Joy in the Journey

Forgiveness is hard work. I sometimes refer to it as “surgery of the heart.” No one looks forward to the process of surgery, but when people look beyond the procedure to what lies ahead once healing occurs, it is easier to bear.

The process of forgiveness includes bearing pain and finding meaning in suffering. It requires pain, emotional pain, as we look directly at another’s injustice and struggle to see him or her as a person, just as I-the-forgiver am a person.

The joy comes, I think, in triumphing through a challenging process and becoming stronger once the process is complete. You stand stronger because you have not let injustice defeat you.

You stand stronger because you are now more capable of receiving the other back into your life, if he or she can be trusted. You may play a part in this person’s positively changed ways as you stand strong.

You stand stronger because you know you have a way of meeting the next injustice, and the next, and the next after that.

Having a new heart as a result of forgiving and becoming stronger and helping others get stronger is a cause for joy.

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Categories: Consequences of Forgiving, Our Forgiveness Blog

1 comment

  1. Jazzy says:

    I just posted a comment for the post on finding meaning in suffering. I just wanted to comment here that joy seems to be one of the outcomes when you find meaning in the suffering. So, when you “bear the pain” another has caused you, two people benefit—the one who hurt you as you do not strike back and you as you find joy. I like it very much.

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