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Rudy Schellekens's avatar

"Father, forgive them, for they know not what they do..."

Pretty good idea where forgiveness takes place, and when. Whether or not the perpetrators came and repented or not: Forgiveness is MY task.

Paul's "heaping coals of fire upon their head..." is, again, a description of MY responsibility to forgive.

Difficult, I am well aware of that - by personal experience.

Years ago, Jack Exum (Sr) wrote an article about the cost of the unwillingness to forgive. It causes more misery for the one unwilling to forgive than for the one needed forgiven...

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Clark Coleman's avatar

People confuse two things: Forgiving, and deciding to not be bitter or hateful. The latter damages the bitter person more than it damages the wrongdoer.

Note that being bitter and harming oneself as a result is not possible for God. God might not have forgiven the unrepentant sinner, but God is not losing any sleep over it, so to speak. By deciding not to be bitter, we are deciding not to do something that is uniquely human, non-Godlike, i.e. ungodly, and harmful.

Deciding to "forgive" the unrepentant is also non-Godlike. Can we be better than God?

Separating true forgiveness from a mere abstinence from bitterness is the key.

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