Mar 21, 2021
This is Entrepreneurs of Faith, a Sunday episode of Monetization Nation. I’m Nathan Gwilliam, your host. Today, we’re talking about how to forgive.
We Want to Forgive, but How do We Forgive?
This is not a talk about why we should forgive. We already know that. We want to forgive, and we try to forgive. But, sometimes we still see the person who hurt us, and those negative emotions bubble up again. This episode is about HOW to forgive.
What Forgiveness is Not
Before I begin, I want to make 3 clarifying points.
Jeffrey Holland said: “Christ taught ‘I, the Lord, will forgive whom I will forgive, but of you it is required to forgive all men.’ It is, however, important for some of you living in real anguish to note what He did not say. ‘You are not allowed to feel true pain or real sorrow from the shattering experiences you have had at the hand of another.’ Nor did He say, ‘In order to forgive fully, you have to reenter a toxic relationship or return to an abusive, destructive circumstance.’”
Now, I will address 7 secrets that can help us to forgive.
Secret #1: We can CHOOSE to love and forgive.
Maybe a good first step in the forgiveness process is to write down who we choose to forgive, and for what. Then, we can write the reasons we love and are grateful for the person.
In 2004, a group of teenagers used a stolen credit card to buy a 20-pound frozen turkey in Long Island. As they drove, an 18-year-old named Ryan Cushing threw the turkey out of the car and into Victoria Ruvolo’s windshield. The impact broke every bone in Ruvolo’s face, which required a 10-hour surgery, three titanium plates, and a wire mesh for her left eye socket to correct. The teens were arrested shortly after, and several of them agreed to testify against Ryan. Cushing would have faced up to 25 years in prison if he was convicted. Instead, Ruvolo intervened on his behalf and worked to get him amnesty for the crime, and he was imprisoned for only 6 months. Ruvolo wrote, “Some people couldn’t understand why I’d done this but I felt God had given me a second chance and I wanted to pass it on.” (source: The Forgiveness Project and the NY Post)
Secret #2: We can replace that darkness and hurt with light and love through acts of kindness.
One of the first and best ways
to replace darkness with light and love is for us to pray for that
person.
Matthew 5:44 teaches “pray for them which despitefully use you, and
persecute you;”
We
can pray for Heavenly Father to bless that person. We can express
gratitude for the good things the person has brought into our
lives. We can pray for strength and courage to forgive. We can tell
our Heavenly Father that we have chosen to forgive the person. Then
we can pray for our hearts to change, to let go and ask that we can
then feel love in place of hurt, sadness, anger, and resentment. We
can ask Heavenly Father to help us see that person how He sees
them.
Matthew also exhorts us to: “Love your enemies, bless them that curse you, do good to them that hate you” with special emphasis on the phrase “do
good”. I think that’s one of the biggest secrets to being able to
forgive.
Choosing to forgive and letting go of the
darkness is not enough. We must fill the darkness with light. If
someone has hurt us, we can serve them, do good to them, and watch
as darkness evaporates and light and love start to increase in the
place of the hurt and resentment.
Martin Luther King, Jr. said “Darkness cannot
drive out darkness; only light can do that. Hate cannot drive out
hate; only love can do that.”
Mary
Johnson lost her son in 1993 after a then-teenaged Oshea Israel got
into a fight with him at a party, and shot him. Johnson went to
visit Oshea in jail. After their first contact, she said “I
began to feel this movement in my feet. It moved up my legs, and it
just moved up my body. When I felt it leave me, I instantly knew
that all that anger and hatred and animosity I had in my heart for
12 years was over. I had totally forgiven [him].” The two now live
as neighbors in the same duplex, and Johnson has even referred to
Israel as “son” in interviews.“ (source:
The Daily Beast)
Secret #3: We must forgive others so we can be forgiven
by the
Savior.
Matthew
6:14-15 teaches, “For if ye
forgive men their trespasses, your heavenly Father will also
forgive you: But if ye forgive not men their trespasses, neither
will your Father forgive your trespasses.”
Thomas Fuller said, "He that cannot forgive
others breaks the bridge over which he must pass himself; for every
man has need to be forgiven."
In
1918, three law officers were murdered when they attempted to
arrest several criminals. Glenn Kempton’s father was one of the
officers killed. Glenn is my great uncle. The murderers were
captured, tried, and sent to prison for life. As a boy, there grew
in Glenn’s heart a bitterness and a hatred toward Tom Powers, the
confessed slayer of his Father. One day, Glenn was on a business
trip in Arizona and detoured to the prison where Tom Powers was
being held. He arrived after visiting hours and spoke with the
warden, who arranged the meeting with Glenn and Tom. The two had a
long talk and at the end, Glenn shook Tom’s hand and said, “With
all my heart, I forgive you for this awful thing that has come into
our lives.” Glenn says it is a glorious thing when bitterness and
hatred go out of your heart and forgiveness comes in. As he walked
out the door and down that long flight of steps he knew that
forgiveness was better than revenge, for he had experienced it. As
he and his wife drove toward home, a sweet and peaceful calm came
over Glenn and he had found a broader, richer, and more abundant
life. (source: The Miracle of Forgiveness)
Secret #4: We can remember
that everyone makes mistakes, especially
ourselves.
