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Mike you wrote:

>>I like the beginning of Amos chapter 7 a lot. Here we see Amos praying for the forgiveness of Israel's sins and asking God to forgo the visions of Locusts & Fire. This is a good reminder to each of us to pray for others, and not just only for ourselves.>>

I have been haunted by the image of a person asking/petitioning God to forgive national/generational/ancestral sins which appears repeatedly throughout the Old Testament especially within the prophets. In the United States our history of “independent” living, pulling oneself up by one’s bootstraps (an U.S. idiomatic expression), we fail to take responsibility for our own missteps much less the sins of someone or something that happened in the past. That is a BIG PROBLEM for most citizens of this country. We cry foul when even asked to consider the “sins” of our ancestors, community or country. However, from what I keep seeing in the scriptures it seems we are compelled, even commanded by God to consider our past history even when that past never included us.

Daniel prayed and asked for forgiveness for Israel/Judah’s national sins and for the sins of his ancestors. Josiah, after finding the Book of the Law, asked for God’s forgiveness on his and his forefathers failure to follow the Laws given by God even though he didn’t have access or know that he was breaking the Law. It seems before man declared, “Ignorance of the law is no excuse,” God had already set that edict in motion when it came to His Laws.

Maybe we are to examine the sins of our forefathers and nation so we can recognize them when they show up on our doorstep and not allow them entrance into our lives. I’ve always been fascinated by the following passage.

And the LORD passed by before him, and proclaimed, The LORD, The LORD God, merciful and gracious, longsuffering, and abundant in goodness and truth, Keeping mercy for thousands, forgiving iniquity and transgression and sin, and that will by no means clear the guilty; visiting the iniquity of the fathers upon the children, and upon the children's children, unto the third and to the fourth generation. (Exo 34:6-7)

Maybe we need to make a practice of asking God’s forgiveness of sins we haven’t committed to keep the “sin” of our fathers from visiting our next generation; and, even if we fail to practice that discipline of asking God to forgive the sins of others, we need to make sure we don’t open the door when sin shows up for a visit allowing it to come in and wreak havoc on our families and loved ones.

Hi Mike and thank you for your blog. My wife and I enjoy it everyday. Just one comment about Revelation 3:20. Most Christians including Preachers make the mistake of using this verse for evangalism and miss the point of this great verse. Jesus is not knocking on the sinner's heart, he is knocking on the church door. A big difference. We cannot ask Jesus into our heart since scripture says that the sinner's heart is wicked and diceitful. Jesus does not want a heart like that. When we give and surrender to Jesus (all of us) He then gives us a new heart. Please read commentaries from great Bible scholars like John MacArthur, Ravinhill etc., and the Puritans and see what I mean.

Love in Christ,

Guy Lacelle

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