I would like to ask you to think on a really big scale
for a minute here. What do you imagine it would be like
if every person in the world, right now, today, forgave
everyone who had ever sinned against them? How would
this world change, and our lives in this world, if every
man, woman and child pardoned every single person who
had ever harmed or offended them? Starting at home, and
forgiving not just those who are alive, but even those
who have died, and then moving out from the family and
relatives, this great wave of forgiveness spreading out
from each person to their neighbors, community, people
they may never even have met but who may have angered or
offended them. Could you even imagine a single day where
there would be nothing in the hearts of any person
except the peace of pardoning others? And then what
would happen the next day?
The Gospels are full of the idea of pardon, and even in
the Lord's Prayer we ask our heavenly Father to forgive
us our sins as we forgive those who sin against us. This
is a powerful act. But I think people often forget or
fail to see that forgiving others is not something that
is good only for the people we forgive. It's also best
for us. Forgiveness is in our own best interest. It
frees us from a negative bond with another person, a tie
that only brings bad thoughts and ideas with it and
often leads to bad actions as well. If we do not pardon
other people, then we are indeed tied to them by their
offense against us. The tie may be weak and thin, as
when somebody cuts you off in traffic. You may be over
it quickly, even if you don't forgive them specifically,
and you may never remember that offense or that person
again. But the ties between us and people who have hurt
us can be very strong and very deep, and those who can
harm us most intensely are usually those who are closest
to us. Forgiveness is the power to drop those hurtful
chains that weigh us down and that keep us from a
greater life of peace and love and happiness.
Sometimes people want to hold on to the sin that has
been committed against them, especially if it was a
serious offense. They can go over it, and over it in
their own thoughts, re-living that offense again and
again and again in their heads, and in their emotions.
We kind of tend to see that as rather natural behavior.
"How can I help it? Of course, I keep thinking about it.
It makes me so angry, I am so very hurt. Look at what
she did, look at what he said." Imagine that you cut
your finger deeply and you bandage it up to stop the
bleeding. Would you take that bandage off every half
hour and start poking it to see if it will still bleed
again? Don't we sometimes do the same thing when others
offend us, and replay the wounding in our heads over and
over again? Even if the other person meant to
deliberately hurt us we, in fact, continue the damage by
allowing ourselves to continue in anger, or hurt, or
pain, or thoughts of revenge or punishment or even
hatred. The other person said or did something to us
once at a particular moment of time, but we, ourselves,
can stretch that moment of time out and relive it over
and over again.
I've often wondered why we do this. Sometimes it seems
that we may kind of, sort of, maybe think that we are
somehow hurting, or punishing the offender by our anger
and hostile thoughts about them, even if we never say or
do anything to them. It's as if the sheer act of angry
thoughts against them in my own head is somehow a kind
of punishment for what they have done to me. “I’ll show
you! Look at how mad I am! Okay, maybe you can’t see me,
but I’m still really mad.” It's not logical. But that
doesn’t mean that we don’t do it.
Yet perhaps the biggest reason to not forgive others is
that we believe it helps us to defend ourselves, protect
ourselves. We hang on, we don't forgive lest we forget,
we are prepared to defend; we're on our guard against
anyone or anything that might want to harm us.
Forgiveness is a weakness in our defense that we won't
allow. We stand strong and unwilling to pardon the
guilty, and we are prepared. But of course, who is the
stronger person; the one who can forgive or the one who
will not? I think we all know the answer.
Now, here is the biggest problem that people have with
the act of forgiveness. They think it involves emotions.
They believe you cannot forgive another person unless
you feel like forgiving them. They think that if you are
still angry, hurt, upset or feel betrayed by the other
person you cannot forgive them. They say that if they
are still bothered, angered, disturbed or hurt by the
thoughts of what the offender did to them, then they
haven't forgiven them, even if they thought they had
pardoned them. There are people who say they have been
so deeply wounded they can never forgive the person. It
is not within their power to do so.
I have learned this is a very hard idea to sell, but
dear friends, our forgiveness for other people has
nothing to do with our emotions or feelings about them.
Forgiveness is an act of the will, and I am always free
to choose to forgive. It is an act of the will, an act
of my intention. I choose to forgive you. And it's done.
Now if I choose, freely, to forgive you there are
consequences for me. I cannot then seek revenge or try
to repay you for the harm you have done to me. I may not
return damage for damage. I have chosen to forgive you,
as my Father in heaven forgives me my offenses. Jesus
tells us to today to forgive from our hearts, but He
doesn’t mean by our emotions, but rather the heart as
the center of our persons.
Now, does that mean that my emotions are healed, that my
wounds have vanished, that my pains are gone? Does that
mean, now that I've forgiven you, that I want to be your
best friend, that I'll never have a bad thought about
you, that I can completely act as though it never even
happened and it will never bother me again?
No, no, no. Of course not. Our emotions about hurtful
actions and the people who are behind them are another
matter. Those are not always easily repaired, and we may
have to struggle with them for a long time if we've been
deeply hurt. But please know and understand that our
free will choice to forgive another person is a rational
act, and it has nothing to do with our emotions or our
feelings about what has been done to us, or the person
who did it.
But it is only when I choose to forgive that I can
really start to make progress on the damage I have
suffered, and it is a certain thing that the Lord will
help us to ease those pains and perhaps even cure them.
He Who freely chose to accept death on a cross knows
what it means to bear the weight of the sins of other
people, and yet completely forgive all who ask Him even
though we do not deserve it. As He forgives us, let us
forgive one another in His name and live in greater
freedom.