We
are all human, and therefore, we are
all prone to
making mistakes. Nobody is perfect. Knowing and recognizing our own
faults allows us to give others the right to make their own
mistakes. (Source: Allan Halls) We can seek to understand the hurt
and traditions of the fathers that contributed to the person doing
what they did.
We
can think of the many things we have done for which we need
forgiveness. When we remember how much for which we need to be
forgiven, it makes it easier to show mercy to those who have hurt
us.
We
can also give people the benefit of the doubt and assume they have
good motives.
Forgiving can also become easier
when we remember a time when we were forgiven, focusing on how it made us feel. (source:
Louisya Graves)
According to
People, teen
Jordyn Howe took his stepfather’s gun to school and accidentally
shot Ady Guzman-Jesus’s daughter, Lourdes, while showing the
firearm to friends. Astonishing the judge and community,
Guzman-Jesus not only forgave the boy but also asked for him to get
a lighter sentence, telling reporters that she believes her
daughter would have wanted it that way. Howe will only serve one
year in a juvenile detention center and will visit local schools
with Guzman-Jesus to warn kids of the dangers of guns.
Secret #5: We can move on
with the next chapters in our
lives.
Our
past histories are not here in our present realities. We shouldn’t
allow them to be here in our minds, muddying our present moments.
Our lives are like plays with several acts. Some of the characters
who enter have short roles to play; others, much larger. Some are
villains and others are good guys. But all of them are necessary,
otherwise, they wouldn’t be in the play. We can embrace them all,
and move on to the next act.
Former South African leader Nelson Mandela was
sent to prison in 1963 on charges of trying to sabotage the
nation’s government, which advocated a policy of apartheid that
treated people of different races differently. Mandela advocated a
democratic society in which all people would be treated equally.
Mandela spent the next 27 years in prison, but after he was
released in 1990, he forgave the people who had imprisoned him.
Mandela later became South Africa's president and delivered
speeches internationally in which he urged people to forgive each
other because forgiveness is God's plan and, therefore, is always
the right thing to do.
Secret #6: We can become
more like Jesus Christ by
forgiving.
Learning
to forgive is part of our journeys to become more like the
Savior.
When
we hold on to anger and resentment, we lose the Spirit, and the
help from the Spirit to forgive. When we choose to forgive, we can
receive the help of the Spirit to forgive.
Sandra Walker, a mother of two, lost her
husband in a car accident that also caused her to have a
life-changing brain injury, according to The Daily Mail. At the
trial for the accident, in her court statement, Walker said she
sympathized with the woman who crashed into them—who herself lost a
child in the accident—and gave her a hug. “I know she is going
through as much pain as I am feeling. I wanted her to know that I
forgive her for what she did,” Walker told
WSB-TV.
Secret #7: We can give it to
God.
Forgiveness is
a gift we give ourselves, by letting God carry the burden of
judging and punishing. We don’t have the wisdom or strength to do
those things without hurting ourselves and others. (source: Sherrie
Call) Forgiveness is in part trusting that God will take care of
things. Romans 12:19 teaches, “Vengeance is mine sayeth the Lord.”
In this scripture, Christ is asserting his role of judge and is
wanting us to trust his judgments, let go, and move on. It’s a
tender mercy. He’s asking us to trust his perfect understanding of
the lives, abilities, and circumstances of all. I believe that as
long as we have faith in Christ as a redeemer and as a judge, we
don’t need to stew over those who have wronged us. Christ will give
them what they need and will give us what we need. He knows that
better than us, and we can trust Him. Once we’ve given it to God,
it’s not ours anymore. It’s His, and we cannot hold onto it
anymore. (Source: Samantha Abildskov)
Key
Takeaways
If
we try to forgive, but the feelings of hurt and resentment come up
in the future, we can go through this process again. If we need
additional help, we can find that help through prayer, fasting, and
sometimes professional counseling.
I
challenge each of us to pick someone today who we need to forgive
and to go through appropriate steps to “leave it alone”, to forgive
them, and to receive the liberating power of forgiveness in our
lives.
I am so grateful for the forgiveness I have
received from my Heavenly Father, from my family, and others. I am
grateful for Jesus Christ’s atonement that has made this possible.
I’m grateful He is quick to forgive us when we sincerely repent. I
know that as we forgive, we will also be
forgiven.
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