Good sense makes one slow to anger, and it is his glory to overlook an offense. Proverbs 19:11
This verse is not an easy one to read.
It’s way more fun to keep an offense, especially when you’re completely justified.
And we always are justified in our own mind, yes?
Looking at the first part, it’s easy to understand.
When we have good sense, meaning solid countenance or common sense, we don’t get angry often.
We don’t allow anger to grab us when we are in our right minds.
Trouble is, other people cause us to exit our good sense, trying to justify our offense at them.
After all, they wronged us! It’s not fair!
When we have good sense, we focus on Whose we are.
Our feet are solidly planted in our relationship with God first.
We know God is living through us, and we fully trust Him to provide us His strength, wisdom, and peace.
Could even be that we ask God how to react before we do. We train our brain to do just that. Putting God first.
So, back to the ouchy part of the verse: not taking offense.
Proverbs says it’s our glory to overlook an offense.
Means we could be offended, but we choose not to be.
Because we remain peaceful, the glory is still ours.
Our mood isn’t in the toilet.
Clouds are not hanging around.
Others can be down in the dumps, but we’re not.
It’s still sunny where we’re at, because we are choosing not to associate with the other person’s offensive behavior.
It’s their problem, not ours.
Is it more fun to take their offense and make them pay?
Sure.
But in the process, you are robbed of peace. You are robbed of minutes or hours, stewing in what they did to you. You are robbed of God’s glory shining through you.
Jesus could have put people verbally down so many times, but he regularly chose to overlook offenses.
And glory remained His.
You can pity others, if it helps.
You can feel badly they are stuck in the mud of getting back at life.
But don’t stay there or you’ll think of yourself as better than them.
And that’s almost as bad as keeping an offense.
So shrug them off.
Remain steadfast in God’s good sense.
And keep your glory as you overlook the other’s offense.
It’s hard, but it’s completely worth it.



Photos by Ingmar H, Gene Dizon, Patrick Fore, & name_ gravity on Unsplash


