Life Application

Forgiveness: The Spiritual Discipline of Laying Down the Burden

BC

Bible Companion Editorial Team

February 18, 2026 · 7 min · 960 words

Forgiveness is one of the most misunderstood commands in Scripture. It is not pretending the offense did not happen, excusing the harm, or guaranteeing restored trust. Biblical forgiveness is a specific decision: to release the offender from the debt they owe you - not because they deserve it, but because you have been forgiven a far greater debt (Matthew 18:21-35).

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.

Reflection for This Week

Is there someone you have been unable to forgive - and which misconception about forgiveness has most prevented you from taking the first step?

Editorial Note

Drawing on Lewis Smedes' Forgive and Forget, Miroslav Volf's Free of Charge, and the Greek text of Matthew 18 and Colossians 3.