, "Now, the boy who stole your cookies is down by the lake. Go down there and share your cookies with him."
The boy protested, "But he's the thief." "I know but try it, and see what happens," replied the counselor.
About half an hour later, the camp counselor saw the two come up the hill, arm in arm. The boy who had stolen the cookies
was earnestly trying to get the other to accept his jackknife in payment for the stolen cookies, and the victim was just as
earnestly refusing the gift from his new friend, saying that a few cookies weren't important anyway.
We all have a great hunger for forgiveness as this next story indicates. It happened in Spain that a father and teenage
son had a broken relationship. The son ran away, but the father searched for his rebellious son. Finally, in Madrid, in a
last desperate attempt to find him, the father put an ad in the newspaper. The ad read: "Dear Paco, meet me in front of the
newspaper office at noon. All is forgiven. I love you. Your father."
The next day at noon, in front of the newspaper office, eight hundred "Pacos" showed up! It seems that all theses men with
the name Paco were seeking forgiveness and love from their fathers.
Does a child of yours need your forgiveness today? Or maybe, you need to seek your father's forgiveness. Or maybe it is
a spouse or a sister or brother or neighbor who needs forgiveness. Remember, "Forgive us our trespasses as we forgive those
who trespass against us." God is waiting!
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PRAYER
"We love you, O our God; and we desire to love you more and more. Grant to us that we may love you as much as we desire,
and as much as we ought. O dearest friend, who has so loved and saved us, the thought of whom is so sweet and always growing
sweeter, come with Christ and dwell in our hearts; that you keep a watch over our lips, our steps, our deeds, and we shall
not need to be anxious either for our souls or our bodies. Give us love, sweetest of all gifts, which knows no enemy. Give
us in our hearts pure love, born of your love to us, that we may love others as you love us. O most loving Father of Jesus
Christ, from whom flows all love, let our hearts, frozen in sin, cold to you and cold to others, be warmed by this divine
fire. So help and bless us in your Son." (Prayer of Anselm, 12th century)
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