Short Accounts
- Taylor Wehri
- Sep 4, 2019
- 2 min read
When I was a child, mom would send us up to the localgrocery to pick up a gallon of milk or a loaf of bread. The store was about two blocks away in cityterms, but we didn’t live in the city.
When we got to the store, we would pick up the needed itemor items and ask the owner to put it on Daddy’s tab. She would pull out a small notebook andcarefully write the date and the items and the amount in it, and we would carrythe supplies back home.
On payday, Daddy would stop at the store and pay off theaccount. Always. The account method was a service that thestore owners provided to the families in the neighborhood.
We were taught early to honor that service. Pay your debts. Don’t let the amount ride, or the payback willbe too hard. Keep short accounts.
Keeping short accounts applies to a lot of areas in my life.
Like anger and grudges.
Like sin.
Throughout each day, feelings and thoughts and poor choicesand hurt can build up as I rub against the demands of the people around me andthe world in general. These fill up theledger in my heart, and they demand payment.
(When my heart ledger is full of debts, it shows in my emotions, my physical and mental state, and my quality of life. It allows Satan to hold on to a piece or more of my heart. Just saying.)
I have a choice. Ican let them sit there, the account growing longer and taking up more heartspace, becoming a slave to the debt. Or I can settle the account.
How do I do that?
Well, just like Daddy always paid the tab at the store, ourFather has provided payment for my sin through His Son, Jesus Christ. He calls me to give the account to Him, torepent of where I have been wrong, to acknowledge my shortcomings and my needs.
I John 1:9 gives me His promise. “If we confess our sins, he is faithful and justto forgive us our sins, and to cleanse us from all unrighteousness.”
There is great freedom and power in daily coming before Godin confession of my need of His grace. There is great joy in receiving His grace.
Short accounts. Daddy was right. It is a good way to live – financially, emotionally, and spiritually.
Ephesians 4: 26 Be ye angry, and sin not: let not the sun go down upon your wrath: 27 Neither give place to the devil.




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