(Parting with Guilt, pg. 80)
Another reason it is difficult to forgive ourselves is that we may have surrendered ourselves to the guilt we feel and grown comfortable with it.
Even though it is destroying us, it is familiar, and we are sometimes more comfortable with what we know than with what we don’t know.
The prospect of waking up tomorrow without guilt is so foreign that we may choose to hold on to our shame. It may be depressing, but at least it is safe.
I will never forget something a friend of mine said when he, thanks to good counseling and the correction of a chemical imbalance,was beginning to come out of a long life of depression:”I don’t know how to live these days. I lived so long with my guilt that I feel strange without it. I grew accustomed to living everyday in pain, and it is hard to let go of it.”
Even though the longing of our hearts is to part with our pain, there is something in us that desires the familiar. The longer we have defined ourselves by our past, the more difficult it will be to let go of the guilt.
If we have grown accustomed to seeing the world in black and white, it will take some adjusting to get used to a world full of color again.
(Banishing the fear of future failure, pg. 80-81)
A final reason it is difficult to forgive ourselves is the fear of future failure. Because of what we have done in the past we assume that we will do the same in the future.
If we forgive ourselves, we reason, we will only make matters worse. By keeping ourselves in the prison of condemnation we hope to keep our behavior in check.
This is really a fear of freedom. to claim our forgiveness is to be free of what we have done. When we forgive ourselves we are proclaiming that we have been emancipated from our past.
If we venture into the land of freedom, we suspect that it will be a short stay. Sooner or later we will sin again, we will be forced to return to our cell. Why not save some time and just keep on condemning ourselves?
The fear of future failure is a lie that paralyzes us. Just because we did something in our past does not me we will do it in the future. There is no real reason to expect that we will repeat our past behavior, but by focusing on it we will increase the likelihood that we will. At some point we will have to confront this lie and proclaim its opposing truth: what we have done in no way must determine what we will do. If we can claim our freedom from these lies, we will be ready to begin the work of forgiving ourselves.
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sorry if there are some word errors, it’s early in the morning and i was typing quickly.
this book is so so refreshing to read, and inspires me the more i get into it.
there are many topics that are listed in the book with explanations and stories that make it so much more interesting and real.
i recommend this book to both a Christian believer and a skeptic.
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