Not to forgive her is to justify her actions and approve of them. — Agustino
But to forgive her would show great magnanimity of soul, and expose her evil to herself. You do not realize that this is actually the biggest punishment that can be dealt. It's much worse than anything else I could do, for it is the only action that refuses to justify her behavior. — Agustino
Yes, it does, because from his point of view my hatred of him and unforgiveness justifies his behaviour, because just like him, I am a bad guy who wants to harm him. That hides himself from seeing his responsibility for what he did - instead, he will conceive of himself as someone who now has to defend against the evil I want to do to him.A man rapes your wife. You don't forgive him. Does that mean you approve of his actions? — Baden
Forgiveness has nothing to do with taking actions to protect my wife. I can forgive him and still take actions to dissipate the threat as you say.And at what point do you forgive him? — Baden
Yes, it does, because from his point of view my hatred of him and unforgiveness justifies his behaviour, — Agustino
I've told you that there is hell back a long time ago:So, now you do believe in punishment? So, there is a hell? — TimeLine
Punishment is self-inflicted. Vice and sin are their own punishments.I'm saying hell and heaven are just reactions to Love. — Agustino
My forgiveness is very relevant because I have to set myself as opposed to her actions. By setting myself on an equal footing with her - as someone just like her - I do the opposite. Setting myself as opposed to her actions is the only way to encourage repentance in her.This magnanimity is a hallucination of reality because your forgiveness is irrelevant if she is not genuinely repentant, proven if she repeatedly makes the same mistake. — TimeLine
It is relevant for me to be honest when I apologize, but not for the other. I will assume that they are honest because we should always try to think the best of our neighbors.The problem here is that you are arguing against authenticity and you need to prove why it is not relevant for a person to be honest when they apologise — TimeLine
Now you're equivocating on "approval". There are two kinds of approval. There is one type of approval that involves me willing the same specific action that you will. There's also another kind of approval that involves me willing according to the same nature that you will.So, you believe those men who don't forgive those who rape their wives approve of their wives being raped. OK. Can you take a look at the edited example? Does the woman also approve of being raped if she doesn't forgive? — Baden
Punishment is self-inflicted. Vice and sin are their own punishments. — Agustino
It is relevant for me to be honest when I apologize, but not for the other. I will assume that they are honest because we should always try to think the best of our neighbors. — Agustino
Any act often repeated soon forms a habit; and habit allowed, steady gains in strength, At first it may be but as a spider's web, easily broken through, but if not resisted it soon binds us with chains of steel.
Are you saying the law has lead us in the wrong direction? — TimeLine
I actually understand this, however I could be wrong. Are you attempting to convey that when any acknowledgement of wrong is formed, forgiveness is unnecessary because it has been articulated either subjectively or to the said-party and the forgiveness is really an acknowledgement of the acknowledgement itself? So it isn't really forgiveness but rather an acknowledgement? I would like you to think about building trust when you think of your response to this. — TimeLine
I agree, I think reconciliation is a lot clearer in that it is a mutual effort, however there needs to be meaning in this reconciliation, an honesty and authenticity that would enable it to adequately work, which requires building trust. Keeping that person out of your life is indeed not an unkind thing to do neither is it immoral, on the contrary it is a form of punishment as you attempt to articulate both your position on this said wrong and what you expect from others to be allowed to be in your personal space. — TimeLine
Augustino is saying that if his wife cheats on him repeatedly, he needs to represent himself as a moral person by continuously forgiving. He is being paradoxical. — TimeLine
With regards to the second kind of approval, if we will not to forgive the other, if we will to punish him - that is willing in the same nature that he wills in. That would be to will under the logic of violence, which would make us approve of him by virtue of sharing in the same underlying logic that he shares in. By virtue of the very fact that we want to distance ourselves from him, we will only make ourselves approach closer to him. It is only the radical break offered by forgiveness that can tear away the logic of violence and create an abyss between us and him. — Agustino
Absolutely. How could there be anything else if God is Love?So, there is only free-will? — TimeLine
It is of course not the one who loves who is fooled. Jesus Christ wasn't fooled when He was put on the Cross. He knew exactly what was happening. It was Satan who was fooled. That is why in Dante's Divine Comedy there is the image of Satan nailed to the Cross - because that is what happened. Through his innocence, love and non-violence, Jesus exposed Satan for the murderer and liar that he is. And a lie that has been exposed no longer works :)Fool me once, shame on you. Fool me twice, shame on me. — TimeLine
That's not approval. And to say of a woman who is raped that she is of the same nature as her rapist because she doesn't forgive him is disgusting. A raped woman or a victim of a similar crime is a person in torment. Their nature is chaotic not evil. — Baden
If the law is meant as punishment, yes, that's the wrong direction. If it's meant to keep criminals off the street or even to rehabilitate them, that should be judged based on how effective it is. — T Clark
Blaming someone, judging someone puts a weight on your shoulders. From what you've written, it seems like you will understand what I mean. Forgiveness takes that weight off. It's a release. You become freer. It doesn't mean you have to ever see the person again. — T Clark
This magnanimity is a hallucination of reality because your forgiveness is irrelevant if she is not genuinely repentant, proven if she repeatedly makes the same mistake. The problem here is that you are arguing against authenticity and you need to prove why it is not relevant for a person to be honest when they apologise. So far, notwithstanding your religious position, there has been no reasonable attempt to do so. — TimeLine
Yes, in that sense of the word, no good person approves of it.No, I'm not equivocating. "To approve" of something involves believing it is good, acceptable or satisfactory. If you don't then you don't "approve" of it. That is the meaning of that word. Your garbled meaning is in your head only. — Baden
What is it then? You're willing according to the same nature that gave birth to the other's actions. That counts as approval of that nature, what else can it count as?That's not approval. — Baden
It may be disgusting if you don't separate forgiveness from approval. To forgive someone doesn't mean you approve of their actions. But it seems you do not understand the underlying logic of violence that perpetuates it, and hence the danger that Jesus's radical exhortation seeks to avoid:And to say of a woman who is raped that she is of the same nature as her rapist because she doesn't forgive him is disgusting. — Baden
Why does Jesus give those prescriptions? Because he wants to be a nice guy? No. Rather because those are the prescriptions that are required to STOP and put an end to the logic of violence, which is otherwise interminable because it feeds off itself.“You have heard that it was said, ‘Eye for eye, and tooth for tooth.’ But I tell you, do not resist an evil person. If anyone slaps you on the right cheek, turn to them the other cheek also. And if anyone wants to sue you and take your shirt, hand over your coat as well. If anyone forces you to go one mile, go with them two miles. Give to the one who asks you, and do not turn away from the one who wants to borrow from you.
