forgiveness

Forgiveness and the Great Fast (Matthew 6:14-21)

On the day before the beginning of Great Lent, the Church teaches us that our journey of repentance begins with offering forgiveness. Fr Tom reminds us that forgiveness is the essential action to grow in the likeness of God, because it is what He freely offers to us. (Forty-first Sunday after Pentecost - Forgiveness Sunday)




forgiveness

Forgiveness: A Divine Act (Mt 6:14-21)

On the last Sunday of preparation before we begin the Great Fast, the Church calls us to offer and receive forgiveness from everyone. Fr Tom reminds us that we are commanded to forgive precisely because this action allows us to participate in and experience the Divine Life of God Himself.




forgiveness

The Power of Forgiveness

In the Parable of the Unforgiving Servant, Jesus illustrates the consequences of unforgiveness. Fr Thomas teaches us that it is the God of love, mercy, and compassion who commands us to forgive and warns us of the judgment to come if we do not.




forgiveness

Forgiveness Is Greater Than Fasting

Leading into the Great Fast, Fr. Tom urgently calls us to remember that all of the fasting in the world is useless if we neglect the weightier matters.




forgiveness

Christ Offers His Love, Forgiveness and Healing

Forgiveness is waiting for us NOW when we turn to Christ. Use the help that is available and let us carry each other in love and prayer as we all strive to a greater perfection.




forgiveness

Forgiveness Changes Everything

Fr. Dn. Emmanuel Kahn gives the sermon on Forgiveness.




forgiveness

The Freedom of Love and Forgiveness




forgiveness

The Freedom of Love and Forgiveness




forgiveness

Forgiveness From the Heart

True forgiveness comes from the heart and Dr. Rossi tells us what that looks like.




forgiveness

Self Forgiveness

Dr. Albert Rossi follows up on his podcast, "Everyone Is Doing The Best They Can," by asking us to consider the importance of forgiveness of one's self as we engage in repentance towards joy.




forgiveness

Bread and Peanut Butter and the Forgiveness of Sins

Fr. Lawrence Farley reminds us that the man who trusts God and does what is pleasing to him, such as giving alms to the poor, will experience His favor when his own time of need comes.




forgiveness

Shall We Forgive? The Fathers on Forgiveness as the Gateway to Salvation

This week, in anticipation of Forgiveness Sunday, Archimandrite Irenei explores a series of patristic texts that deal with the imperative of forgiveness, and the need to forgive as the gateway into the life offered by Christ in the Church.




forgiveness

Back to Forgiveness

We look again at the theme of forgiveness in the writings of the Fathers—with an eye particularly toward practical injunctions on forgiveness and the relationship of repentance, forgiveness, and redemption in quotations from a variety of patristic sources. Archimandrite Irenei also introduces the Patristic Quotations Topical Index.




forgiveness

Back to Forgiveness

As A Word From the Holy Fathers resumes after a summer hiatus, we look again at the theme of forgiveness in the writings of the Fathers—with an eye particularly toward practical injunctions on forgiveness and the relationship of repentance, forgiveness, and redemption in quotations from a variety of patristic sources. Fr Matthew also introduces the Patristic Quotations Topical Index.




forgiveness

Forgiveness

Fr. Pat distinguishes between "official" forgiveness and "personal" forgiveness.




forgiveness

Forgiveness

Fr. Pat explains that the mandate to forgive offenses is not something we're disposed to do except by grace.




forgiveness

Family, Forgiveness, and Flame

Fr. Pat discusses the social structure, the moral imperatives, and the discerning moral light of discipleship.




forgiveness

The Church, Man, and Forgiveness (Matt 18:23-35)




forgiveness

Life in the Church, Forgiveness




forgiveness

Holy Unction-Healing and Forgiveness




forgiveness

Two Aspects of Forgiveness

Fr. Pat's homily from Forgiveness Vespers 2012.




forgiveness

Forgiveness First

Before we start fasting during Great Lent, we start forgiving. Why do we ask forgiveness from everyone, even people we may not know?




