Chris:
Thanks for the clarification.

I was thinking that, in a way, this was sort of a personal holocaust.  To be 
sure,

this is a misuse of that word; nothing can compare with what the Jews went 
through

in the 1940s.  The point is that I know how it feels to have such  a bad 
experience

that it stays with you from then on, like a smoldering fire. One puff of air

and it flames up.


Can the Jews ever forgive Hitler? In my  humble opinion they should never 
forgive that

criminal maniac.


Well, fortunately there have been few monstrosities in history that were as bad

as ol' Adolf, but this got me thinking further  -about some Christians who make

the most of forgiveness.  Not that the sentiment is somehow bad; it isn't.

And some advocates of the idea deserve genuine respect, like Tolstoy.

But clearly it cannot be an absolute   -if it is taken that way the result

can be one absurdity after another.


Now the problem is how to make this clear but  in the context of Christian faith

precisely because there is, and has been historically, one reading of the Bible

that says we should always forgive people even when they commit really horrible 
crimes

that ruin lives forever.


One place to begin is to note that Satan was incarnate on Earth.  That is, he 
took

flesh and blood form.  Jesus never forgave Satan anything at all.   Of course 
it is

important not to go around and equate bad people with Satan as a matter of

a verbal device.  There aren't a million "satans" on Earth.  But I think it is 
safe

to say that some fraction of people have, in one sense, sold their souls to the 
Devil

and those that have, do not deserve  the least well-meaning "understanding."


Then there are people who fall into the worst possible  error and criminality.

They should have known better but for a time they allowed evil to take over.

Then, out of pride, they allow the effects of their horrible decisions to 
continue

to control their lives.  I do not believe for one minute that such people

deserve any forgiveness, either.



----------


About Evangeline's husband, he was as contrite as any man can get.

He knew he was wrong, he voluntarily tried to come clean, and even without 
legal actions

he was willing to pay the girl everything he could and then to serve his time 
in prison.

Nobody, least of all Evangeline, excuses what he did. But  she forgave him

because of his sincere repentance and willingness to face the consequences.


If anybody has learned his lesson, it is him, so it seems to me.  I am in no 
position

to forgive him anything but as far as I am concerned what is good for Evangeline

is something that I can agree to without qualms of conscience.  I hope her 
husband

gets a second chance in life as soon as it may be possible.


Way back when this all began and Evangeline asked me to do some legal research

she gave me a dossier of his life. One selfless action after another by  the 
man including

giving  substantial money to poor people.  If he had not gone off the rails 
sexually

we would be talking about him now as deserving a good citizen's award.

I do not excuse one thing, either, but I have no idea what useful purpose

it serves for him to continue to be incarcerated.  At this point his punishment

is hurting Evangeline more than anyone else.



Billy






















________________________________
From: [email protected] <[email protected]> on 
behalf of Chris Hahn <[email protected]>
Sent: Sunday, November 18, 2018 6:37 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: RE: [RC] Re: Forgiveness issues etc


“…and can never (never) heal the way things once were.”



This is not what I have ever been suggesting.  Clearly, VERY bad injuries were 
inflicted on you and Evangeline.  What I am suggesting is not about 
reconciliation, putting things back the way they were, forgetting, or in any 
way suggesting that these egregious actions are at all excusable.  The things 
that you are describing are not okay and they never will be.  What I am 
suggesting is that you don’t allow the perpetrators of these actions to 
continue to win year after year.  If you let bad actors dominate thoughts, over 
time, to such an extent that the life of the victims are impaired, then bad 
actors’ actions are extended over time.  My point is that it is advantageous 
for victims to compartmentalize the insults/injuries so that the perpetrators 
actions are not extended.  I have no need to hang this concept on the word 
“forgiveness”.



Chris



From: [email protected] <[email protected]> On 
Behalf Of Billy Rojas
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2018 6:55 PM
To: [email protected]
Cc: Billy Rojas <[email protected]>
Subject: Re: [RC] Re: Forgiveness issues etc



Chris:

I hear you but  -simultaneously- think you have missed something important.



Evangeline has, in fact, forgiven her husband. She does not for one minute 
excuse what

he did, but she decided not to let his terrible conduct ruin everything else 
for her.

She still loves him and is waiting for his release,  which won't be for quite a 
while yet, years.



However, the church where he once was a pastor, has not forgiven him and

has, in the bargain, decided that Evangeline is persona non  grata

because she has forgiven him.



I attended this church at times in the past, as recently as 2015, a few months 
before
the scandal broke.  As I recall,  at least one sermon was about forgiveness as a

Christian virtue.  But when push comes to shove, well, forgiveness is not such 
a hot idea.



It is very easy to see their problem. The husband was a pastor there, his 
actions were

a huge betrayal of everyone's trust. Indeed, in a similar situation, say as a 
member

of a board of deacons, to speak hypothetically, what would I do?   You tell me;

I have no idea what I would do. But one thing is very clear, forgiveness is

not an Absolute at that church.  Should it be an absolute?  What do you think?

What if it was your church?  What would you do?  And keep in mind that 
Evangeline
was a regular participant and played a role in various programs there for women.

She was respected and had at least a hundred good friends there.  Now she cannot

put her foot in the door.



What about 7 or 8 of the kids  -for whom any thought of forgiveness is 
completely

out of the question.  And can you blame them?  I cannot.  But what about 
Evangeline

and what it all has done to her? What if you were one of those kids?



It is so easy to talk about forgiveness but then there is the real world.



What further complicates everything is how the husband tried to make up for his 
sins

even if, at that time, the story was still  a secret. Among other things he 
financed

a trip to Africa for the girl, which wasn't cheap, and a variety of other 
favors.

When the story did break the girl said that she forgave him ,but then someone

told a female homosexual lawyer and the lawyer contacted the girl and dangled 
riches

before her eyes and she  -the girl- forgot all about  forgiveness.



There are all kinds of lessons to learn from this saga but none that can solve 
the

problems which have resulted.



--------------------





As far as my former brother is concerned,  this isn't a case of his saying bad 
things

about me and then, well, OK, forgive and forget.  He destroyed artwork  I had 
done

for my mother each year at her Birthday and Christmas, every year since

some date in the early 1980s.  He trashed it all.



He also destroyed all the art that Grace  -the name of the girl I had tutored 
in 2013- 2014 -

gave to mother as a gift. My hope was simply to obtain this art and give it

back to Grace.  But Robert destroyed all of that, too.  Out of spite for me, I 
guess,

maybe on the theory that this art was something I treasured and what better way

to injure me?  Similarly with the art  I  had done for mother.



Forgive him WHILE he continues to lie about me, continues to deny that any of

the art was present in the house  (a blatant falsehood), and has somehow

conned my sister, where Robert is now staying, that he is being truthful

and that I am doing the lying ???



He doesn't know when to quit lying, and this has gone on every year since early 
2016.



What about approximately 30 years of my art gone forever?



What if it was your art?  "Oh, that's OK, time heals all wounds?"

Huh?????



What if, since art isn't your background, it was 30 years of your business plans

or research or math solutions?





And what about  the precious art done by the girl  -who never did anything

at all to hurt Robert?    Robert destroyed all of that art, also, about 40 or 
50 drawings.



All of this from a mama's boy who refuses to grow up. Why do you suppose

he now lives with  my oldest sister?  Except for a couple of years when he was

still college age and in college, Robert has never lived on his own.

Gotta tell you, sure he has psychological problems, but he also needs to

take responsibility for himself and face his issues like a man.

Which he simply will not bring himself to do.



"Forgiveness" for a mental defective who can't tell right from wrong?

That, in my  opinion, would be an absurdity.  It would not mean

one damned thing to him  -unless it would be relief at not needing to

admit his crimes and lies-  and it would prevent me from internalizing

a vital lesson in life, thus injuring myself.



This isn't about a "scab" that falls of, it is more like an arm or a foot that

has been chopped off and can never (never) heal the way things once were.





I get the  impression that we aren't talking about  the same kinds of personal 
problems.

All kinds of stuff in ordinary life can be forgiven  -sooner of later.  I 
understand

that very clearly.  But these are anything but sins from ordinary life as

anyone in a normal family understands things.





