Very interesting question. I suppose there are fashions in forgiveness like everything else.
This is (somewhat tangentially) related to something I have noticed in religious circles in recent years. I have seen some examples of this on this forum, but the best example comes from outside.
The following story was included by the Pastor of a nearby parish that I happened to attend one week. I am telling the story from memory, but I remember the gist of it anyway.
The Pastor was in a grocery store. There were three people in line at the checkout and he was the third. The checker was apparently new in her job and not very good. The first person in line was patient. The second person in line was impatient, asking for additional help in a loud voice after a few minutes. He was (I remember this was stated with a fair amount of disdain) buying cigarettes. The moral of the story was that the first person in line was concentrated on the needs of the checker and the second person in line was selfish, not seeing things from other people’s points of view.
Well, that was OK as far as it went, but as far as I could see, the third person in line was suffering from an equal blindness to the other person’s point of view. The second guy in line was supposed to sympthize with the checker’s incompetence, so why wasn’t the third person in line (the priest) supposed to sympathize with the second guy’s irritability? I mean, it’s good to be charitable and assume that the checker was new (rather than just unwilling to learn), but he didn’t know it for a fact. Isn’t it also good to be charitable and assume that the irritable guy was irritable and impatient for some valid reason as well? Maybe he was upset because he had tried to quit smoking and was failing. It could be anything. Quite possibly he was less annoyed with the checker herself than with the store, who should have let her shadow someone with experience for a while, if she was as new as all that.
How this relates to the subject of the thread is that we just don’t seem to want to sympathize with certain people. I think it has a lot with a laudable (in itself) desire not to be judgemental. It makes us judgemental toward those whom we perceive to be judgemental. But it seems to me that since we are admittedly aware of the sin of being judgemental, it is even worse for us when we commit it.
Perhaps your very religious friend perceives in sympathy to the victims a corresponding desire to judge the perpetrators. Aside from the fact that the latter does not necessarily follow from the former, there is not now nor has there ever been a proscription against judging actions. We are not in a position to judge the souls of the criminals, just as we are not in a position to judge the soul of the incompetent checker. However, it does not mean that we are not allowed to say that the criminal act was a wrong act, or that people should be good at their jobs.
If someone is hurt by a crime, they deserve our sympathy even if they react in a vengeful manner. (I do not mean that this family has done so, but that even if they had, they would still deserve our sympathy.) This is not to say that we shouldn’t try to talk them out of their desire for revenge, just that it doesn’t cancel out the harm that was done to them. In a much more trivial way, the fact that the guy had to wait in line for a much longer time than would reasonably be expected, was an injury to him. To some extent (a very much smaller extent of course), he deserves our sympathy for this, which is not canceled out by his becoming irritable about it. We should try to talk him (if we know him well enough of course) out of showing his irritability in such a way, of course.
Alternatively to all of the above, sometimes people just want to be thought of as merciful, so they like to appear really merciful toward people who have not in fact harmed them personally at all.
–Jen