I recall listening at length to a couple who
sat across the desk from me. There was bitterness between them. I know that at
one time their love was deep and true. But each had developed a habit of
speaking of the faults of the other. Unwilling to forgive the kind of mistakes
we all make, and unwilling to forget them and live above them with forbearance,
they had carped at one acof a so-called 'no-fault' divorce. Now there is only
loneliness and recrimination. I am satisfied that had there been even a small
measure of repentance and forgiveness, they would still be together, enjoying
the companionship that had so richly blessed their earlier years (Gordon B.
Hinckley, "Of You It Is Required to
Forgive," Ensign, June 1991, 4).
We all depend on the Savior; none of us can be
saved without Him. Christ’s Atonement is
infinite and eternal. Forgiveness for our sins comes with conditions. We must
repent, and we must be willing to forgive others. Jesus taught: “Forgive one
another; for he that forgiveth not … [stands] condemned before the Lord; for
there remaineth in him the greater sin”3 and “Blessed are the merciful: for
they shall obtain mercy.”4
Of course, these words seem perfectly
reasonable—when applied to someone else. We can so clearly and easily see the
harmful results that come when others judge and hold grudges. And we certainly
don’t like it when people judge us.
But when it comes to our own prejudices and
grievances, we too often justify our anger as righteous and our judgment as
reliable and only appropriate. Though we cannot look into another’s heart, we
assume that we know a bad motive or even a bad person when we see one. We make
exceptions when it comes to our own bitterness because we feel that, in our
case, we have all the information we need to hold someone else in contempt.
The Apostle Paul, in his letter to the Romans,
said that those who pass judgment on others are “inexcusable.” The moment we
judge someone else, he explained, we condemn ourselves, for none is without
sin.5 Refusing to forgive is a grievous sin—one the Savior warned against.
Jesus’s own disciples had “sought occasion against [each other] and forgave not
one another in their hearts; and for this evil they were afflicted and sorely
chastened.”6
Our Savior has spoken so clearly on this subject
that there is little room for private interpretation. “I, the Lord, will forgive
whom I will forgive,” but then He said, “… of you it is required to forgive all
men.”7
May I add a footnote here? When the Lord
requires that we forgive all men, that includes forgiving ourselves. Sometimes,
of all the people in the world, the one who is the hardest to forgive—as well
as perhaps the one who is most in need of our forgiveness—is the person looking
back at us in the mirror. (Dieter F. Uctdorf, “The Merciful Obtain Mercy,”
General Conference Apr. 2012).
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