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Editorial
Comment: "While Challenges sees real value in this article,
we feel it must be mentioned that not all Christian denominations
share the same philosophy about forgiveness as presented here."
THE
POLITICS OF FORGIVENESS
The following is a summary of an
article by Frederick W. Keene published by "On The Issues"
magazine, Fall 1995 that appeared in the Summer 1996 newsletter
of the Rape Crisis Intervention Service of Carroll County, MD.
"For centuries
the Christian church has guilt-tripped survivors of sexual abuse
to forgive their abusers. Now startling new biblical evidence exposes
a sanctimonious scam.
This is a quote
of Frederick W. Keene in a recent article on the politics of forgiveness.
He says, Many Christian clergy interpret the Bible to mean
that survivors of child abuse, battery, and sexual assault are supposed
to forgive the perpetrator. Add to this many psychologists and therapists,
advice columnists, talk-show hosts and self-help gurus, and it seems
as if everyone in the world believes the same dictum: If you have
been abused, you should find it in your heart to forgive your abuser,
and if you cannot, there is something wrong with you.
The idea of
forgiveness is one of the most difficult issues with which survivors
of sexual or domestic violence must deal. Keene believes that the
virtue of forgiving those who harm us is part of Christianitys
pervasive legacy to Western culture. He says it is invariably attributed
to the teachings of Jesus as found in the Christian Bible. However,
Keene does not believe Christ taught about this type of interpersonal
forgiveness. Rather he believes that the teaching of Christ regarding
forgiveness does not deal with someone of a lesser power forgiving
someone of a greater power. He sees forgive-ness being taught only
when it deals with same level-- brother forgiving brother
or higher level forgiving lower level, i.e., Jesus forgiving the
sins of a prostitute.
Keene believes
there is a very political reason for preaching to the less powerful
that they should forgive unconditionally: it protects the powerful
and perpetuates the status quo. He says, Having taught for
centuries the necessity of forgiving ones abuser, the church
now uses the doctrine to protect abusive clergy, making survivors
of clerical sexual abuse feel at fault.
Keene states,
If the actual New Testament teachings were applied, the result
would be quite different. In the New Testament, the only way a person
can forgive is to be no longer the weaker party in the relationship.
Either the survivor must be raised up to equal power, or else the
abuser must be stripped of power. One way or another, the former
power relationships must no longer exist.
The concept
of power is a familiar one to those who work with people hurt by
sexual violence. Abuse generally occurs most frequently when there
is an imbalance of power, but seldom when the power is relatively
equal. Those who object to the idea that abusers must give up power
often raise the idea of repentance. Although abusive
clergy often express sorrow and remorse, especially when caught,
true repentance requires a real, substantive change. It means, a
reversal or turning around. The abuser must no
longer have the power to continue the abuse.
Put simply:
the meaning of repentance is the giving up of power. Only with equal
power does a victim of abuse have a genuine freedom to choose to
forgive:; dispensing forgiveness because that was the safest or
socially prescribed thing to do is hardly the same act of freedom,
and ultimately release, that forgiving from a base of equal power
can be. Only when the choice is made from a position of power can
it be considered to be genuine.
How can this
process be implemented? Keene sees two possible ways. First, the
person with the power must give it away--or have it taken away.
This may mean the clergy being stripped of his position thus taking
the power away. Or, a second way suggested by Rev. Marie M. Fortune
of the Center for the Prevention of Sexual and Domestic Violence
in Seattle, is to use justice-making as efforts to help empower
those rendered powerless by abuse so that forgiveness... becomes
an option. This means giving power to the survivor. The writer
did not elaborate on how the justice making is done, and perhaps
this is an area where everyone, clergy, counselors and society need
to concentrate much more attention.
Certainly it
is neither useless nor unhealthy for people to forgive. People often
need to let go of their pain in order to heal, but letting go must
not mean letting those who hurt them off the hook. No survivor should
be guilt-tripped into forgiving.
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