Overview:
As parents, two words haunt us more than any others: “If only . . .” We say them with slumped shoulders and deep frowns. “If only I hadn’t said that . . . If only I hadn’t done this . . . If only I had been more gracious . . . If only I could turn back the clock.” But we can’t turn back the clock. However, that doesn’t mean that we have to live with remorse or regret for the rest of our lives. God provides a way for our relationships to be restored.
Message Summary:
Message Key Facts:
- The Definition of Reconciliation: Swindoll defines reconciliation as restoring what has broken down, recovering harmony, and "settling accounts" with someone you have offended. It is distinct from fixing the other person; it is about handling your own responsibility.
- The "House Fire" Metaphor: Swindoll uses an imaginary tragedy of a house burning down to illustrate that while we lose things with price tags, we do not lose memories or relationships. Therefore, repairing relationships is more logical than obsessing over material things.
- Three Painful Realities:
- Imfection: Every parent and child is imperfect; we are all "sheep who have gone astray".
- Immutability of the Past: No one gets a "second chance to redo a first time"; we cannot change what has already happened.
- Personal Responsibility: In any act of reconciliation, the first move begins with you dealing with your own faults, not the other person's.
- The "Pointer Finger" Principle: In the context of "removing the yoke" (Isaiah 58:9), Swindoll reminds listeners that when you point one finger at someone else to blame them, you have three fingers pointing back at yourself.
- The Balance Scale: Swindoll illustrates that holding a grudge or refusing to apologize gives the other person the "upper hand" on the relational scale. When one humbles themselves and apologizes, the scale balances out, and the other person often loses their desire to blame.
- Cliff Barrows’ 12 Words: Swindoll cites Cliff Barrows’ formula for a great relationship: "I am wrong. I am sorry. Please forgive me. I love you." However, he warns that these must be spoken with sincerity, not as a robotic recording.
- Becoming a Builder: The ultimate goal of the process is to move from being a destroyer of the relationship to fulfilling the promise of Isaiah 58:12: becoming a "repairer of the breach" and a "restorer of the streets".
Message References:
- Isaiah 58:6: The call to "loosen the bonds of wickedness" and "undo the bands of the yoke," which Swindoll applies to humbling oneself to break the cycle of family conflict.
- Isaiah 58:9: The promise that God will answer when we call, contingent on removing "the pointing of the finger and speaking wickedness" (stopping the blame game).
- Isaiah 58:10: The instruction to "give yourself to the hungry," interpreted as making oneself available and vulnerable to the family member who is starving for affection or resolution.
- Isaiah 58:12: The concluding promise that those who follow God's way of reconciliation will be called "the repairer of the breach, the restorer of the streets in which to dwell".
- Isaiah 53:6: A reference to humanity's shared imperfection: "All of us like sheep have gone astray, each of us has turned to his own way".
- Romans 3:23: The New Testament affirmation that "all have sinned and fall short of the glory of God," reinforcing that both parties in a conflict are imperfect.