forgiveness

United by Forgiveness

As Christians, we're called to union with each other and God. Yet we're constantly stuck in divisions, both external and internal. So how are we supposed to achieve true union? The answer is forgiveness: God's invitation to share the same space with Him.




forgiveness

The Freedom of Forgiveness

St. Dionysios of Zakynthos is a powerful example of forgiveness. He shows us how forgiveness can free us to be who God made us to be, rather than trapping us and defining us by our sins and shortcomings.




forgiveness

Sharing the Space of Salvation (Forgiveness/Cheesefare Sunday)

“Nothing makes us so like God, as our readiness to forgive the wicked and wrongdoer.” (Saint John Chrysostom) The Greek word for forgiveness means "sharing the same space." At the doorstep to Great Lent, we're given the opportunity to both seek and offer forgiveness. Forgiveness Sunday (especially Forgiveness Vespers) is our chance to overcome resentments and share the same space with both God and neighbor. So that, together, we can journey to salvation and an experience of God's Kingdom. Because right and wrong is about more than what’s right or wrong for you. As always, we've prepared a FREE downloadable workbook to help you act on what you'll learn. https://mailchi.mp/goarch/bethebee168 .




forgiveness

Forgiveness ...




forgiveness

Forgiveness Sunday

Forgiveness is not symbolic but an act of faith. How do we have a heart of forgiveness at home and in the congregation?




forgiveness

Trump’s win brings uncertainty to borrowers hoping for student loan forgiveness

Student loan cancellation was not a focus of the campaign for either Trump or Vice President Kamala Harris, who steered clear of the issue at her political events.

The post Trump’s win brings uncertainty to borrowers hoping for student loan forgiveness appeared first on Boston.com.




forgiveness

Studio 5: Exhibiting Forgiveness - October 16, 2024

Studio 5 looks at the film Exhibiting Forgiveness. It's about an artist coming face to face with his estranged father and his challenge to forgive. We talk with the cast and Titus Kaphar who is behind this cinematic masterpiece.




forgiveness

“The Soul Recognizes Itself in Somebody Else”: The Healing Value of Forgiveness among Formerly Incarcerated People in the Profession Practice of Peer-Support

The Prison Journal, Ahead of Print. The present study focuses on perceptions of forgiveness among formerly incarcerated people engaged in peer-support roles, based on their lived experience and referred to as wounded healers. Participants were 26 men and women with a history of addiction, trauma, and incarceration who are employed in formal peer-support positions and […]

The post “The Soul Recognizes Itself in Somebody Else”: The Healing Value of Forgiveness among Formerly Incarcerated People in the Profession Practice of Peer-Support was curated by information for practice.



  • Journal Article Abstracts

forgiveness

Navigating the Journey of Self-Forgiveness in Addiction Recovery

By Brenda Hibbs




forgiveness

Author Mary Beth Keane's 'Ask Again, Yes' Explores Addiction, Mental Illness And Forgiveness

Mary Beth Keane’s 2019 novel Ask Again, Yes was an instant New York Times bestseller, and is now out on paperback. The book follows the families of two New York City police officers who live next door to each other in a suburb north of the city – and a tragedy that divides them and their children over four decades.




forgiveness

The Power of Forgiveness


In this inspirational article, Pastor Doug explores the theme of forgiveness through the lens of one of Jesus’ most challenging parables.




forgiveness

The Healing Process of Remorse and Self-Forgiveness * Wicca-Spirituality.com

 


Although often confused with guilt and shame, remorse is actually a much higher calibrating "emotion." It's the 21st Century alternative to feeling bad about yourself, and making others around you feel bad too.


It not only feels better and helps you move forward in your life, but it is healing for the Earth... and as we ride the 2012 Transition, Mother Earth needs all the help we can give her!


This article explains how it works, and why you are worthy of forgiveness.

 

Remorse is a method to heal yourself, and others, after making a mistake.


After all, anything that brings a feeling of remorse is a mistake -- just a mistake. Did you know that's the origin of the word "sin"? "Sin" was an archery term; it means missing the mark. That leaves a lot more possibility for positive growth, doesn't it!


