Insights

Reverend Dr. William H. Curtis

Latest Blog Entries

Forgiveness Is a Gift

Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in Christ God forgave you.
Ephesians 4:32 (NIV)

Paul calls believers to embody Christ in a culture that values power, revenge, and self-preservation. And the phrase that carries the weight is “as in Christ God forgave you.” The model is not culture. The model is grace.

The word forgiveness means to give freely, to forgive graciously, to show favor. It carries the connotation of gracious giving. Forgiveness as a gift, not forgiveness as something earned. It is free cancellation. The releasing of a debt even without payment. It is generous favor, kindness beyond what is deserved.

And it is not a one-time moment. It means ongoing action. The present participle suggests continuous habitual forgiveness. It means I keep offering it because the Lord is giving me the grace to keep extending forgiveness as a gift.

Forgiveness feels unnatural because injury awakens self-protection. The human brain is wired for self-protection. That is why the nervous system reacts. That is why the guard stays up. We confuse forgiveness with condoning. We fear it communicates permission. But the text insists forgiveness is not earned. It is given.

Forgiveness is not a reward for repentance. It is a gift shaped by grace received from the Lord.

As God in Christ forgave us, we can in Christ forgive others.

 

Memory Bridges the Gap
Jesus took the bread and gave it to them, and did the same with the fish.
John 21:13 (NIV)

When the disciples finally reach the shore after their long night of work, Jesus has prepared breakfast. Fish and bread. And in that simple act, memory wakes up.

They had seen this before. Hands on bread. Bread broken. Bread given. And suddenly recognition rushes in. What abundance alone could not clarify, memory now completes.

This is one of faith’s greatest tools. When you are caught between God’s presence and God’s hiddenness, faith invites you to pull on memory. Memory reminds you that you have been in places like this before and God came and got you.

Memory interrupts despair. It recalls answered prayers, unexpected provision, restored joy, and sustained strength. It refuses spiritual amnesia when circumstances grow confusing.

Hiddenness is not abandonment. It is often an opportunity to mature faith. God may appear concealed, but He is still working. The pressure is not on Him to prove Himself again. The pressure is on us to trust Him in His hiddenness.

That is why waiting is possible. Not passive waiting, but trusting waiting. Waiting informed by remembrance. Waiting that says: I remember who You’ve been, so I trust who You are.

And eventually, recognition comes. It always does. God never stays hidden forever. But while He is, memory keeps faith alive.

Faith Beyond What You Can See
Because you have seen Me, you have believed; blessed are those who have not seen and yet have believed.
John 20:29 (NIV)

Thomas represents a familiar posture. He refused to believe unless he could see and touch the wounds of Jesus. Laden with doubt, he demanded physical proof before trusting resurrection truth.

Jesus meets him graciously. Reach out your hand. Put your finger here. Examine the wounds. But Jesus also presses Thomas beyond the moment. From here on out, you can’t base your faith only on what you see.

Faith that depends solely on visible evidence cannot grow. You’re going to have to base your belief not just on what you see, but on what you don’t see. That is where resurrection faith lives.

Locked spaces feel safe because they are controlled. But miracles don’t generally populate locked-in spaces. “Exceedingly and abundantly” does not dwell behind barricaded belief. Locked in is not where kingdom expansion hangs out.

Faith must move beyond comfort, beyond control, beyond proof. Let belief take you where evidence cannot. Trust has to step where sight cannot lead.

The resurrected Christ calls His people to a faith that transcends physical confirmation. Not reckless belief, but deep belief that rests in who Jesus is, not just what can be proven.

Don’t Lock Yourself Out
Though the doors were locked, Jesus came and stood among them…
John 20:26 (NIV)

The disciples are gathered together behind locked doors, convinced that confinement is protection. Fear, grief, uncertainty, and danger have convinced them that locking themselves in is the safest option.

But the danger is not what they think it is. The problem is that in locking themselves in, they locked themselves out. Locked out of mission. Locked out of witness. Locked out of courage. Locked out of sharing faith with a world that desperately needed the resurrected Christ.

This pattern of behavior is not limited to a room in Jerusalem. We can lock ourselves into our anger, our disappointment, our despondency, our fear, our grief. Locking in becomes emotional. It becomes spiritual. And over time, locking in becomes a prison.

Here’s the warning we can glean from this text: Don’t let life make you lock yourself in until you lock yourself out. You cannot stay locked into one emotion until it imprisons you and robs you of what God intends to do on the other side of healing and growth.

And here is the hope of the passage: When you’ve locked yourself in, Jesus appears anyway. He steps into locked spaces because you can lock yourself in, but you can’t ever lock Him out.

Locked in is not a spiritually productive option. It feeds fear instead of mission. It protects doubt instead of faith. And it contradicts everything the resurrected Christ empowers His people to become.

The doors did not stop Jesus. But staying behind them could have stopped the disciples.

Living at the Level of Resurrection
She turned around and saw Jesus standing there, but she did not recognize that it was Jesus.
John 20:14 (NIV)

Mary sees Jesus but cannot recognize Him. She assumes He is the gardener. This is not because Jesus has failed her, but because grief lowers her level of vision.

There is a difference between life lived beneath the level of resurrection and life lived at the level of resurrection. When faith is frozen, we misdefine everything around us. We assume loss instead of transition. We assume denial instead of redirection.

Jesus does not correct Mary immediately. He calls her name. And when He does, paralysis becomes transformation. Recognition happens not through analysis, but through relationship. “My sheep know my voice.”

Then comes the shift. “Do not hold on to Me. From now on, you must hold Me by faith.” This is resurrection-level living: trusting God without clinging to old forms of security.

At that moment, Mary becomes more than a disciple. She becomes the first proclaimer of the resurrected Christ. Frozen faith turns into forward movement. Confusion turns into commission.

Resurrection living reframes everything. Loss becomes shift. Closed doors become protection. What looked like an ending becomes an assignment.