Today we are being confronted with
daily issues which entail the dilemmas of zero tolerance towards inflicted evil, power
abuse, injustice, forgiveness and reconciliation. There are becoming
increasingly important and very easily misunderstood concepts. We all have gone
through the experience of forgiveness and maybe we are still struggling with it
as you read through this or some of us just don’t want to talk about it as the Italian could
put it lascia perdere (forget about
it). What does forgiveness among people imply? and above all in your life as a Christian or someone of good will.
BASSET, L., Holy Anger: Jacob, Job, Jesus, London/ Ottawa Continuum, Novalis 2007, pp. 21-60
FLANIGAN, B., Forgiving Yourself, Paducan, KY: Turner Publishers 1997
GORMLEY, S., The Impossible Demand of Forgiveness, International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 22, No. 1 (2014) pp. 27-48
MOULE, C.F.D., Forgivenessand Reconciliation, and Other New Testament Themes, London SPCK 1998, 1-47
MONBOURQUETTE, J., (ed) How to Forgive? A step by Step Guide, Ottawa: Novalis, 2000.
PELLEFEYT, D., “Ethics, Forgiveness and the Unforgiveable after Auschwitz” in Incredible Forgiveness, ed Pollfeyt, 121-159.
____________.,Repentance, Reconciliation and relationship: The Silence of Jonah and Boundaries of Forgiveness”, in Reconciliation in Interfaith Perspective, (ed) Bieringer and Botton, pp. 28-39
ROBERT, D., Enright, Exploring Forgiveness Conference 1995
WYSCHOGROD, E., “Repentance and Forgiveness, the Undoing of Times” in International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 60, no. 1-3 (2006) pp. 157-168
Forgiving doesn’t necessary mean that we think we know what are talking about, so
that we are never messed up or misunderstood, but it is all about
creating an interpersonal connection between the enemies, recognizing and
sharing the pains of the other, injury, judging and simply correcting the
injuries caused. This will eventually have to lead to confession, restoration,
and purification. This means that one has to be helped to understand God’s
forgiveness and religious reconciliation. Forgiveness today crisscrosses different science
disciplines: the world of therapy, church, society, politics national and
international frontiers.
Forgiveness among persons, what it implies and how it works.
In life you will always find that you just have to forgive
and create a path for peace personally because of what your values you have
upheld in life and the sense of Christian upbringing. You forgive and reconcile
because God too has forgiven you your many sins. (Monbourquette, 2000) states
that you do justice as a human being because of the human reality of
forgiveness, there is when you release how difficult things are when you have
to forgive you perpetrator and reconcile and start walking on a new road.
Without it life becomes impossible to live. Through that process we discover
God’s exceptional force of mercy bestowed on the victims and perpetrator.
Forgiveness does fall
from the sky
This is truly embedded in the entire existential, relational,
social, religious and ethical context. One thing or another will always have to
proceed it. (M. Buber, 1958:193-210). There is always the perpetrator and the
victim. An affront, of an insult, an infidelity, forms of psychological or
bodily harm, (sexual) abuse of power and violence.
There is a breach violated of the warm relationship shared, at the time may not be the case but only arises after the wrong doing. This we have to factor in when we have to be confronted with when we have to deal with forgiveness and reconciliation. Forgiveness is directed to the person who has committed evil, entering a special specific relationship with the one who has done evil, it’s a relational event. It is never directed towards evil, for it will remain unforgiveable but it is always towards the person in relationship to the evil. (D. Pollefeyt : 121-159).
There is a breach violated of the warm relationship shared, at the time may not be the case but only arises after the wrong doing. This we have to factor in when we have to be confronted with when we have to deal with forgiveness and reconciliation. Forgiveness is directed to the person who has committed evil, entering a special specific relationship with the one who has done evil, it’s a relational event. It is never directed towards evil, for it will remain unforgiveable but it is always towards the person in relationship to the evil. (D. Pollefeyt : 121-159).
Forgiveness is a conscious act of the will, which deals at a
certain moment, in a vacuum, as, as it were to forgive. It is part of the
process that takes place between two people. Forgiveness is exculpation, the
one who has committed an offense is not excused by for he is not accountable,
because of some psychological incapacity or due to variety of elements form his
or her family or social history. Forgiveness is not possible if the guilty one
cannot be held responsible for what he or she has done. We have to be held
accountable for our decision making and behavior.