So you don't need to berate yourself for eternity. There is nothing to berate yourself for if you didn't know any better, or if you did the best you could.


And I believe we always do the best we can, with what we have in the moment.


We're not perfect. Sometimes we do things we're not proud of. But, in the moment, that was undoubtedly the best that we could do.


Maybe you gave in to your meaner impulses. If you could have held yourself to a higher ideal in that moment, you would have done so. What would you have to gain, by not?


Maybe you didn't know how to do better. You can only work with what you know.


God does not expect you to know what you do not yet know!


For whatever reason -- fatigue, stress, anxiety, confusion, distraction, etc -- maybe you didn't do the best you hoped for. Maybe it wasn't as good as you could have done another day.


But you obviously did the best you could in that moment.


Why would anyone do less than that?


God doesn't need you to burn in hell for it, not even the hell of your own harsh thoughts. She only wants you to learn from the process, and to use it to grow. That's what remorse is all about.

 

There are four parts to the process of remorse.


The first part is a pang in your Heart. There is an energy there, call it an emotion if you like, that signals you are not happy with your actions.


From here, many people get derailed into guilt, instead of continuing the process of remorse.


The second part is the most important, the core of remorse...


You accept that you made a mistake. And you make an unemotional, practical assessment of your actions.


When your actions and choices don't live up to your ideals or ethics... you figure out how you could do better, discover what was moving in you (probably subconsciously) that caused that action, and -- here's the critical bit -- resolve to do better next time.

Remorse is calm and determined. Rather than destroying your self-respect, remorse enhances it. It provides you with the opportunity to grow, to live up to your ideals.


It recognises that within you there is a perfect being, capable of the best.


And that there is always another opportunity to try.


Contrast that with shame, which says that you are worthless and hopeless. There's just nowhere good to go, from there!


Remorse doesn't take the mistake personally. It sees an action as wrong, but not you as a person.


Remorse knows that people can't accurately, honestly be judged in terms of "wrong" and "bad."


The next step is always making amends. You must undo the error, to the best of your ability. And apologise, if it won't make things worse.


We must be clear -- this step has nothing to do with being forgiven by another person. Whether they forgive you or not is about them and their process, and is not about you.


To seek someone's forgiveness when they aren't ready to give it can be a further harm.


You fix the mistake if you can. That is the only purpose of this step.


Inherent in this process is self-forgiveness. You see a mistake, you acknowledge it, you figure out what went wrong, you fix it if you can, and you determine to not make that mistake again.


When you've done all that, forgiveness is a lot easier.


You can forgive yourself, because you know you aren't a bad person who intentionally did wrong... and because you are doing your best not to slip up that way in the future.


No one is perfect. No one is expected, by the Divine, not to make mistakes. On the contrary, that's often how we learn and grow.


That's all the Divine wants of you. Not perfection. But learning and growing from your slip-ups.


So you can accept that you did the best you were able to, at the time. And forgive yourself, for being human and humanly fallible.

 

If you get stuck in guilt, look for the underlying shame. Shame is like Velcro to guilt. It tells you that you deserve to feel terrible guilt, that you are not worthy of forgiveness or compassion or kindness.


But shame LIES.


You are worthy of forgiveness, because you are not a flawed person.You are Divinity tasting life as a mortal individual -- nothing else.


It doesn't matter what your family or coworkers or boss thinks of you. It doesn't matter how you've been treated by others -- that's nothing to do with YOU, that's all about the (human) blindness of others.


You are infinitely worthy and loveable!


And when others can't see that it's only because they haven't realised that they are infinitely worthy and loveable. When people get tied down, in their minds, into one little frail animal body and one small human life, all kinds of such misconceptions arise!


But it's not the truth.


The truth is that you are eternal -- learning and growing and polishing yourself on challenge after challenge, life after life.


The soul that is truly you is infinitely worthy and Divine. The body and mind you think of as you are only a costume that put on for a while, and then point aside, to go home for dinner and a bath, a good rest, to get up and come play again.


