Unintentional Themes: The Power Of Forgiveness

Forgiveness is powerful—it frees us from a prison of resentment and unresolved anger we were never meant to be in.
on Sep 6, 2019 · 11 comments

Funny, how the things that are important to us find their way into our stories whether we mean for them to or not. Things like forgiveness.

Years ago, a dear friend and I parted ways—because of me. We didn’t fight or reach any sort of impasse in our relationship. I simply felt like there were too many unresolved differences and that it would be better for me to release her. So I did.

I likened my decision to the Biblical account of Abraham and Lot, who amicably separated because their shepherds kept arguing. “I forgive you,” I wrote in response to my friend’s having asked me to forgive her, “but I think it would be better if we parted ways.”

Over the years, every so often, my husband would (irritatingly) suggest that I forgive my friend. Always, he was met with my defensiveness: “I don’t need to forgive her! I already have! We’ve just gone separate ways.”

Except.

Forgiveness doesn’t feel like a need to pull away from someone.

Forgiveness doesn’t keep replaying scenes that stir up past anger, hurt, or disappointment.

Forgiveness doesn’t drive a wedge between friends.

And after too many years, I realized that my husband was right. The real, ugly-as-it-gets reason that I’d ended the friendship was because I hadn’t forgiven my friend for all the times she’d hurt me. I spent months working through things in my heart with God, until one day, while I was driving, it suddenly occurred to me that I loved my friend.

I wept. In that singular, joyful moment, I realized I had the capacity, after all, to be a friend to this woman, simply because I had forgiven her.

We have a relationship once again. (And the grace she offered me after years of lost friendship is one of the greatest gifts I’ve ever been given.)

Forgiveness is powerful—it frees us from a prison of resentment and unresolved anger we were never meant to be in. And because I passionately believe that forgiveness is the key to emotional and relational health, it makes sense that some of my characters’ strongest moments happen when they forgive.

Mind you, I never wrote, “Rain will forgive this person” or “This is the scene where so-and-so forgives Rain” while I was plotting Stormrise. Rather, the forgiveness expressed in these scenes is a natural outgrowth of the character arcs, according to my views on forgiveness. In each instance, a character can choose whether to forgive or not. And I believe choosing forgiveness is the stronger (though not necessarily the likely) path.

Unforgiveness plays an equally strong role, not only in plotting, but in character backstory. For instance, in one brief comment, Sedge, one of the less likeable characters in Stormrise, reveals more than he means to:

It’s not fair, the way the good ones go first,” Sedge said. “I’d have traded my father for Grandmaster Denerek in a swift second.

In this scene, the characters are discussing the death of their Grandmaster. Sedge’s comment smacks of unforgiveness, whether Sedge knows it or not (and he probably doesn’t). His attitude and outlook have been formed by his lack of a good relationship with his father, and by the fact that he has (unconsciously) chosen to stay angry about it. What he’s really saying is, “I wish my father had died instead of Grandmaster Denerek.”

Wishing his dad were dead is a pretty good sign that he hasn’t forgiven him.

There are even more pivotal moments of forgiveness in Stormrise that I don’t want to mention (because, spoilers). But the bottom line is that I didn’t set out to weave the theme of forgiveness into my story. It was a natural outgrowth of the state of my heart.

I am forgiven. So I forgive.

Not that forgiveness is easy. Sometimes our hurt is so big (like Sedge’s) that it takes a lot of processing before we can truly forgive the person who has hurt us. And sometimes we aren’t aware that we’re carrying a secret grudge. (Psst. Grudge = unforgiveness.)

To deny the thread of forgiveness that makes its way into my writing—both the presence and the lack of it—is to deny my own heart. I know what years of unforgiveness feel like, and I know the sublime freedom of finally forgiving someone. It doesn’t surprise me that it’s such an important theme in my writing, despite never having set out for it to be.

Stormrise isn’t a story about forgiveness; it’s a story about a girl who hides herself in order to ultimately discover her identity and step forward to save her land and everyone she loves. But it wouldn’t be the story it is without the thread of forgiveness woven through its words.

And I didn’t even do it on purpose.

Jillian Boehme, author, STORMRISEBIO—JILLIAN BOEHME

JILLIAN BOEHME is known to the online writing community as Authoress, hostess of Miss Snark’s First Victim, a blog for aspiring authors. In real life, she holds a degree in Music Education, sings with the Nashville Symphony Chorus, and homeschools her remaining youngster-at-home. She’s still crazy in love with her husband of more than thirty years and is happy to be surrounded by family and friends amid the rolling knolls of Middle Tennessee. Stormrise is her debut novel.

You may find her online in these places: her author web site (where you may enter a Stormrise preorder contest—details below), Twitter, Facebook, Instagram, Goodreads, and Miss Snarks’s First Victim.

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  1. notleia says:

    (Assorted noises of frustration) This is the kind of rhetoric that people use to manipulate other people into letting themselves be taken advantage of again.

    “Forgiveness” has been used to mean “let me walk all over you again” so much that it is a word I do not trust anymore. What if that person sucks, and the best course of action is to not hold a grudge but also hold to your boundaries and not let them get close again?