Learning the path towards
inter-human forgiveness
This will require patience and humility in order to accept
that forgiveness and it will comprise a number of steps and this will never be
taken in a sequential manner. Sometimes it can be slow and uncertain, retracing
the steps missed, sometimes we remain stuck on certain point hence not having
the courage to go ahead. If you don’t forgive you will remain in that
embitterment. One has to remain o the experience caused by the inflicted evil
on the victim and allowing it work through the usual normal processes, you
shouldn’t force it if you are not ready.
As a victim you have to come face to face to what needs to be forgiven and naming it as it is. This means you have to avoid generalizing everything, or attempts to neutralize the pain and discomfort quickly and easily. One has to face the real hurt where it lies and not to fall into the temptation of over dramatizing or underestimating what happened. The perpetrator cannot run away from concrete realities into self-protecting stories.
As a victim you have to come face to face to what needs to be forgiven and naming it as it is. This means you have to avoid generalizing everything, or attempts to neutralize the pain and discomfort quickly and easily. One has to face the real hurt where it lies and not to fall into the temptation of over dramatizing or underestimating what happened. The perpetrator cannot run away from concrete realities into self-protecting stories.
How we are to acknowledging and
share the inflicted injury
All sorts of feelings that are negative, bitterness,
disappointment, anger, revenge, hatred and the so forth, are normal reactions
in the victim, sometimes denied or suppressed (repressed). We build up a
defense of “you cannot touch me” “your attack cannot harm me,” “I am above all
that” (L.Basset, 2007: 21-60). All these have to rise to the surface, the
victim has “right” to these feelings as a form of self-respect. Trivialized
when they are shunned, repressed or hidden behind a so called “understanding of
the perpetrator, they need to be shared with someone, a confidant.
We have to stop doing evil and
rectify issues
The journey of self-discovery must start looking inside out
of the self (victim), injustice must be stopped and rectified. The victim ought
to approach the perpetrator about the wrong done, reproach the perpetrator
about the wrong doing. At times the victim may want to do it in silence without
saying anything or the perpetrator knowing anything about it. Injustice,
insults, infidelity, pestering, humiliation, abuse should not be allowed to
happen or continue, the evil has to rectified, which has to be completely
different from revenge... Without addressing the bitterness within the victim
could be the bed rock of cancer. The emotional acknowledgement of what has
happened and the suffering caused forms the basis both for fair rectification
as well as for the generous act of forgiveness, which one not only should want
to give but also should want to receive.
Forgiveness is about reconciling with one-self
To avoid unburdening oneself emotionally, from negative and
bitter feelings that remain at work underneath and disturb one’s inner
emotional peace. Psychologically and therapeutic dimension of forgiveness.
Forgiveness is a method of healing the injured. (Offended, insulted, violated)
“psychologization” therapeutization of forgiveness, forgiving the guilty one.
Forgiveness in the first place is about the one who is forgiven not the one who
forgives, applied by the victim then that is a welcome bonus. (B. Flanigan,
1997). Forgiveness cannot be equated with healing, it’s about walking towards
restoration. Only the victim can decide when the time to forgive has come. You
cannot not be demanded or forced. It can only be given.
Learning to look
differently at the guilty one
Diverting the attention from the self (victim) to the
perpetrator standing in the shoes of the perpetrators, to see what picture
could have been created, the perpetrator has his dignity. He remains a person
not a demon, not simply an embodiment of evil. There should be a stop to the
rebuking of perpetrator as a person, who has also bad and good qualities and
the challenge of being human. Humility of the victim, sober knowledge and
awareness of one’s own mortality.
You have to allow
forgiveness take place.
One has to arrive at a point of
feeling that she or he needs forgiveness. Failure and mistake, one will realize
that it’s all in humans. True self knowledge is the acceptance of one’s own finitude
or incompleteness. Humble towards gentle openness that knows how the temptation
towards inflicting evil, sinning lurks in every human heart. An act of letting
go and surrendering can be magnanimity experienced by both the victim and
perpetrator, as a freeing gift that opens new paths to relationship. Then there
is no longer any winner or loser. (Lafitte: 92-95).