“You have heard that it was said, ‘Love your neighbor and hate your enemy.’ But I tell you, love your enemies and pray for those who persecute you, that you may be children of your Father in heaven. He causes his sun to rise on the evil and the good, and sends rain on the righteous and the unrighteous. If you love those who love you, what reward will you get? Are not even the tax collectors doing that? And if you greet only your own people, what are you doing more than others? Do not even pagans do that? Be perfect, therefore, as your heavenly Father is perfect. — Matthew 5:38-48
In your very attempt to disapprove of the rapist, you are approving of him by using the very same logic he has used - the logic of hatred and violence. Likewise, in their very rejection of their fathers, the Pharisees are approving of them. Just like their fathers did not recognise their own violence and expelled their own fathers saying they have nothing to do with their violence, so too the Pharisees go on perpetuating the same logic of violence while being unaware of it.Woe to you, scribes and Pharisees, you hypocrites! You build tombs for the prophets and decorate the monuments of the righteous. And you say, ‘If we had lived in the days of our fathers, we would not have been partners with them in shedding the blood of the prophets.’ So you testify against yourselves that you are the sons of those who murdered the prophets. Fill up, then, the measure of your fathers’ sins. You snakes! You brood of vipers! How will you escape the sentence of hell?
That is true, but just because they are suffering does not mean that they are not at risk of perpetrating and continuing evil. Many have felt that because of the injustices done to them, they are allowed to murder, pillage, torture, etc. That is wrong. An evil doesn't justify another evil.A raped woman or a victim of a similar crime is a person in torment. Their nature is chaotic not evil. — Baden
So, there is only free-will?
— TimeLine
Absolutely. How could there be anything else if God is Love? — Agustino
It is of course not the one who loves who is fooled. Jesus Christ wasn't fooled when He was put on the Cross. He knew exactly what was happening. It was Satan who was fooled. That is why in Dante's Divine Comedy there is the image of Satan nailed to the Cross - because that is what happened. Through his innocence, love and non-violence, Jesus exposed Satan for the murderer and liar that he is. And a lie that has been exposed no longer works :)
Love is not fooled in its innocence and forgiveness. It is worldly wisdom which is fooled. — Agustino
I'm justifiably looking for a justification. My basic point here is there is no sense that a woman who is raped "approves" of the act on the basis of not forgiving the rapist. I know more or less what Agustino is trying to say but he is using words wrongly and that has consequences for his argument, which I'm trying to hold him accountable for. — Baden
No, I don't think I ever said that :s - when did I say that? Believing that everything is predestined is against my spiritual position, and I don't believe I would ever have said that.Wasn't it you that said everything is determined? — TimeLine
Marriage is really hard. No one in my life has been as cruel to me as my wife can be. I don't forgive her, it never gets that far. I know her, I see her. I know the part of her that does what she does - the things I like and the things I don't. My goal is to deal with her behavior. I know that if I don't get angry and push back, the incident will be over. That doesn't mean it doesn't really hurt. It hurts a lot. We've been married for 40 years and together longer than that. It still hurts and I still fail to react the most effective and, coincidentally, the most compassionate way. — T Clark
No, I don't think @Agustino presumes this. Someone may be unable to forgive for psychological reasons, but this doesn't change what it would be preferable that they do. These things can take time. It can take time to forgive your enemies. I never said it's easy.also seems to presume that victims of harmful acts are fully capable of forgiving those who have harmed them (otherwise how could it be wrong for them not to do so?). But that could only be claimed by someone ignorant of the psychological affects of trauma. — Baden
Someone may be unable to forgive for psychological reasons, but this doesn't change what it would be preferable that they do — Agustino
When you keep people out of your life because they are hurting you, that is a form of punishment. — TimeLine
You are conveying the same message the law is attempting to convey, which is that justice prevails by effectively keeping criminals from harming people, just like how you are saying morality prevails by effectively keeping the said-person from harming you. — TimeLine
What you are saying is ignorance, not forgiveness. — TimeLine
Conceding to prevent incidents from escalation is perhaps the key difference between you and I as people since, for me, my ideal partner and I would communicate any concerns rationally and effectively. If they are unable to do this, they would not be my partner as I would hate to be in a relationship that involves this power struggle and especially playing games. It ends up hurting both parties and I refuse to be hurt. — TimeLine
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