S
seekerz
Guest
If God wants to forgive Bin Laden, that’s His business. If He is going to ask me to forgive Bin Laden, I’m going to decline. Punishment of the criminal by society is justice, not vengence. IMO, to forgive a wrongdoer who has murdered someone, for example, is to belittle the victim. If the sinner wants forgivness, they need to ask the ones they have wronged. There’s no obligation on the victims to forgive. I don’t recall even Jesus saying forgive those who wrong you. If he did, does that mean that not forgiving someone who has wronged you is a sin?
Multiple times in Scripture (I could search for the exact quotes if you need them), Jesus commands us both to love and to forgive those who hurt us.
We are told to: love our enemies, pray for those who persecute us, forgive as we want to be forgiven (see parable of the unforgiving servant), love our neighbor (see the parable of the Good Samaritan to understand who a neighbor is). Jesus wasn’t just talk, He gave us His own example: healing the servant whose ear Peter cut off in the garden, asking His Father to forgive those who crucified Him, forgiving sins of those who came to Him for physical healing, He also did not cut Peter off after his denial…
I could go on and on, but the point is when we refuse to forgive and to love, it perpetuates a cycle of negative emotions and actions that warp our lives and those of generations to come. Hate does nobody any good. Surely by now the sorry state of our world would have taught us this much.***
Sure, I have forgiven Bin Laden, because God demands no less from me and because refusal to do so would make me hate-filled and vengeful (qualities which unchecked, turn normal people into terrorists). When we hate, we eventually become that which we hate - the ultimate victory for those bent on our destruction.Does anyone here really forgive Bin Laden? Does anyone here really love Bin Laden? Are we so far off track on what is right that we are not discussing forgiving someone who is responsible for murdering thousands, when that person has not even asked us for forgiveness??
P.S. That does not mean I don’t think BL should be brought to justice. If a friend/relative/even child of mine went out and shot even one person, I would hand them over to the authorities. Don’t interpret that to mean I would stop loving them, even for a second. Justice and love are not mutually exclusive, but together they give rise to this most wonderful of gifts called mercy.
That is good overcoming evil in our hearts–love overcoming hate–even if we still feel the hate without ever actually feeling any love. For a lack of a better way of saying, I call it invisible love.