Few of us go through life without having been injured,
wounded, sometimes devastated by the actions of individuals or institutions. We’re creatures of memory and carry our
injuries with us, which can be quietly nagging or secretly poisonous. Seemingly invisible or forgotten,
we have to deal with them, one way or another. I have an unoriginal suggestion. One way is through
conscious acts of forgiveness.
Forgiveness can change one’s whole outlook on life, as in
the story of Louis Zamperini, an American soldier who returned to Japan and
embraced with forgiveness three of the men who tortured him in the Second World
War. It was only after this that
his nightmares from the war ceased.
It was the beginning of something new; he became a teacher, a healer,
and a force for good.
William Blake thought
Christianity most original in its take on forgiveness.
When Peter asked Jesus how often he should be willing to forgive an
offense (seven times? he wondered), the disarming reply was ‘seven times
seventy!’ (Matt: 18:21). According
to Jesus, our readiness to forgive one another should be limitless. According
to Jesus, forgiveness is a revolutionary power. For one thing, it dares to transcend nature. “An eye for an eye” is nature; “turn
the other cheek” seeks to rise above nature.
So we have William Blake, Jesus and Zamperini who zero in on
the value of forgiveness. They gain
some earthy support from a 2014 book by Kelly Turner, Radical Remission; the author studied over a thousand case
histories of people who beat the odds against cancer, and were healed despite a
hopeless medical prognosis. The survivors
shared nine main factors.
One was the ability to let go of negative emotions they had
been clinging to for a long time, like anger, resentment, and the need to
strike back against perceived wrongs. To root out these destructive emotions by forgiveness is no
small thing. But it can be managed,
and is part of the healing and remission from cancer reported by survivors.
Unfortunately, many are so badly wounded, and have such fixed
ideas about what is possible and what is right or wrong, they cannot yield to that
dilation of the heart we call forgiveness. Why is it so difficult?
One reason may be the idea of manliness that forbids feeling
the emotions that prepare one for the act of forgiveness. A touch of inspiration is perhaps called
for in cases of authentic forgiveness.
More than a grudging nod is required; one has to tap into deep reserves.
Can we reach that far down? Saying it requires meaning it; without
some feeling, it won’t work.
For forgiveness, imagination and expectation need to be
mobilized. To forgive in this active sense is to possess a lively and optimistic
vision of the future. As Blake saw it, it’s a creative act—much more than passive
resignation. One forgoes the old
for the not-yet-new; a closed for an open universe. Forgiveness is
a choice, a gamble, an experiment.
Not easy to pull off.
“To err is human; to
forgive is divine,” wrote Alexander Pope. I’m moved to ask about America? Is it
a particularly forgiving place? America incarcerates more people than any nation
on earth, a large percentage of
them being non-violent drug ‘offenders’.
Jesus said that we should be willing to forgive each other again and
again.
And yet in many of these god-fearing United States, three
time offenders for petty crimes are imprisoned for life. Since the rise of the incarceration
industry, there are lobbies dedicated to keeping the prisons of the nation
booming with business. The alliance of profit motive and the American penal system
adds to the brutality of incarceration and further scrapes away any lingering
veneer of ‘divinity’.
The clear opposite of “I forgive you” is “I bomb you.” And yet, need I say it? America is pre-eminent in the bombing
-- surely not the forgiving -- business. The United States has a larger share of the world’s arms
market than the rest of the world put together. The USA has created the mightiest war machine in human
history. Always ready for endless
war, it gives no impression whatsoever of being interested in forgiveness. The
state, the military, the banks are not in the forgiving zone. Forgiveness is a homeless wanderer we can
only hope will visit us in a time of need. Don’t bank on it, though.
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