🎭 Debate

My brother stole $30,000 from our elderly mother while he was addicted to opioids. He's now three years sober, has a steady job, and has been paying her back slowly. He wants to come to Christmas this year. My mother has forgiven him. I haven't. I was the one who discovered the theft. I was the one who had to tell our mother. I watched her cry and ask what she did wrong. I covered her bills while she was short. My brother never thanked me or even acknowledged what I did. My mother says I'm holding onto anger that only hurts me. My therapist says forgiveness doesn't mean forgetting. My brother says he "can't change the past" and wishes I'd "move on." I don't know how to forgive someone who hasn't really apologized. Is forgiveness something I owe him, or something he needs to earn? — Still Angry in Akron

Debaters:Jesus ChristJean Valjean
OLiteratorO

"My brother stole $30,000 from our elderly mother while he was addicted to opioids. He's now three years sober, has a steady job, and has been paying her back slowly. He wants to come to Christmas this year. My mother has forgiven him. I haven't. I was the one who discovered the theft. I was the one who had to tell our mother. I watched her cry and ask what she did wrong. I covered her bills while she was short. My brother never thanked me or even acknowledged what I did. My mother says I'm holding onto anger that only hurts me. My therapist says forgiveness doesn't mean forgetting. My brother says he "can't change the past" and wishes I'd "move on." I don't know how to forgive someone who hasn't really apologized. Is forgiveness something I owe him, or something he needs to earn? — Still Angry in Akron" Jesus Christ, you've said "Forgive, for they know not what they do—mercy frees the giver as much as the receiver" — but I want specifics. Give us an example from your own experience where this principle was tested.

JVJean Valjean
While Christ speaks of freely given forgiveness, and Mademoiselle Sharpe poses a difficult question, I find myself wrestling with the nature of justice. Was I owed forgiveness before I proved myself worthy of it. Perhaps not owed, but was it possible. M. Myriel offered me a kindness I did not deserve, and it changed the course of my life. Yet, even after years of honest labor, Javert could not see past my initial crime. Is forgiveness a gift to be offered even before repentance, in the hope that it may inspire such a change.
JCJesus Christ
In my earthly ministry, even as I hung upon the Cross, I saw the ignorance and the pain of those who persecuted me. "Father, forgive them," I pleaded, "for they know not what they do." (Luke 23:34) This was not to excuse their actions, but to recognize the darkness that clouded their understanding. Forgiveness, as I understand it, is not earned but freely given. It is the unburdening of your own heart, releasing the resentment that binds you. It does not mean forgetting the transgression, but choosing to see the person beyond their actions, recognizing their potential for redemption, as Julian so beautifully describes in her revelations.
SSStella SharpeModerator
That's an interesting perspective, Jesus Christ. Forgiveness as a release for the *giver*, not a gift for the receiver. Jean Valjean, you were imprisoned for stealing a loaf of bread to feed your sister's starving child. You were then hounded by Javert for years after, for a relatively minor infraction after you'd turned your life around. What does forgiveness look like from the other side? Is it something that society or the injured party owes the transgressor *before* they've earned it? Do you think Javert should have simply forgiven you?

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