Remember
the phrase “forgive and forget”? A very common thing to say or hear especially
within the four walls of the church. I, personally have found myself use this
phrase in many attempts to help someone completely forget about some kind of
pain they had been caused by someone else. It is only with time that I have
come to realise it is a dangerous way to live life.
I am an introvert.
Those close to me know that I can only hold a conversation for so long and then
quickly want to call it quits not because I have something else important to do
but simply because I enjoy my own company. For people like myself, It’s easy to
say “oh that’s okay” after experiencing some kind of hurt but subconsciously
store it up in some part of our memory only to realise we aren’t ‘so okay’
after all, when something similar re occurs. Many times we are hurt because we
place people in high expectations and are unable to release them when they
disappoint the role we needed them to fill.
Forgive and forget
makes a nice slogan but the reality is, it is almost impossible to erase
memories connected to your life that caused you to question your ability to
trust again. I’ve had people ask me “Is it possible to forgive and forget?”
Recently, my answer has always been forgive and remember.
I’ve had lessons
from broken relationships that I still treasure and keep. Did it hurt? Yes! Do
I still feel the pain when the memory comes to mind? No. But I’d forever
cherish what my pain taught me. Yours may be a lost job or perhaps a broken
marriage you invested so much time and effort into. Unforgiveness is surely
poisonous but the real test of genuity in your forgiveness is the emotions that
are stirred up in you when you remember whatever it is that caused you pain.
Our smile is the
best camouflage that our bodies automatically exhibit as proof of “forgive and
forget” but the reason I say ‘remember’ is to help you examine the state of
your heart in a likely re occurrence of a similar situation. Will your heart
still ache? Will you feel the need to distance yourself all the more from the
villain? As nature has it, the true test of healing is not when the scar
disappears but when we can no longer feel the pain in the same spot we used to.
My new expression for such scars is; “God always leaves evidence”.
If we are able to
recognise that people hurt us often out of their own brokenness or immaturity,
we will develop a sense of empathy towards them which allows us to release them
very quickly.
By all means
forgive but don’t forget. Remember until all of your hurt and pain is
translated into empathy and maturity. Until the situation becomes so irrelevant
to your present that you forget why you were hurting in the first place.
Perhaps you may discover broken places in your life that needs healing too.
Don’t be quick to tuck your hurt under a carpet labelled “forget”. It’s only a
matter of time and you’d find blood oozing from the same spot at the slightest
tickle. Why such a hurry to forget though? Maybe because it still
hurts? And if it does, maybe your forgiveness is not complete. Don’t get me
wrong. There are times the enemy capitalises on our rememberance to cause
unnecessary pain and that should be prayed out. By all means forgive and
remember Pain is only your servant never your master.
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