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Thursday, April 23, 2026

How Can You Forgive A Parent Who Didn’t Protect You From Family Abuse While Understanding Their Own Traumatic Background?

Forgiving a parent who didn’t protect us from family abuse is one of the hardest kinds of forgiveness, because it isn’t just about something that was said or done once. It is about what should have happened and didn’t. It is about a role that was violated. A parent was supposed to cover us, and we were left exposed. Even if we can understand that our parents had their own traumatic background, that understanding doesn’t erase what happened to us. It can explain some of it, but it cannot excuse it. So we have to learn how to hold two truths at the same time: our parents were wounded, and we were wounded by them. 

Scripture helps us because it doesn’t pretend this is easy. The Bible calls us to forgiveness, but it also calls us to honesty, wisdom, and healing. We can’t rush forgiveness as if it were a single emotional moment. Jesus told Peter that forgiveness isn’t a neat number, but an ongoing posture, “seventy times seven” (Matt 18:21–22). That tells us forgiveness is often a process. We forgive in layers. We forgive again when the memories come back. We forgive again when grief surprises us. We forgive again when we realize how much that childhood wound shaped our adult habits. 

Forgiveness also doesn’t start with pretending we’re fine. It starts with naming what is actually in our hearts and bringing it to God. When we are hurt, angry, confused, and exhausted, we are invited to cast that burden on the Lord because He cares for us (1 Pet 5:7; Ps 55:22). If we don’t do that, bitterness can take root and defile us from the inside out (Heb 12:14–15). That is one reason forgiveness matters so much: not because the abuser “deserves it,” but because we need to be free. 

At the same time, forgiveness is not the same thing as pretending it wasn’t abuse, or that it didn’t matter, or that we should just “move on.” Scripture commands us to put away bitterness and malice, but it also calls us to tenderness and truth (Eph 4:31–32). The goal is not denial. The goal is release. God is not asking us to call evil “good.” God is asking us to stop letting evil own us. 

One key that helps us forgive a non-protective parent is recognizing what God has forgiven in us. We are not forgiven because we were righteous; we are forgiven because of Christ’s mercy. “All have sinned,” and we are “justified freely by His grace” (Rom 3:23–24). God does not deal with us according to our sins, but removes them far away in mercy (Ps 103:8–12). When we see how God forgave us in Christ, we begin to understand why Scripture says we forgive “even as God in Christ forgave” us (Eph 4:32; Col 3:12–13). That becomes the foundation. Forgiveness becomes a response to grace, not a performance to earn it. 

This is also where understanding our parents’ traumatic background can be useful, but only if we use it properly. Understanding can soften our desire to condemn, because Jesus told us not to live in condemnation but to forgive (Luke 6:37). It can help us see that our parents may not have had the internal strength, wisdom, or courage to protect us as they should have. And sometimes the tragic truth is that people cannot give what they do not have. They were formed in dysfunction, and they passed it on. But even when we understand that, we still have to say clearly: they were wrong. They failed. They sinned. Compassion does not require us to minimize reality. 

Forgiveness also does not always mean reconciliation. The Bible teaches forgiveness, but it also teaches wisdom and boundaries. We can forgive and still refuse to live in an unsafe relationship. We can forgive and still limit access. We can forgive and still require honesty and accountability. Jesus teaches us a process for dealing with sin, including confrontation and escalation when someone refuses to hear (Matt 18:15–17). That shows us something important: love does not mean enabling. Love can be truthful and firm. We can forgive from the heart and still take heed to ourselves in how we relate (Luke 17:3–4). Forgiveness is the release of vengeance to God; reconciliation is the rebuilding of trust, and trust is not automatic. 

Scripture gives us models for this kind of forgiveness that does not deny evil. Joseph looked at real betrayal and said, “You meant evil… but God meant it for good” (Gen 50:19–21). That wasn’t Joseph pretending his brothers didn’t harm him. That was Joseph refusing to sit in God’s place as judge. He handed ultimate justice to the Lord and chose to comfort rather than destroy. Jesus, in the deepest injustice imaginable, prayed, “Father, forgive them” (Luke 23:34). Stephen, while being murdered, said, “Do not charge them with this sin” (Acts 7:60). Those examples don’t make pain smaller; they make grace bigger. 

If we are asking, “How can we forgive a parent who didn’t protect us?” part of the answer is that we may need to grieve first. Grief is not unforgiveness. Grief is the honest recognition of what we lost: innocence, safety, trust, a normal childhood, and a parent who covered us. God heals the brokenhearted and binds up wounds (Ps 147:3). He comforts us in tribulation so that we can later comfort others (2 Cor 1:3–4). That is not quick work. It is deep work. And it often happens through prayer, truth-telling, and support from wise, godly people. 

