Tagged: “forgiveness”

I find that it is easier to forgive a person only after I first have sought and gotten revenge.  I think it is unhealthy to forgive before I have had my revenge.  What do you think about that?

I think you are confusing what forgiveness actually is.  To forgive is to have mercy on the other.  In sharp contrast is revenge in which you deliberately and severely punish the other.  Revenge is not even justice because revenge is an intemperate (severe) form of the eye-for-an-eye form of giving back to the other what was unfortunately given to you.  If you have sought and completed your intemperate form of justice, then where is the mercy?  Try mercy by itself and then ask for a more accurate form of justice.  I think you will be better off in terms of your own emotional health if you operate in this way.  I think those who hurt you will be better off, too.

Please follow and like us:

I’ve been making an effort to forgive someone who just keeps hurting me. With every new transgression, this person makes me angry again, how can I ever forgive this person?

I get asked this question quite frequently. This is not just you. Please remember that the accumulation of resentment within you may make the hundredth time someone hurts you more painful than the first. This potential for animosity to fester makes forgiveness even more important. Thus, I suggest the following three methods to you:

1) To prevent your resentment from overwhelming you, persevere in your forgiving. Every time this person treats you unfairly and causes you pain, forgive .

2) You will become more adept at forgiving as you practice it repeatedly. Observe how your capacity for forgiveness and your confidence in it are both expanding; you may find that you are able to forgive more quickly and effectively each time.

3) Remind yourself that practicing forgiveness is not something you do in isolation from the other virtues.  As you forgive, ask for justice, and do so after you have forgiven again so that you approach the person with less anger.

Please follow and like us:

Suppose that I see the one who hurt me as a wounded person.  I do not excuse, but as you say, I “widen the lens” through which I see the other person.  Might this be dangerous because, maybe, the offending person now begins to see all of his wounds and interprets these differently than you do.  In other words, in seeing his own wounds, maybe now he excuses himself and perpetrated more abuse on you.  What do you think?

When you forgive, you need to bring justice alongside the forgiving.  In other words, you ask fairness of the other.  This asking for fairness should help the other person to not now start excusing his unfair behavior.  After all, you would not ask for changes in the person if you are excusing the behavior.  To excuse is to see an extenuating circumstance and not a deliberate injustice.

Please follow and like us:

In some of your publications you talk about “the 3 R’s.”  Would you mind explaining these, please?

The 3 R’s are in the context of a genuine reconciliation.  They center on the one who acted unjustly.  The first R is remorse or an inner sorrow for the behavior.  The second R is repentance or the spoken word of sorrow to the one who was treated unjustly.  The third R is recompense or a doing-one’s-best to restore what may have been taken away.

Please follow and like us:

If I forgive someone, will that restore the relationship?  I do want the relationship restored.

Your forgiving the person is one of the steps toward reconciliation, but it will not automatically lead to the relationship being restored.  Also needed is the other person to accept your forgiveness, seek forgiveness from you, and be willing to reconcile.  The other person, who may have been acting unjustly, needs to feel sorrow for the emotional injury toward you and change the behavior.  Once you have forgiven, the other has accepted this and now seeks forgiveness, followed by a trustworthy set of behaviors toward you, then a restored relationship is likely to happen.

Please follow and like us: