by jimwalton » Thu Jan 19, 2017 5:58 pm
I'm glad that you're catching on to what I'm saying. But let's also put it this way: When a murderer commits his homicide, it's not the victim (deceased) who comes forth to forgive him (duh, they're dead), but the survivors: friends, family, and even community. Because there is more than one victim, and different levels and kinds of victimization. Is it appropriate for the mom to forgive the murderer of her daughter? I think we'd say yeah, because she was a victim, too.
OK, so when Hitler murdered all those innocent people, his crime was against them but it was also against God. It was an outrage against humanity and against the God who created them to have life. Joseph expresses the same kind of thought when he is tempted to adultery in Genesis 39.9. His sinning with Pot's wife would be a crime against his boss and is also a sin against God. Hitler's crime was against those people, their families, their religion, their communities, and against humanity at large. But it was also a sin against God. Therefore God, like the mom in the first example, is in a place to forgive him (or not too, as the case may be), for the infraction was multi-leveled.
I'm glad that you're catching on to what I'm saying. But let's also put it this way: When a murderer commits his homicide, it's not the victim (deceased) who comes forth to forgive him (duh, they're dead), but the survivors: friends, family, and even community. Because there is more than one victim, and different levels and kinds of victimization. Is it appropriate for the mom to forgive the murderer of her daughter? I think we'd say yeah, because she was a victim, too.
OK, so when Hitler murdered all those innocent people, his crime was against them but it was also against God. It was an outrage against humanity and against the God who created them to have life. Joseph expresses the same kind of thought when he is tempted to adultery in Genesis 39.9. His sinning with Pot's wife would be a crime against his boss and is also a sin against God. Hitler's crime was against those people, their families, their religion, their communities, and against humanity at large. But it was also a sin against God. Therefore God, like the mom in the first example, is in a place to forgive him (or not too, as the case may be), for the infraction was multi-leveled.