Forgiveness brings
about liberation
We have to be confronted with one personal responsibility
and seriousness of guilty that clings to us often. This may urge us to escape
from it by means of forgetting it. “What is the past is the past” but into
“diversion of amusement” “To forgive and forget”. Forgetting only brings a
brief delay or deferment, without ensuring a final removal of the guilt.
Forgiveness is a very special form of memory. The
perpetrator receives once again the breathing space and new opportunity to
become different, this doesn’t mean to become innocent being, as if nothing has
happened differently the same. Forgiveness is a unique form of redemption
insofar as it allows the perpetrator to enter into new relationship with his
own act. Actions already done, can’t be undone, but the missteps committed no
longer exercises a destructive influence, but the misstep committed no longer exercises
a destructive influence onto the actual self- experience of the perpetrator.
No forgiveness without
confession, restoration and purification
The perpetrators must confess and acknowledge in an
authentic, tangible and perceptible way what he has done or inflicted on the
victim. Inner and outside form of confession. Only when the perpetrator
acknowledge his misstep towards the victim can the victim make his or her
desire to forgive effectively. One must acknowledge that has done evil and
injustice to another person and also accept that this evil is to be settled and
that the victim has the right to do so. (S. Gormley, 2014: 27-48).
The desire becomes effective when it expresses itself in the
confession and request for forgiveness directed to the victim. Committing an
evil means the perpetrator is defiled right from the core, it affects one’s
mentality and manner of living, so that the future doesn’t relapse into wrong
doing, avoiding certain contacts or occasions, building up new social milieu,
living or working elsewhere, they are easily consequences that intimidate
people. The help of the others as individual or community will also help,
therapeutic help and spiritual direction is indispensable.
Forgiveness is
unconditional
It can only work when the perpetrator shows remorse, regret,
it belongs to the order of gratuitousness. It cannot be imposed or requested by
confession, neither doesn’t it wait for confession, in order to offer its gift,
readiness of the heart and mind. The peak of love that desires simply to offer
itself freely and nothing to everyone. Only when forgiveness is a conditional,
is it truly forgiven, in the full sense of the word, exceptional and
extravagant stronger than the impossible.
Forgiveness belongs to the order of the irrational:
forgiveness is insane and must therefore venture fully lucid into the night of
incomprehensible. (Jacques Derrida). Extravagant, gratuitousness of forgiveness
can only be effective among people when we do not isolate it from its
psychological cultural, historical and ethical context. Linking it to
forgiveness with magnanimity, amnesty and the attempt at understanding the
perpetrator, as well as with intolerance with regard to the evil, retribution, punishment
and restoration.
It can be the result of negotiation and consultation, of
give and take, of a strict calculable reciprocity. On the side of the victim it
can be given freely and for nothing, one on the side of the perpetrator can be
requested and not enforced. Forgiveness can be given and not given. The victim
avails the possibility of not yet granting or even simply refusing the
requested forgiveness. The victim and not the guilt one can determine the
moment to forgive. (Gen 50:17, Matt 18:15-17).
Service to others and a greater commitment to avoid all
trappings of evil, while continuing to be patiently and humbly open towards the
victim. (E. Wyschogrod, 2006: 157-168). Forgiveness according to the Jewish
tradition has three times attempts when asking for forgiveness. Every time you
get three friends to ask for forgiveness from the victim and he refuses, you
change and look for other new three friends, at least three times. (3x3x3).
Forgiveness is a
promise
Forgiveness is related as a promise, unique form of promise.
The quality one should know that there is still a future, that everything about
his life has not yet been said and done, he may nurture a trust in that future.
Every promise is an attempt at finding an answer to the human heart, with its dark
sides, where by no one is absolutely certain, to know what I will be tomorrow,
(Arendt: 243-244) but also from the unpredictability of others, it’s impossible
to foresee how people shall act tomorrow, for they are free beings who can make
different choices.
Our future is like a chance in lottery, counter attacking
this double darkness of myself and others. Establishing an island of stability
within a sea of possibilities that can go off in all directions. The hope and
promise. The longing of the people and can thus never be fully trusted,
uncertainty and despair, made and addressed by someone else. Promise is an
external speech-act, that comes towards me, frees me from the disquiet and
doubt of the present towards the future so much so that I dare to entrust
myself to it (Psalm 31,3-4, Deut 32,4, Lk 6,36, Matt 5,45, 6,12). If God gives
us the means and Grace of His love to do so, even though as finite and sinful
human beings we will always remain wanting in this imitation without as being
crushed by our guilt.
Moving from
forgiveness to reconciliation
Reconciliation is after all applicable when the afflicted
evil caused a breach in the relationship that the perpetrator and victim had
previously. Reconciliation means to heal the breach caused by the wrong doing
in the relationship so that the relationship can be taken up again and acquire
a new future. Sometimes it’s difficult due to emotional feelings underneath, or
simply no longer possible. (New marriage of relationship with children after
divorce) irreversible or would be simply unjust. Hence, there should be no
confusion between forgiveness and reconciliation (Monbourquette, 2000:217-217).
Forgiveness is a state of the heart and mind by which one affords the other new
opportunities for the future, one regains the inner peace and freedom in
oneself at the same time. Reconciliation is rising to a new level of
relationship.
The extravagance of
God’s mercy
Forgiveness and reconciliation are together for God.
Reconciliation from God always comes first, and precedes all human
reconciliation towards God. “Out of the ordinary” loving bound with his
creatures, even those who do evil. One must dare to acknowledge his responsibility
and bad will. God judges and he is a just God. Judgment without mercy is
inhuman. Judgment is never final. God repents and offers new opportunities by
means of promise of new future, of a new covenant. (Cain and Abel) as well
explained in by the sacrament of penance. Conversion must be expressed in
deeds, likewise called to act of contrition. (D. Borobio : 2008)
Conclusion
You forgive because you are convinced and are willing to search yourself to see the other rooms you have never opened, there are doors in your life which you have not opened to see the beauty that lies there-in. How many people do not see the meaning of life, or prospects of the future, how many have lost hope and are plunged into the destitution, by unjust social conditions. The family is the place we learn to forgive, confess and reconcile, a place of affection, intimacy, where one acquires an art of dialogue and interpersonal communication.
Books
cited
BASSET, L., Holy Anger: Jacob, Job, Jesus, London/ Ottawa Continuum, Novalis 2007, pp. 21-60
BORGGRAEVE, R., “The Difficulty but Possible Path
Towards Forgiveness and Reconciliation”, in
LOUVAIN STUDIES, A Quarterly Review of the Faculty of Theology and
Religious Studies KU Leuven, Spring 2018, pp. 38-63
BUBER, M., “Guilt
and Guilt Feeling” crosscurrents, 8, No. 3 (1958) pp. 193-210
BOROBIO, D., “Sacramental
Forgiveness of Sin”, in Concilium no.184
(1986) Oxford, Blackwell, 2008.FLANIGAN, B., Forgiving Yourself, Paducan, KY: Turner Publishers 1997
GORMLEY, S., The Impossible Demand of Forgiveness, International Journal of Philosophical Studies, 22, No. 1 (2014) pp. 27-48
MOULE, C.F.D., Forgivenessand Reconciliation, and Other New Testament Themes, London SPCK 1998, 1-47
MONBOURQUETTE, J., (ed) How to Forgive? A step by Step Guide, Ottawa: Novalis, 2000.
PELLEFEYT, D., “Ethics, Forgiveness and the Unforgiveable after Auschwitz” in Incredible Forgiveness, ed Pollfeyt, 121-159.
____________.,Repentance, Reconciliation and relationship: The Silence of Jonah and Boundaries of Forgiveness”, in Reconciliation in Interfaith Perspective, (ed) Bieringer and Botton, pp. 28-39
ROBERT, D., Enright, Exploring Forgiveness Conference 1995
WYSCHOGROD, E., “Repentance and Forgiveness, the Undoing of Times” in International Journal for Philosophy of Religion, 60, no. 1-3 (2006) pp. 157-168
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