When forgiveness begins to grow, it often looks like this: we stop rehearsing revenge, we stop wishing harm, and we begin to pray for God to do what is right. Romans tells us not to repay evil for evil, not to avenge ourselves, and to leave vengeance to God (Rom 12:14–21). That is one of the most freeing lines in Scripture for someone who has been abused: God is a better judge than we are. We don’t have to carry the courtroom in our hearts anymore. We can say, “Lord, You see. You know. You judge rightly.” Then we can start taking steps toward peace as much as it depends on us, without pretending the other person is safe or trustworthy (Rom 12:18). 

Forgiveness is challenging because it feels like letting someone “get away with it.” But biblical forgiveness is not letting someone get away with it. It is letting God handle it. It is releasing the person from our grip and placing them into God’s hands. And at the same time, it is choosing not to be overcome by evil, but to overcome evil with good (Rom 12:21). Sometimes “good” looks like prayer. Sometimes it looks like distance. Sometimes it looks like a hard conversation. Sometimes it looks like silence and healing. But it always looks like refusing to let bitterness become our identity. 

If we are still struggling, we should remember this: forgiveness is not a feeling we manufacture. It is an obedience we practice. Love “thinks no evil” and “bears all things” (1 Cor 13:4–7), which means love refuses to keep sharpening the knife in our mind. It doesn’t mean we forget. It means we stop feeding the poison. Forgiveness may begin as a trembling prayer: “Lord, I am willing. Help me.” And God honors that kind of prayer, because He cares for us (1 Pet 5:7), and He is committed to healing what people broke. 

Wednesday, April 22, 2026

How Can A Person Tell If They Are Truly Ready To Share Their Life With Someone Else?

When we ask, “How can a person tell if they are truly ready to share their life with someone else?” we’re really asking whether we are ready for covenant, not just companionship. Scripture frames marriage as something God designed because “it is not good that man should be alone” (Gen 2:18), yet it also shows us that sharing life means leaving, cleaving, and becoming “one flesh” (Gen 2:24; Matt 19:4–6). That kind of union is beautiful, but it is also serious, because it joins our decisions, our habits, our future, and our spiritual direction. 

One of the clearest ways we can test readiness is by looking at what is ruling our inner life. “Keep your heart with all diligence, for out of it spring the issues of life” (Prov 4:23). If our heart is led primarily by lust, loneliness, fear, or the need to be “completed” by another person, we are not truly ready; we are vulnerable. Scripture warns us not to let passion become our compass, and it teaches that self-control is part of maturity (1 Cor 7:1–9; Gal 5:22–23; 1 Thess 4:3–5). Readiness shows up when we can govern our desires rather than be governed by them. 

Another test is whether we are seeking God first or using the relationship to replace God. Jesus said to “seek first the kingdom of God and His righteousness” (Matt 6:33). When our life is already ordered under Christ, we don’t approach marriage as an idol or a desperate solution; we approach it as stewardship. We can say, “Lord, direct our paths,” and mean it (Prov 3:5–6). If we’re not living under God’s direction as single people, we shouldn’t assume marriage will suddenly make us spiritually stable. 

We also have to ask about spiritual alignment. Scripture does not treat spiritual mismatch as a small detail. “Do not be unequally yoked together with unbelievers” (2 Cor 6:14–18) isn’t about superiority; it’s about direction. A yoke is about pulling together. If our worldview, our worship, and our moral convictions are pulling in opposite directions, the relationship will eventually feel like a strain rather than a source of peace. Readiness includes the humility to admit: we cannot build a godly life with someone who is committed to a different god, even if that god is self. 

We can also measure readiness by our capacity to love biblically rather than romantically. 1 Corinthians 13 describes love as patient, kind, humble, truthful, and enduring (1 Cor 13:4–8). That kind of love is not mood-based; it is character-based. When we’re ready to share life, we can bear with another person without becoming bitter (Col 3:18–19), we can prefer the other’s well-being and not live for ourselves (Phil 2:3–4; Rom 15:1–2; 1 Cor 10:24), and we can forgive and repair rather than punish and withdraw (Col 3:12–14; Eph 4:2–3). That’s not perfection, none of us has that. But it is direction. If our default is pride, control, harshness, or “I’ll love you as long as you meet my needs,” we are not ready for covenant love. 

Readiness is also revealed by whether we can handle the vulnerability of being truly known and truly responsible. Marriage joins lives in ways that require honesty, tenderness, and restraint. Scripture speaks of honoring and understanding one another so that our prayers are not hindered (1 Pet 3:7). That means our spiritual life is affected by how we treat our spouse. If we are not ready to communicate, repent, listen, and grow, we are not ready to share a life. 

