Tagged: “Love”

Does one need humility in order to forgive well?

As we forgive, we begin to see the inherent worth in both the one who acted unjustly and in ourselves.  Yes, I do think it requires humility to not feel superior toward the other person who acted badly.  Humility shows us that we are not better or worse than others. To see both of you as human, both in need of respect and love, requires the moral virtue of humility.  These two viruses, humility and forgiveness,  constitute an important team.

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You used the term “full humanity” in answering my earlier question. What do you mean by that term?

So often, when people are unjustly treated by another person, they tend to focus only on those unjust actions, viewing the other only in terms of those behaviors.  Upon entering the forgiveness process, the people tend to expand their story of the other, seeing this person now more broadly, seeing that there is much more to this other person than only those unjust actions against them.

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May I follow up again? What do you mean when you say that I as a forgiver begin to view the other “more broadly”?

I mean this: There is more to the person who offended you than those unjust actions.  Take your own case.  Have you ever behaved unjustly toward others?  If so, would you want those behaviors to be the final word on who you are as a person? After all, don’t you have the capacity to help others, to love others even when it is difficult for you to offer this kind of love to others?  This is the broader perspective.  We all have at least the potentiality to be people who help and who love others.

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