This subject was heavy on my
mind this morning as I listened to Joel Osteen speak about how God forgives
always, and how His forgiveness is always greater than any error one could ever
commit. I got to thinking about a couple
of people I have chosen not to forgive and whose transgressions I refuse to
forget. What would it mean for me to
forgive these people? I am a forgiving
person, and have long understood that “forgive and forget” does not translate
into allowing harmful or toxic people to continue in my life. So why have I chosen, knowingly, to hang onto
the pains caused by these people? They
are not still doing anything to me, and this allows them to continue in my life
in a toxic way. This is my
self-examination today.
From
Dictionary.com
Word Origin & History
Word Origin & History
FORGIVE
O.E. forgiefan "give, grant, allow,"
also "to give up" and "to give in marriage;" from
for- "completely" + giefan "give" (see give). The modern sense of "to give up desire or power to
punish" is from use of the compound as a Gmc. loan-translation of L.
perdonare (cf. Du. vergeven, Ger. vergeben; see pardon).
From
Merriam-Webster.com
Full Definition of FORGIVE
Full Definition of FORGIVE
transitive verb
1 a : to give up
resentment of or claim to requital for <forgive an insult>
b : to grant
relief from payment of <forgive a debt>
2 : to cease to feel
resentment against (an offender) :
pardon <forgive one's enemies>
From
Dictionary.com
Word Origin & History
Word Origin & History
FORGET
O.E. forgytan, from for- "passing by, letting go" (cf.
forbear, forgo) + gietan "to grasp" (see get). A
common Gmc. construction (cf. O.S. fargetan, Du. vergeten, Ger. vergessen
"to forget"). The literal
sense would be "to lose (one's) grip on," but
that is not recorded in any
Germanic language.
From
Merriam-Webster.com
Full Definition of FORGET
Full Definition of FORGET
transitive verb
1 a : to lose the
remembrance of : be unable to think of
or recall <I forget his name>
b obsolete : to cease from doing
2 : to treat with
inattention or disregard <forgot their old friends>
3 a : to disregard
intentionally : overlook —usually used
in the imperative <I shouldn't have
said that, so just forget it>
b :
to give up hope for or expectation of —usually used in the imperative
<as for prompt service, forget
it>
intransitive verb
1 :
to cease remembering or noticing <forgive and forget>
2 : to fail to become
mindful at the proper time <forgot about paying the bill>
So… to completely give a let-go! This is why it is a gift to oneself.
“Forgive and forget” is made a difficult practice by the
confusion that it means to release another from his or her transgressions and
allow them back – back in one’s life, back home, back in a group, etc. This is faulty thinking and leads only to
heartache and often bitterness of the one preoccupied and determined not to
forgive. That takes effort, but
forgiveness actually takes far less effort!
Every action receives a reaction from the universe. So consider if we forgive, we receive a
certain path to take, and if we do not, we receive another. Which would you have – one chosen for you, or
one that you choose freely and with far less effort?
One can find many Bible verses about forgiveness. Whether you claim a religion or not, they are
all good advice, and worthy of much consideration and action. However, I have yet to find a verse that says
we should forgive AND forget. I think
forgetting, as in something being involuntarily or voluntarily wiped from one’s
memory is impossible – at least in a force-it-out kind of way.
As used in the context of forgive and forget, the forgetting
is in letting go; it is a ceasing of purposely and purposefully recalling. Let go of the attachment you have to the
error. Let go of the emotion you have
attached to the error. Most importantly,
let go of how right you are about the error.
Whether you are right or not about the error, it is still the
error. Just let it gooooooo... and let the universe swallow it up for you. It is just as simple (or difficult, depending
on one’s outlook) to practice letting go as it is to practice harboring the
judgment and anger. Yes, it is a
practice. We become better at that which
we focus – positive or negative. Much
like forgiveness, there is another choice about direction here. Which will you choose?
Forgiving and forgetting is not releasing the one (or ones)
who hurt you. To the contrary, it is
about releasing yourself from the hurt.
The life path of the person who hurt you does not change whether you
choose to forgive and forget, or not.
But yours DOES! We choose our own
paths, even when we are asleep at the wheel, and inaction is still an
action.
Wake up! Pay attention! Turn on your conscious GPS! If you could draw out your choices over your
lifetime as a map, how would those twists and turns look? Where have they taken you, and what journey
are you still on? Are you
progressing? Do you feel good about your
direction? Are you going in circles only
to end up in the same spot all the time?
Are you lost – wandering aimlessly?
Each choice takes a particular path.
Each choice rewards us with something.
We each created our own maps, life journeys, and painted ourselves into
a particular picture. Where are you
headed?
(It is important to remember that transgressions, whether
real or perceived, are always real to the one who owns the experience.)
References
Forget. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged. Retrieved
January 19, 2014, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Forget
Forget. (n.d.). Merriam-Webster.com. Retrieved January 19, 2014, from http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/forget
Forgive. (n.d.). Dictionary.com Unabridged.
Retrieved January 19, 2014, from Dictionary.com website: http://dictionary.reference.com/browse/Forgive
Forgive. Merriam-Webster.com.
Merriam-Webster, n.d. Retrieved January 19, 2014. http://www.merriam-webster.com/dictionary/forgive
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