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Tuesday, April 30, 2024
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A Difficult Word

I heard about an office whose answering machine was set up to instruct callers to leave their name and address, and to “spell any difficult words.”

Early one Monday, when the secretary was reviewing the weekend messages, she heard an enthusiastic young woman recite her name and address, and then confidently offer, “My difficult word is reconciliation. R-E-C-O-N-C-I-L-I-A-T-I-O-N.”

Reconciliation can be a difficult word.  It’s not that it’s difficult to understand.  Webster defines the word “reconcile” as “to restore to friendship or harmony, to settle or resolve.”  The word can be used in a variety of ways, but when it’s applied to people it basically means to get two separated people back together again.  So we talk about a husband who wants to be reconciled to a wife who has left him, a father who wants to be reconciled to a wayward son, or a lost sinner who needs to be reconciled to God.

While not difficult to understand, reconciliation can be a difficult word to put into practice.  It can be very difficult to get two family members who are at odds to be reconciled.  And it can sometimes seem very difficult for us (or for others we know) to be made right with God.

A man once went to a preacher because he was having some family problems. He wasn’t a very well-educated man and sometimes got his words confused.  He said, “Me and my wife need a re-cancellation.”  What he meant to say was reconciliation, but the word re-cancellation wasn’t a bad choice.  Because there can be peace for those who have been separated only when sin has been canceled.  As sinners before a righteous God, we need a “re-cancellation”. And that’s exactly what Jesus made available when He died on the cross.

… by Him to reconcile all things to Himself, by Him, whether things on earth or things in heaven, having made peace through the blood of His cross. And you, who once were alienated and enemies in your mind by wicked works, yet now He has reconciled in the body of His flesh through death, to present you holy, and blameless, and above reproach in His sight. (Col. 1:20-22)

Thanks be to God for making this difficult word a reality in our lives.

Alan Smith
Alan Smith
Alan Smith serves as the minister for the Cruciform Church of Christ (www.cruciformcoc.com) in Spring Lake, North Carolina. Alan has been preaching for 39 years and has been with the Cruciform Church of Christ since February 2016. He received a bachelor’s degree in Bible from Freed-Hardeman College in 1977, and has previously preached for congregations in Milan, TN, Bassett, VA, Roanoke Rapids, NC, Gloucester, VA, Boone, NC, White House, TN, and Fayetteville, NC. Alan has been married for 39 years to the former Sueanne Sword, and they have three children — Charity (living in TN), Amber (living in NC) and Joshua (living in KY). They are also blessed with six grandchildren. Alan started the daily e-mail devotional, “Thought For the Day” in September 1997. He enjoyed sharing humorous stories received by e-mail with his friends and members of the congregation and felt that people might enjoy reading those bits of humor with a spiritual application and challenge to Christian living, so TFTD was born. Initially sent to 25 friends, it was passed on and passed on until eventually it reached over 6,000 subscribers in all fifty states and over 90 different countries. To receive the free issues of “Thought For the Day,” send a blank email to [email protected].

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