It was the last weekend of the 1964 baseball season. Bill Valentine was umpiring a game between the Detroit Tigers and the New York Yankees.
Dave Wickersham was pitching for Detroit, and he had 19 victories for the season. One more would be a sign of stardom. But it wasnt to be.
After a close play, Wickersham tapped the umpire on the shoulder to ask for a time-out. Touching an umpire is against the rules, so Valentine tossed Wickersham from the game depriving him of his chance for a 20-win season.
For the next 39 years, Valentine lived with a gnawing regret for booting the pitcher in that split-second decision. But he doesnt carry that regret anymore. Last year, Wickersham wrote the umpire a note, telling him he was right in his decision and that he held no hard feelings. That note lifted a weight from Valentines shoulders.
In Genesis 45, Joseph lifted a burden of guilt from his brothers, who had sold him into slavery something far more serious than a simple misunderstanding. Yet he was willing to forgive them.
Is there someone who needs to hear a forgiving word from you that would lift a burden of regret? Dave Branon
Let me forget the hurt and pain
Found along lifes way;
Let me remember kindness
Given day by day. Berry
READ: Genesis: 45:1-15
Ground filled with the roots of bitterness needs to be plowed by the grace of God.