>From a few things you have said along the way I had the impression that

your own experiences included at least a few really baaaaaad times

that defy all rules of normal life  -with a terrible price in pain to pay.



This is not an exercise in theoretical theology, from behind the picket fence

of a middle class family where most days all is well and there isn't a cloud in 
the sky,

or from the perspective of  a posh suburb where only perfect people live.



This is about reality.





Billy





---------------------------









________________________________

From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> on 
behalf of Chris Hahn <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2018 4:18 PM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Subject: RE: [RC] Re: Transcendence vs Reconciliation Re: Forgiveness issues



Billy,



Those are compelling stories and I would not suggest that Evangeline excuse her 
ex for what he did or that you excuse your brother.  If Evangeline is now less 
bitter and better able to enjoyably engage in her life, after the creep went to 
prison, that suggests to me that she might have been able to transcend the 
transgressions of her ex, for her own sake.  This could be done without 
excusing his actions.



Likewise, in the case of your brother, “The damages he has done to my life and 
now the life of my oldest sister, are irreparable.”  I get that the damage to 
your relationship may be irreparable and your willingness to excuse his actions 
is beyond the scope of anything you would consider, but if you can transcend 
the injury to he did to you (let the scab develop and fall off, albeit with a 
scar), then you might be able to move into the future with less resentment.  I 
wouldn’t necessarily call this forgiveness; rather, it is a way to move into a 
more contented place in life.



Chris





From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On 
Behalf Of Billy Rojas
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2018 11:38 AM
To: Chris Hahn <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>; 
[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>
Cc: Billy Rojas 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: [RC] Re: Transcendence vs Reconciliation Re: Forgiveness issues





Chris and Ernie:

Good comments from both of you. But let me sort of put everything

to the acid test.  I doubt if any of us, in discussing forgiveness,

is speaking in a vacuum. I also think that we each, to some extent,

assume everyone else somehow "knows" what kind of problem

is being discussed even when it is very different in each case.



I have mentioned Evangeline at times in my e-mails.  She is a good lady friend

and a 'study in forgiveness.'  Various of my remarks relate directly to her and

what she has gone through in the past 3 years.



That was when her husband, then an assistant pastor at an Evangelical church,

was found out to have gone through a period -about a decade previously,

when he had sex with one of his and Evangeline's adopted daughters,

then a girl still in middle school.



You do not need to imagine that it tore the family apart and caused a furor

in the church.  For Evangeline it was the most horrible time in her life.

She had no idea and out of nowhere everything around her collapsed.

The result was that her husband ended up in prison, where he is

currently serving a lengthy sentence, and most (not all, but most)

of the children, almost all of whom are now adults, turned against her

precisely because she ultimately forgave him.



This is all public record, I'm not saying much of anything that isn't known

to all sorts of people here in Eugene, and elsewhere,  except, of course,

for the things that go on within a family, about which I'm only

saying the minimum.



The story goes much deeper than I can possibly tell you. Not in any way

to excuse anything that happened to the girl, but her reaction, once the story

was in the open, was utterly depraved.  She found a female homosexual lawyer

who insisted that the girl not only file a lawsuit against the man but also

against Evangeline for supposedly being complicit.  Despite not being aware

of her husband's transgressions Evangeline would not defend herself because,

so she told me, her heart was not in it,  a consequence of all the turmoil

in her life and the struggle she went through to forgive her husband

and then deal with rejection by most of her kids (her own and the adoptions,

about a dozen altogether). The outcome was that not only  did the husband

lose his wealth of about $2 million, Evangeline lost most of her wealth as well,

another million and  a half or so. She does not live in poverty or anything 
like that

but her standard of living is now maybe 20% of what it once was.



Meanwhile the girl, who is black, BTW, now lives in a posh deluxe community

near Portland, she has married a Muslim, and, despite eventually confessing to 
Evangeline

that she knew her case against her was phony, never gave back even one penny

of all the money she was awarded.



Yet Evangeline still forgives her.



So, the issue of "forgiveness" is front and center in my  life each and every 
month

because of my friendship with Evangeline.



And, while I think I understand where Evangeline is "coming from," and sometimes

think she has done exactly the right thing, sometimes she has, as I see it,

gone too far and should have drawn a line on how far she should have gone.



