He asks if I’ll reconsider. Caught
up in the frenzy that is cookie baking and holiday card making, I initially
decline his invitation. “But it’s at the Wentz Center”, he says, “I’ve never been there and the acoustics are
supposed to be amazing.” This
is important to him. I find the
time.
So often we go to
concerts wanting the artist to play the songs we know by heart. If they string together too many “new” songs in a row we tune out. We want to sing along, if not out loud, in
our heads. And so when I hear “Reckless Forgiver” for the first time ever I’m surprised by how the entire performance moves me. It’s not just the song itself, it’s the brilliant acoustics (everything they are rumored to be),
in this intimate theater and the joy bursting from the band members as they
play. I find myself singing along.
The lyrics have stuck
with me, turning in my head, becoming part of my mantra for 2015. When I first proclaim I want to be a reckless
forgiver I think I’m talking about granting grace to
others. It seems like a noble cause, and
I know I am holding on to a grudge or two I should probably shed.
As months fly off
the calendar, I find forgiving others really doesn’t require recklessness, in fact, it requires very little
effort. I hardly notice I’m doing it.
Things like being late or forgetting to close the garage door are minor
offenses in my book, forgiveness is almost automatic. And so I start to think
about the situations I have trouble forgiving; a common theme surfaces in no
time: I can forgive imperfections in
others, but I can’t seem to forgive them in myself.
Wait a minute . .
. I replay the song again. Could it be this
songwriter is seeking to be his own reckless forgiver?
Of course, it
makes complete sense now. And, wow, forgiveness is a whole other animal when we
look in the mirror. The artist sings of
wanting “peace like a river, a long life of sanity
and love that won’t leave too soon”. When I think about what gets in the way of peace and joy and
love, it’s our inability to forgive ourselves for
being human and the ebbing of self-worth in this wake.
So much is against
us when it comes to forgiving ourselves. The world tells us we need to be
perfect. We’re assaulted daily, hourly, minute-by-minute with carefully
edited highlight reels hosted on social media. The only brokenness we see is in
ourselves, which pales in comparison to these airbrushed lives. We pick apart every word misspoken, selfish
reaction, lapse in attention, every kindness we leave unsaid. We kick ourselves for a lack of clairvoyance,
the inability to be in two places at one time.
We chastise ourselves for sleeping in, taking a break, for not being
able to get it all done. With no one
else do we need to forgive so frequently, so feverishly, so relentlessly. No wonder it’s
called reckless forgiving.
What would happen
if we threw caution to the wind, stopped worrying about the possible
consequences of letting ourselves off the hook and allowed for our own absolution?
Wouldn’t
that make us, well, just like everyone else?
The real crime
here is not our imperfections, but how we let them rob us of “peace like a river, a long life of sanity and love that won’t leave too soon”.
These are ours for the taking.
It's not a song we know by heart, but one we can teach ourselves to play. Hey, reckless forgiver, I leave it all for you.
It's not a song we know by heart, but one we can teach ourselves to play. Hey, reckless forgiver, I leave it all for you.
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