    I have found Captain Awkward to give far more useful advice about broken friendships and relationships than most sermons on forgiveness I’ve heard. Mostly because she doesn’t imply that you should just hurry it up and get over it, even if you have to repress rather than deal with your feelings.

    • Forgiveness doesn’t mean you can’t have boundaries. People generally shouldn’t be obligated to let someone back into their lives either, but being able to do so without resentment can be a good sign that the problem’s been resolved and that forgiveness truly happened.

      Forgiveness is often a journey, though, not something that people achieve at the drop of a hat. That doesn’t make it less important, though.

      • notleia says:

        I like that narrative better, but that’s not really the one that Boehme presents here. But that’s part of the problem with how meaningless a word that “forgiveness” has become.
        Does/should the concept of “forgiveness” imply not holding a grudge, or does/should it imply that it’s not complete until things go back to the way they were? People equivocate about them all the time, like Brennan making his joke (or joke-shaped object) about conflating my objection to automatic assumptions of unreserved reconciliation to being the same thing as refusing to let a grudge die. (I realize that he’s trying to compete with my being funnier than he is, but on a serious note, that’s exactly the rhetoric that manipulators use.)
        Captain Awkward is still a good resource, tho, like her posts on the African Violet of Broken Friendships.

        • Well, there’s several important details the article pointed out. Number one, Boehme mentioned that her friend asked for forgiveness. Number two, Boehme discussed the sequence of events that made her realize that she still held a grudge. She still cared about her friend, so the only reason she would pull away was if she still held that grudge.

          Given all that in the example, it would make sense for Boehme to describe forgiveness as she did. Forgiving this particular friend would mean accepting her back, because it looks like the issue was resolved and Boehme would still enjoy hanging out with her. This is a completely different scenario than, say, going back to an abusive parent that obviously hasn’t changed a bit. And, she never said one can’t have boundaries. So, maybe she believes that way or maybe she doesn’t. People are more likely to form more nuanced views of forgiveness as they age and get questioned enough.

          Forgiveness does have multiple meanings, just like any other word, so when discussing it it’s probably useful to clarify what one means in a particular case. I’d be curious to know what words you think would be better, though?

          To an extent I have an odd perspective on all this, because I’m all about forgiveness AND boundaries. I also can’t stand being trodden on, but I can put up with a lot of s*** if I decide there’s a good enough reason. I can have a lot of grace with people, but I’m still willing to assert what I’m willing to do/not do, along with finding some way or other to address their behavior. I’m also quite able to care about someone and look out for them even without being around them all the time, so in my opinion it’s certainly possible to avoid someone and still forgive them. But I do realize in many cases people only avoid each other because of deeply help resentments.

          • notleia says:

            It’s lines like this that made me go nope:
            “Forgiveness doesn’t feel like a need to pull away from someone.”

            That might not be the voice of forgiveness, but it could be the voice of boundaries, self-care, or even mere self-preservation, which are still worth listening to.

            • To an extent I agree with you, but it’s important to go even deeper and give honest assessments of those feelings. Am I pulling away because I hate that person(even if they’ve genuinely changed), or do I feel that way because on an instinctive level I KNOW they’re going to keep being awful?(that would genuinely be the voice of self preservation) Am I just not interested in hanging out with them anymore because I’ve found other things I’d rather do instead, or am I actually just trying to punish someone that doesn’t actually need punishment anymore?

              It’s still someone’s choice in the end, as far as who they choose to associate with or do things for, but the hows and whys behind feeling the need to pull away are very important considerations when deciding on a course of action. People can’t/shouldn’t force each other to forgive, either, but that doesn’t mean that the person unwilling to forgive is doing the right thing.

    • I think Jillian said it best: I forgive because I’m forgiven. How would it work if I said, I’m forgiven, but I’m not going to forgive? There’s a Scripture that says, As much as it is up to you, be at peace with one another. It isn’t always up to us. We might forgive, but the other person doesn’t want to 1) change or 2) reconcile. But if we forgive, the ball is back in their court. To switch metaphors, the weight is off our shoulders. We’ve done what we can, so we don’t have to carry any response: guilt or resentment or revenge or anything else.

      Becky

    • (Assorted noises of irritation) I’ve found the rhetoric you’re using is often used to manipulate others into thinking bitterness and rudeness is justified.

      “Boundaries” have been used to mean “be a dick to whoever you think wronged you,” so much that it is a word I do not trust anymore. What if that person doesn’t suck, and the best course of action is just to let it go rather than hold a grudge in the name of boundaries?

      I’ve found kind-hearted people to give far more useful advice about broken friendships and relationships than most hypercritical internet commenters that I’ve read. Mostly because they don’t imply that you should just hurry up and abandon forgiveness as if it’s unimportant, or useless, or more akin to slavery rather than freeing and emotionally healing.

  2. I’ve found that sometimes a hurt is so deep that you can forgive (and truly forgive) but also realize that the person who wronged you has disable a relationship–and disable it forever. You don’t hate them, hold a grudge, or despise them, but you realize you will never be friends with them. “A brother offended,” the Bible says, “is harder to be won back than a fortified city.” I know people I’m cordial with and talk to, but I know they will never be my friends because of the damage of something they did in the past.

What do you think?