Another sign is whether we are building life wisely instead of rushing. Proverbs warns us about haste and praises diligence (Prov 21:5). Wisdom also says there is an order to preparation, “prepare your outside work… and afterward build your house” (Prov 24:27). We don’t need to be wealthy, but we do need to be responsible. Scripture even ties provision to faithfulness: if we refuse responsibility for our household, we are living in contradiction to our confession (1 Tim 5:8). Readiness means we’re not fantasizing about marriage while avoiding discipline in daily life. 

We should also look for the kind of character Scripture celebrates. Proverbs 31 and Ruth 3 highlight virtue, trustworthiness, industry, and kindness (Prov 31:10–31; Ruth 3:10–11). Those passages don’t exist to create a checklist that crushes us; they exist to show what blesses a home: a trustworthy heart, wisdom in speech, steadiness in work, generosity in spirit, and fear of the Lord. If we can’t be trusted with small responsibilities, we should not expect to be trusted with someone’s heart. 

Finally, readiness includes accepting what marriage will cost us in attention and focus. Paul says that married people naturally have additional concerns about pleasing their spouse and managing life together (1 Cor 7:32–35). That isn’t condemnation, it’s realism. It means we should enter marriage with our eyes open: this will take time, energy, and sacrifice. We will not be “free” in the same way. If we resent that idea, we may want romance but not want covenant. 

So how can we tell if we are truly ready to share our life with someone else? We can look at our heart (Prov 4:23), our spiritual direction (Matt 6:33; Prov 3:5–6), our capacity for biblical love (1 Cor 13:4–8), our self-control and holiness (1 Cor 7:1–9; 1 Thess 4:3–5; Gal 5:22–23), our willingness to sacrifice and honor (Eph 5:25–33; 1 Pet 3:7), and our commitment to unity without compromise (2 Cor 6:14–18; Amos 3:3). When those things are growing in us, not perfectly, but truly, we are moving toward readiness. And when we’re unsure, we can slow down, seek wise counsel, and let God establish our steps in His time (Prov 15:22; Prov 3:5–6). 

Tuesday, April 21, 2026

What Does The Bible Say About Forgiveness, And Why Is It Such A Challenging Concept For Many People?

What is interesting about forgiving someone who has wronged us is that the healing appears to be primarily for us, the one wronged. Many of us will understand that the root of bitterness that grows within us, because of holding onto the wrong, makes moving forward in life difficult at best and impossible at worst. While we hold the thoughts of past wrongs and/or abuses, what we are doing, as it is said, is allowing the individual or situation to live rent-free in our head, taking up the space that love, mercy, grace, compassion, and yes, forgiveness need to live within. Bitterness and a hard heart can spin us out, taking over a person’s entire life, especially while they take up space in our heads rent-free. Christ not only died to deliver us from our sin, but He also died on our behalf to deliver us from ourselves. 

Forgiveness is one of the clearest teachings Christ taught in the Bible, and it is also one of the hardest teachings to live out, because it goes directly against what my flesh wants when I’ve been wronged. When I read Scripture honestly, I see that forgiveness is not optional “extra credit” for the unusually spiritual people. It is central to what it means to live as a forgiven person. 

Jesus ties forgiveness to our relationship with God in a way that should sober us. He teaches that if we refuse to forgive others, we should not pretend we’re living in the freedom of God’s forgiveness ourselves (Matt 6:14–15). He even connects unforgiveness to prayer, saying that if I am holding something against someone, I need to forgive as I stand praying (Mark 11:25). That does not mean I pretend the offense never happened. It means I stop carrying it like a weapon, and I stop feeding resentment like it’s a pet I keep alive. 

When Peter asked Jesus how many times he should forgive, Jesus did not give him a neat limit. He said, in essence, “Don’t count,” and then He told the parable of the unforgiving servant (Matt 18:21–35). That parable is one of the most clarifying and confronting pictures of forgiveness in the Bible. A man is forgiven an impossible debt, then turns around and refuses mercy to someone who owes him something small. The point is not that small debts don’t hurt. The point is that I cannot receive massive mercy from God and then live as if mercy were scarce when someone sins against me. Jesus ends that parable with a warning about refusing to forgive “from the heart,” which tells us forgiveness is not merely a polite outward act; it’s an inner release that God must work into me (Matt 18:21–35). 

That’s why forgiveness is so challenging. Forgiveness requires me to release a legitimate grievance. If the offense weren’t real, forgiveness wouldn’t be necessary. Forgiveness means I give up the emotional satisfaction of holding someone “in my debt.” It means I refuse to replay the injury as a way of staying morally superior. It means I stop craving the moment when the other person finally hurts the way I hurt. And when I’ve been deeply wounded, those cravings can feel like the only “justice” I’ll ever get. That is why forgiveness is hard: it feels like I’m letting the offender go free. However, in reality, I am the one set free. 

