What Forgiveness Is Not
Forgiveness is not forgetting - God chooses not to remember our sins (Jeremiah 31:34) as a deliberate act of will. Forgiveness is not excusing genuine wrongs. Forgiveness is not automatic reconciliation - we can fully forgive someone with whom it is unwise to reconcile. Forgiveness is not a feeling - it is primarily a decision of the will to release a legitimate claim against another person.
The Theological Ground: Why Christians Must Forgive
The parable of the unmerciful servant (Matthew 18:21-35): a servant forgiven ten thousand talents immediately seizes a fellow servant over a hundred denarii. The king's response: should you not have had mercy, as I had mercy on you? The forgiveness we have received in Christ is infinite; every offense against us is a hundred denarii by comparison. Paul makes the implication explicit: forgiving each other, as the Lord has forgiven you (Colossians 3:13).
The Psychology of Bitterness
Hebrews 12:15 warns of a root of bitterness that springs up and defiles many. Psychological research confirms: sustained unforgiveness correlates with anxiety, depression, and relational dysfunction. The person we refuse to forgive continues to live rent-free in our mental real estate. Forgiveness is not primarily a gift to the offender - it is a liberation of the one who forgives. Lewis Smedes: When you forgive someone, you set a prisoner free - and discover the prisoner was you.
A Practical Path Through Hard Forgiveness
For serious wounds, forgiveness is a process, not a single decision. First, name the offense accurately. Second, acknowledge the cost honestly. Third, make the deliberate choice to release the debt - this may need renewing as emotions resurface. Fourth, pray for the person who wronged you (Matthew 5:44) - it is almost impossible to sustain hatred toward someone you genuinely intercede for. Fifth, seek support from a trusted friend or counsellor when the wound is deep.