Live in Union With Christ, April 2
            
            
              And be ye kind one to another, tenderhearted, forgiving one another, even
            
            
              as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.
            
            
              Ephesians 4:32
            
            
              .
            
            
              “If thy brother shall trespass against thee, go and tell him his fault between thee
            
            
              and him alone: if he shall hear thee, thou hast gained thy brother” (
            
            
              Matthew 18:15
            
            
              ).
            
            
              This is the way in which misunderstandings are to be settled. Speaking alone, and
            
            
              in the spirit of Christ to the one who is in fault, will often remove the difficulty.
            
            
              Show Christlike love for your brother by seeking to adjust the difficulty “between
            
            
              thee and him alone.” Talk quietly together. Let no angry words escape your lips.
            
            
              Present the subject in a way that will appeal to his best judgment. And if he will
            
            
              hear you, you have gained him as a friend.
            
            
              Whatever the character of the offense may be, this does not change the plan
            
            
              God has made for the settlement of misunderstandings and personal injuries. Act
            
            
              out the spirit of Christ. Take the recipe God has provided, and carry it to the
            
            
              spiritually diseased [one]. Give him the remedy that will cure the disease of
            
            
              disaffection. Do your part to help him. Feel that it is a duty and privilege to do
            
            
              this, for the sake of the unity and peace of the church, which is very dear to the
            
            
              heart of Christ. He does not want any wound to remain unhealed on any member of
            
            
              His church. All heaven is interested in the interview between the injured member
            
            
              and the one who has been guilty of error. After settling the difficulty, pray together,
            
            
              and angels of God will come to you and bless you. There is music in heaven over
            
            
              this union.
            
            
              As the erring one accepts the testimony borne, and gives evidence of true
            
            
              repentance, the sunshine of heaven fills his heart. Hearts are drawn together. The
            
            
              healing oil of love removes the disease and soreness of the wrong. The Holy Spirit
            
            
              binds heart to heart.
            
            
              Those who have been united in Christian fellowship offer prayer to God, and
            
            
              pledge themselves to deal justly, to love mercy, and to walk humbly with God. If
            
            
              they have wronged others, they continue the work of repentance, confession, and
            
            
              restitution; and the disease is healed. They are fully set to do good to one another.
            
            
              This is the fulfilling of the law of Christ.
            
            
              Repentance, confession, and restitution are all required. But these cannot
            
            
              atone for the sin, for God has been wronged in the person of His saints. The Lord
            
            
              Jesus alone is able to atone for sin, by the application of His blood, shed for the
            
            
              guilt of the sinner. His blood cleanses from all sin.—
            
            
              Manuscript 47, April 2, 1902
            
            
              ,
            
            
              “Lessons From the Eighteenth of Matthew.”
            
            
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