The Bible helps us see what forgiveness is and what it is not. Forgiveness is not denial. It is not calling evil good. It is not automatically rebuilding trust. It is not removing boundaries. Forgiveness is me releasing personal vengeance to God and choosing mercy over revenge, even while consequences may still exist. That is why passages like “forgiving one another, even as God in Christ forgave you” are so powerful: they ground forgiveness in what I have already received, not in what the offender deserves (Eph 4:32). Paul repeats the same truth: as Christ forgave me, I must forgive others (Col 3:13). That is the standard. Not my feelings. Not my mood. Christ. 

Now, the moment we talk about forgiveness, people often feel a tension: if forgiveness is required, does that mean salvation is earned? Let me explain the thinking of seeing forgiveness tied to our salvation. This is where I must keep two categories clear in my mind. Salvation is by grace through faith, not by works, so that no one can boast (Eph 2:8–9). Yet that same passage immediately says we are God’s workmanship, created in Christ for good works that God prepared for us to walk in (Eph 2:10). So, I don’t get saved by forgiveness; as if I must forgive the one who wronged me to receive forgiveness from God the Father through Christ. I forgive because I am being saved, because grace has begun to change my heart. Forgiveness is fruit, not payment. Another way to say this is I can forgive the one who wronged me because I am forgiven. I am saved, yes, but I am saved first because God forgave me, and by that forgiveness, I am then able to forgive those who have wronged me. 

Logically, this also connects to repentance. Repentance is not me trying to “buy” forgiveness with moral performance. Repentance is the turning of my heart toward God when the Holy Spirit awakens me to my sin and my need. In other words, repentance and faith are responses to grace, not wages I earn. When I hear the gospel, God works through His Word to convict, illuminate, and draw me, and I respond, really respond. I believe. I turn. I ask for mercy. That does not make me the hero of my salvation; it shows that God’s grace is alive and active in me. 

And yes, I understand the deeper question many of us eventually ask: what exactly is “not of yourselves” in Ephesians 2:8? Is it salvation? Is it faith? Is it the whole package? However, someone parses the grammar, the point remains the same: I cannot boast. I was dead, and dead men do not raise themselves. If I believe, it is because God has done something in me that I could not do on my own. Yet it is still my belief. God does not believe for me, but He does awaken my heart so that I truly believe. That preserves what Scripture keeps holding together: God’s sovereignty and my real responsibility. 

That brings me to the “But why?” question, the one that often sits underneath every discussion of forgiveness, salvation, and transformation. If I am not worthy, why does God bother with me? The Bible’s answer isn’t that I’m secretly more deserving than I think. The answer is that God is gracious, and His love is not drawn out by my worthiness but by His nature. God saves because He delights to show mercy. God saves because He intends to display the riches of His grace. God saves because He is creating a people for Himself, and He is glorified in taking broken rebels and making us His children. That is why forgiveness is not a side issue. Forgiveness is one of the clearest displays that grace has truly touched me. 

So, what am I missing if I still struggle? In my experience, the missing piece is not more information; it’s abiding. It’s the difference between a moment of salvation and a daily life of surrender. I can know the doctrine of forgiveness and still get derailed by my flesh if I’m not staying close to Christ. That is why Scripture keeps pointing me back to an ongoing posture: presenting myself to God, renewing my mind, and refusing to let sin rule me again. When I’m living close to Christ, forgiveness becomes possible in a way that feels impossible when I’m living on my own fumes. 

This is also why forgiveness is such a challenging concept for many people: it forces us to live out the gospel we say we believe. It exposes our pride. It exposes our need for control. It exposes our demand to be the judge. And it exposes whether we have truly understood what God has forgiven in us. Forgiveness is hard because wounds are real. Forgiveness is necessary because grace is real. And forgiveness is possible because Christ is real, and He does not merely command forgiveness; He supplies it as we walk with Him. 

This last phrase, He supplies it as we walk with Him. While that statement is true, it is much more powerful than that because when Christ forgave us, He enabled us to forgive others. Without His first loving us, forgiving us, we could not and would not forgive others truly as He has forgiven us. For some of us, who have experienced horrible abuse at the hands of those we trust, forgiving them is a command. While we may not want to forgive them, we must remember the command is for our benefit, for our health, for our spiritual well-being; thus, we must obey the command to forgive as we have been forgiven. 

If we need further proof or evidence of forgiveness modeled, look no further than when Jesus said, “Father, forgive them, for they do not know what they do.” Moreover, the first Martyr Stephen, seeing the heavens opened and Jesus, the Son of Man, standing at the right hand of the Father, said, “Lord, do not charge them with this sin.” Jesus, God knew the heart of man and knew that those who crucified Him did not know what they were doing on the deepest level of spirituality known to Christ. Stephen, for the first time in his life, was fully learning about true spirituality. Today, those of us who have the Holy Spirit indwelling us know true spirituality as well. May we be thankful that we have the same spiritual life that dwelt in Christ, in Stephen, and all the saints who have gone before us, who too have also learned what true forgiveness is.