So how do you as a mere mortal forgive yourself?


The same way you forgive anyone... With compassion for your human frailty: you really are doing our best with what you have. With perspective: understanding that this life is a playground and schoolroom, and not the life-or-death struggle it seems. With determination to not make the same mistake again.


With Bright Blessings,





forgiveness

Protection and forgiveness

A man goes from being sought by gangsters to being sought by God.




forgiveness

Nearly All Teachers (and Other Public Servants) Who Applied for Loan Forgiveness Were Denied

The Department of Education has denied 99 percent of applications for public service loan forgiveness under a temporary expanded program funded by Congress, a report finds.




forgiveness

A message of forgiveness

The 2012 movie of 'Les Miserable' provides an opportunity in Kazakhstan to discuss faith, forgiveness and obedience.




forgiveness

Forgiveness in the Age of Rage (Selected Scriptures)

Check here each week to keep up with the latest from John MacArthur's pulpit at Grace Community Church.




forgiveness

The Beauty and Blessing of Forgiveness, Part 1 (Philemon 1–3)

Check here each week to keep up with the latest from John MacArthur's pulpit at Grace Community Church.




forgiveness

Student Loan Forgiveness: The Borrowers Who Now Qualify

WSJ higher-education reporter Melissa Korn breaks down the select groups of borrowers who are currently eligible for student debt relief and what borrowers can expect next year. Photo: Getty Images




forgiveness

Thailand's Yi Peng Festival fills sky with light, hearts with forgiveness

A spectacular scene unfolds every year in Chiang Mai, Thailand, when thousands of candle-lit paper lanterns are released into the sky and Ping River.



  • Arts & Culture

forgiveness

Why Forgiveness is Crucial to Your Happiness

Your ability to forgive those who have hurt you in the past is a crucial stepping stone to your spiritual and emotional growth. Learn how letting go of the past can help you to heal.




forgiveness

IRS Fresh Start Program Offers Tax Debt Forgiveness

Program Helps Taxpayers Who Owe the IRS




forgiveness

Nse Uffot releases her new book "Bruised But Not Broken – A Journey of Forgiveness and Finding Purpose"

Book becomes best seller




forgiveness

Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loan Forgiveness Calculators

Tracking expenses is an important part of maximizing PPP loan forgiveness. Once you identify which expenses are eligible for PPP forgiveness, it’s time to start keeping track of these expenses and calculate your potential forgiveness amount. The Anders CARES Act Research and Response Team put together tracking tools you can use to make it easier...

The post Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loan Forgiveness Calculators appeared first on Anders CPA.




forgiveness

RECORDED WEBINAR: PPP Loan Forgiveness and Stimulus Updates

Download our recorded webinar to hear from the Anders CARES Act Research and Response Team on the details of PPP loan forgiveness and the newest stimulus package update, including: Loan forgiveness calculations based on current guidelines How to maximize your loan forgiveness Loan forgiveness for self employed individuals Updates on the various stimulus programs based...

The post RECORDED WEBINAR: PPP Loan Forgiveness and Stimulus Updates appeared first on Anders CPA.




forgiveness

Using PPP Loan Proceeds to Maximize Loan Forgiveness

One of the biggest areas of CARES Act that benefits businesses is the Paycheck Protection Program (PPP). With big benefits, comes many questions around one detail specifically: loan forgiveness.
Which loan expenses are forgivable?
According to the CARES Act, if… Read More

The post Using PPP Loan Proceeds to Maximize Loan Forgiveness appeared first on Anders CPAs.




forgiveness

Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loan Forgiveness Calculator

Tracking expenses is an important part of maximizing PPP loan forgiveness. Once you identify which expenses are eligible for PPP forgiveness, it’s time to start keeping track of these expenses and calculate your potential forgiveness amount. The Anders CARES Act… Read More

The post Paycheck Protection Program (PPP) Loan Forgiveness Calculator appeared first on Anders CPAs.




forgiveness

The Power of Forgiveness


In this inspirational article, Pastor Doug explores the theme of forgiveness through the lens of one of Jesus’ most challenging parables.