Unforgivable?
Exploring the Limits of Forgiveness
-
- $17.99
Publisher Description
Forgiveness is a lovely idea, wrote C. S. Lewis, and in recent decades it has been seen and admired in situations ranging from therapy to politics, and proposed as a constructive pathway in the aftermath of abuse and atrocity. Not everyone is impressed, however, and in parallel with praise and promotion of forgiveness, cries of 'unforgivable' are uttered with increased shrillness and frequency.
In this hugely compelling, wide-ranging, and thought-provoking book, Stephen Cherry argues that while forgiveness can be transformative in the aftermath of harm, it can also, if not handled with care, become an additional pressure and anxiety for those who have been harmed. He teases out the way in which Christian understandings often lie behind pressure to forgive, identifying a number of typical mistakes with the Christian approach to forgiveness.
Reflecting on many examples from real life as well as literature, and on the insights of psychologists and philosophers, Cherry uses the tension between the desire to forgive and the protest that a person is unforgivable to push towards understandings of forgiveness that avoid the harshness of binary models. Forgiveness is not, he insists, the only good way forward after harm. A positive understanding of non-vengeful unforgiveness is vital if the harmed are to be given the care and support they need and deserve, and if forgiveness itself is to be authentic and liberating.
Cherry's challenging book brims with energy and blends human insight with intellectual vision. It argues that if forgiveness is to play a part in the aftermath of harm without inflicting further harm it must be presented in a non-idealized way and only following acknowledgement of the depth of the human impact of the harm done.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Cherry (The Dark Side of the Soul), the dean of King's College Cambridge, probes in this discerning study the "mistakes in the way Christianity has approached and promoted forgiveness." Starting roughly in the 1980s, a "therapeutic forgiveness" industry emerged that promoted interventions for those more "debilitated" by their own emotional response (anger, desire for vengeance) to an offense than to the offense itself. Cherry traces the roots of this approach to Christianity's uncritical view of forgiveness as a way for humans to emulate God's mercy. Yet, he writes, that understanding rests partly on a misinterpretation of Jesus's final pardon of his executioners, which Cherry argues was not an act of forgiveness but a prayer. Contending that when forgiveness is "simplified and over-promoted," the "abused, the harmed and the exploited... pay the price," Cherry cites such examples as the South African Truth and Reconciliation Committee's attempts to "heal" the country from apartheid, which often involved soliciting "poor black women" to officially forgive their white transgressors. Cherry's call for a contextual understanding of forgiveness and defense of such alternatives as principled, "non-vengeful unforgiveness" (in which the wronged neither seeks retaliation nor gives the transgressor a "free pass" for their actions) are reasonable and thought-provoking. It's a worthy complement to Myisha Cherry's Failures of Forgiveness.