By Dr. Glenn Mollette
Many have watched the powerful
television report of Brandt Jean’s act of forgiveness toward Amber Guyger who
killed his brother Botham Jean. The scene of him hugging her and extending
forgiveness toward her has been replayed over and again and invoked a sundry of
reactions from across the nation and the Texas community.
The former Dallas police officer Guyger testified that she shot her victim by mistake, in his own apartment while he was eating ice cream. She was sentenced to ten years in prison and many thought it would have been much longer.
Allison Jean, the mother of the brothers wrote on her Facebook page to her son Brandt, “Your load is lighter. Regardless of the views of the spectators, walk with God always. Forgiveness is for the forgiver and it doesn’t matter what the forgiven does with it. “
From the
Lancaster, PA community in 2006, comes the story of ten young schoolgirls
killed in an Amish one room school. On the afternoon of the killing an Amish
grandfather expressed forgiveness toward the killer Charles Roberts. That same
day Amish neighbors visited the Roberts family to comfort them. Later that week
the Roberts family was invited to the funeral of one of the Amish girls who had
been killed. Amish mourners would later outnumber the non-Amish at Charles
Roberts’ funeral. The story is told
that the killer was tormented for nine years by the premature death of his
young daughter. He never forgave God for her death. Yet, after he cold-bloodedly
shot ten Amish schoolgirls, their families and friends almost immediately
forgave him and showed compassion toward his family.
In 2015,
from the historic Charleston, South Carolina Emanuel African Methodist
Episcopal Church, comes the story of forgiving relatives. One by one those who
chose to speak at his trial did not turn to anger. Instead, while the killer
Dylann Roof remained impassive, they offered him forgiveness and said they were
praying for his soul, even as they
described the pain of their losses. “I forgive you,” Nadine
Collier, the daughter of 70-year-old Ethel Lance, said at the hearing, her
voice breaking with emotion. “You took something very precious from me. I
will never talk to her again. I will
never, hold her again. But I forgive you. And have mercy on your soul.”
I don’t know what I would do. I can’t tell you what to do because I don’t know what has happened to you. It’s between you, whoever and God and how you want to live your life. However, if you carry a lifelong load of hate, resentment and bitterness, it will wear you down.
The words of Jesus remind us from the Bible … “For if you forgive men their trespasses your father in heaven will forgive you.”
Think about it. Is there someone you need to forgive?