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Featured Article:
Dressed in Black: African Americans and End of Life Care

With the advent of certain pain medicines like morphine, or medical equipment like respirators or ventilators, or procedures like kidney dialysis, medical physicians and other health care professionals have the ability to prolong life or prolong death. Persons with certain debilitating and/or terminal diseases or injuries, especially, to the central nervous system, may be able to live longer today. Read Full Story | Print Version

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Forgiveness

Comment on Featured Articles in the forum

Forgiveness by Deacon Alex JonesForgiveness is easy to talk and write about, but difficult to do. Once we've been offended, especially unjustly, the natural response is seek retribution or even vengeance. We want the offending party to suffer as we have suffered, to feel the pain we have felt. The very idea of forgiveness is an uncommon response to the very human response for immediate justice and retribution. We want the Old Testament lex talons of "eye for eye, tooth for tooth, stripe for stripe, or burning for burning" to be the judgment rule of the occasion. You hurt me, I'll hurt you back! You lie on me, and I'll dig up some dirt on you! You betray me and I'll destroy your name and your aspirations.

But as Christians we are called to live a stripe above the merely human response to injustice and pain. We are called to forgive those who offend us:

"…forgive, if you have anything against anyone, so that your Father who is in heaven will also forgive you your transgressions. But if you do not forgive, neither will your Father who is in heaven forgive your transgressions." Mark 11:25-26

But how does one forgive an offending party who has damaged us or broken our hearts or destroyed our good name? Does our Heavenly Father expect us to do the impossible? Does He ask us to turn a blind eye to injustice? No, God never asks us to turn a blind eye to injustice, but He does ask us to forgive the perpetrator.

Separating the perpetrator from the deed is very difficult indeed, but nevertheless can be done. All of us have the capacity for good and evil. We offend as well as being offended, yet we think of ourselves as being basically good people. We acknowledge that at times we do things that wound others: we carry gossip about others, hedge on our commitments, do spiteful things to others because, for lack of a better word, we're in a funk and just feel uncharitable. Yet we still think of ourselves as being good Christians, but with a human dimension. We tend to separate our good selves from our bad acts.

Looking at others through the same lens helps us to understand that we all do bad things at times and all of us have the need of giving and receiving forgiveness. Separating the act from the actor is a big step towards forgiving an offender. We can never forgive an act of injustice or evil, but we can forgive the perpetuator. An evil act will always be an evil act and can never be swept under a rug, yet those persons who commit those acts are made in the image of God and have, however small, some good in them. Maybe they had a bad day, or maybe they are going through a difficult sickness or divorce, or maybe they endured humiliating abuse or perversion during their formative years. We don't always know the real reason a person acts unjustly toward us. Maybe their encounter with us triggered or occasioned something within them that they themselves do not fully understand. Since we don't always know the cause of an unjust act towards us, forgiveness is indeed difficult but not impossible. It may take time for healing to take place before forgiveness can take place, but that's normal. In the end when we look at the debilitating cost of carrying the burdens of anger and hatred, forgiveness is the only practical solution. Forgiving a perpetrator for the unjust acts he or she has committed against us may not be easy, but it's a lot easier than living under a cloud of bitterness.

This article is written by Alex Jones, a permanent deacon in the Archdiocese of Detroit. You can know more about Deacon Alex by visiting his website: www.deaconalexcjones.com.


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