Corrie ten Boom's Return to Ravensbruck
In 1947, Corrie ten Boom stood in a church basement in Munich, sharing her message of God's forgiveness after the horrors of the Nazi concentration camps. When the talk ended, a man approached her with his hand extended. She recognized him instantly — a former guard from Ravensbruck, the camp where her sister Betsie had died.
"A fine message, Fraulein," he said. "How good it is to know that, as you say, all our sins are at the bottom of the sea."
Corrie's blood ran cold. She saw it all again — the leather crop swinging from his belt, the blue uniform, the pile of dresses and shoes. Her hand froze at her side. She who had preached forgiveness could not forgive.
Then she prayed the simplest prayer of her life: "Jesus, I cannot forgive this man. Give me Your forgiveness."
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