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Jim McCrory

Is Someone Living Rent-Free in Your Head?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Wednesday 27 August 2025 at 13:33

 

 

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Is Someone Living Rent-Free in Your Head?

In Robert Burns’ Tam o’ Shanter, he describes Tam’s wife, Kate, as “nursing her wrath to keep it warm.” It’s a sharp image of how anger lingers when we choose to feed it.

History offers us a very different picture in Corrie ten Boom. During the Holocaust, she and her family hid Jews in their home, a choice that led to Ravensbrück concentration camp and the death of her sister Betsie. Out of that suffering, Corrie discovered the power of forgiveness.

Years later, she faced it head-on when a former guard approached her, asking for forgiveness. In that moment, every memory of cruelty returned. Forgiving seemed impossible, until she remembered Jesus’ words, “Forgive, and you will be forgiven.” Praying for strength, she took his hand. What followed was a release only God could give.

We know this struggle. Someone wounds us, and we replay it, nursing the hurt. Yet while we carry the burden, the other person may have moved on. In truth, unforgiveness chains us, not them.

Jesus calls us to a freer way. When Peter asked if forgiving seven times was enough, Jesus replied, “Not seven, but seventy-seven.” Forgiveness isn’t keeping score; it’s keeping your heart open.

Forgiving doesn’t mean the pain didn’t happen. It means refusing to let it rule you. As Corrie said, forgiveness is the key that unlocks resentment’s prison. She didn’t erase Ravensbrück by forgiving—she simply refused to carry it into her future.

Forgiveness is rarely easy. Sometimes it’s a daily choice, sometimes a whispered prayer: “Lord, help me forgive.” But you’re not asked to do it alone. Jesus Himself forgave from the cross, and He offers us that same strength.

So, who’s living rent-free in your head? Maybe it’s time to let them go. Forgiveness isn’t just a gift to them—it’s freedom for you.

 

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Jim McCrory

I've Done a Terrible Thing; Will God Forgive Me?

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Edited by Jim McCrory, Friday 25 October 2024 at 19:50

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Several years ago, I had the opportunity to address an English Christian convention in Italy. The evening before, I shared a meal with friends, including an acquaintance devoted to offering pastoral care to prisoners. Among those in his care was a former Mafia member, a man haunted by a heart-breaking question: "I have taken many lives and committed terrible acts of violence. Can God forgive me?"

 Though I can’t recall the exact words the shepherd offered in response, I remember how deeply this man's struggle resonated with me. Even if we haven’t committed such grievous wrongs, many of us know what it feels like to long for forgiveness and the assurance that our mistakes don’t define us forever.

 In moments like these, Isaiah 1:18 offers comfort beyond measure: “Come now,” God says, “Though your sins are like scarlet, they will be as white as snow; Though they are red like crimson, they will be like wool.” The striking image of scarlet sins becoming white as snow is a reminder of God’s overwhelming grace and His ability to cleanse even the darkest parts of our lives.

Consider David, the biblical figure who, after falling into sin through adultery and murder, found his way back to God’s mercy. He later wrote, “As far as the east is from the west, so far has He removed our transgressions from us” (Psalm 103:12). Imagine God gathering our sins, putting them away, and removing them from us forever. Yet this forgiveness calls us to something more: a new way of living, a life free from the chains of our past (John 5:14).

I often think about that former Mafia member and his question. Did he find peace in the words of Scripture? There is perhaps no greater anguish than carrying a conscience heavy with guilt, and yet, the Bible offers a way to release that burden, to find rest in God's profound forgiveness.


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