>From my perspective it is all too easy to see the strengths as well as the 
>weaknesses

of the Christian view of forgiveness. So,  when we talk about forgiveness,

it is not some kind of abstract topic for me, it concerns how forgiveness

has impacted the life of dear friend who means the world to me.





This isn't "Sunday school stuff." This is cruel reality and very hard-to-take

effects on human beings.



Then there is my former brother, who has made a career of lying about me

and wrecking as much of my life as possible through cover-up of his lies.

No way in hell can I forgive him for anything.  The damages he has done

to my life and now the life of my oldest sister, are irreparable.



So any conversation about forgiveness has to take into account actual people

we know and must be person specific.  No way could any kind of

forgiveness issue Ernie is having, or Chris, be anything remotely like

the kinds of issues I need to deal with.





Maybe this explains things...





Billy







________________________________

From: Chris Hahn <[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2018 9:40 AM
To: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>; 
Billy Rojas
Subject: RE: Transcendence vs Reconciliation Re: Forgiveness Re: [RC] Religious 
Faith and the Problem of Evil .........



Excellent comments Ernie, about the differentiation between reconciliation and 
forgiveness.  Yes, we will generally be better off if we can transcend wounds 
imparted by others and put the injury behind us.  The transcendence is for our 
benefit, not theirs.  On the other hand, if there is reconciliation, both 
parties benefit.  The common use of forgiveness may or may not mean all of the 
above.

Chris



From: [email protected]<mailto:[email protected]> 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> On 
Behalf Of Dr. Ernie Prabhakar
Sent: Saturday, November 17, 2018 4:54 AM
To: Billy Rojas 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Cc: Centroids Discussions 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>>
Subject: Transcendence vs Reconciliation Re: Forgiveness Re: [RC] Religious 
Faith and the Problem of Evil .........



Hi Billy,



On Nov 12, 2018, at 7:04 PM, Billy Rojas 
<[email protected]<mailto:[email protected]>> wrote:



My point was simply that forgiveness has to be appropriate or it can backfire 
on you.



Lots of good things in life are like that, including love.  Someone can love

the wrong person, after all, someone who is abusive or violent or irresponsible.

We all know people who have loved someone who was wrong for them

and paid a terrible price for "wrong  love," to put it that way.



You know, that is a fantastic point. I think you may be on to something.  
Modern Christianity has a deeply confused understanding of forgiveness.  As 
Chris mentioned, the English word is overloaded with many different 
connotations:



The first sentence of yours, above, exemplifies the point I was trying to make. 
 I think the problem with the Tibbits definition of forgiveness is that it runs 
counter to the common use of forgiveness.  It could be better stated as, put 
the evil ones in your past, as much as you can, so you don’t get impeded by 
their evil.



Maybe we Radical Centrists can come up with some better terminology.  One 
possibility is to distinguish between “internal” and “external” forgiveness: 
how we treat ourselves versus how we treat others.



Perhaps we could use a word like Transcendance for the internal aspect of 
forgiveness. Like Chris said, we want to put the evil ones in our past, rather 
than being consumed by revenge and anger.  I think you once described it as 
being “objective” and taking the long view, rather than caught up our sense of 
being wronged.



What a lot of people imply when they say forgiveness is more about the other 
person, and might be better termed Reconciliation: “hey, don’t worry about it, 
we’re all good.” As you rightly point out, God has a REALLY high bar for 
reconciliation.  It requires repentance, restoration, and rebuilding of trust.  
It is completely conditional.



On the other hand, Transcendence is an unconditional practice, very much like 
the Buddhist idea of Compassion.  In meditation, we seek to free ourselves from 
the personal sense of injury in order to be able to see the bigger picture and 
make wise choices compatible with our long-term values and vision. We refuse to 
be controlled by the wrong others have done to us.



This could help us better understand verses like Ephesians 4:32:



Be kind and compassionate to one another, forgiving each other, just as in 
Christ God forgave you.



Yes, Christ on the cross transcended his enemies by asked God to forgive them.  
But he also made it abundantly clear that He will come back to punish those who 
don’t repent.



Does that clear things up?



— Ernie P.

















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