The Forgiveness Chair
“Mom, isn’t Josh’s time-out over?”
“No,” I replied, “He has four minutes to go.”
“But, Mom, he’s been in there forever!”
Sternly, I reminded Hannah of the house rules. Time outs don’t officially begin until the screaming has ceased. Then, the bottom-on-chair time must equal one minute plus the offender’s age. The noisy complaints from Joshua’s bedroom shred Hannah’s hope of convincing me differently. Defeated, my mercy-giver slumped away.
However, moments later she was back with a bounce in her step. “Mom,” Hannah began with her hands pressed in prayer, “I know Josh has to sit until he’s quiet, but could he PLEASE just move to the FORGIVENESS chair now?”
I raised an eyebrow as Hannah beckoned me to follow. “I got it all set up in my room.”
I grabbed Maggie and headed for the girls’ bedroom. There, I stifled a giggle as I beheld the forgiveness chair: a purple beanbag adorned with shaggy pillows, fuzzy blankets and a cupful of left-over Valentine’s Day candy.
As I peered at God’s six-year-old ambassador of grace, I thanked Him for the beautiful picture of His boundless mercy. Then, Hannah invited Joshua to finish his punishment in the luxurious lap of the Forgiveness Chair. And I thanked God for reminding me that grace is the best measuring stick for all of His children, even for mommies who long ago outgrew the time out chair.
Today’s Treasure: Forgive one another as quickly and thoroughly as God in Christ forgave you.-Ephesians 4:13, The Message