Forgiveness is one of the most weaponized concepts against those who have been harmed and abused. Several Bible verses and doctrines have been used to silence and re-traumatize victims, while they also protect abusers. So we have to keep on setting the record straight:
(1)
Forgiveness is not accepting an apology – You can forgive someone and not accept their apology.
Forgiveness is not meant to eradicate responsibility – You can forgive and people should still be held accountable for their abuse and harm.
(2)
Forgiveness has nothing to do with anger – Anger is a valid emotional response to abuse regardless of forgiveness.
Forgiveness doesn’t mean anything is forgotten – Asking victims to forget or “let go” of abuse/harm is stifling their healing and further abusing them.
(3)
Forgiveness is not absolution – Abusers receive no absolution for forgiveness; their actions don’t change an iota by forgiveness.
Forgiveness doesn’t mean victims/survivors don’t get to talk about the abuse – You can forgive and talk about what you were subjected to.
(4)
Forgiveness doesn’t mean the pain of harm/abuse is gone – You can forgive someone and still feel deeply hurt by their actions.
Forgiveness doesn’t mean the relationship is restored – You can forgive and never again want to talk to or see those who harmed you.
(5)
Forgiveness doesn’t mean things will go “back to normal” – Things fundamentally change and what that change looks like depends on the victim/survivor. The main priority is their safety, not going “back to normal.”
(6)
Forgiveness is about refusing to dehumanize the one who harmed us. It’s about being able to see them as human, made in the image of divinity too, without minimizing for a second that they are abusers. It is refusing to harm them back even in our commitment to seek justice;
(7)
because justice is not the same as getting people back, justice is about making things right, protecting others, and holding people accountable. Forgiveness is about loyalty to our true selves, about our own healing, but forgiveness is not a prerequisite to healing.
(8)
Abusers don’t get to ask for or demand forgiveness; forgiveness is for the victim, and 100% about the victim. And if the word forgiveness is too triggering for you because it’s been so misused against us, then you can let go of forgiveness all together.
(9)
The goal is healing and wholeness, not whatever version of forgiveness anyone wants to use against us.
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Jewish Zionism is a response to hundreds of years of oppression and persecution. For many Jews it’s the only response. Jewish Zionism didn’t come out of privilege but out of marginalization.
A few caveats before I keep sharing what I’ve been learning in the last few years:
1/
Christian Zionism is anti-semitism full stop.
The actions of the Israeli government against Palestinians citizens are despicable, we can oppose governments without hating the people those governments claim to represent. For US citizens, that’s life every day.
2/
To talk about Zionism without understanding the history behind its conception is to ignore how generational trauma and systemic oppression work. Therefore it is to miss an opportunity to learn from the mistakes of the past. Zionism is a response to oppression, that’s relevant.
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People raised by high control adults grow up unaware of the most authentic version of themselves, our personality and life choices are often a response to trauma.
The journey to ourselves is a reparenting that requires tools we’ve never had and support we may have not seen.
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One things is for sure, we won’t find this version of ourselves within high control spaces/relationships, they activate our childhood trauma and the version that responds is the survivor who had to so whatever was needed in order to survive the abuse of high control.
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Perhaps you are not a pushover, a liar, a perfectionist, bossy, a people pleaser… maybe you simply have never felt safe enough to be authentic, vulnerable, kind, soft, assertive… because you’ve never experienced healthy relationships/spaces.
3/
Christian friends I say this with all the love in my heart. Antisemitism is embedded in Christian theology. I have said and believed horrifically antisemitic things. It’s taken me years of intentionally listening and learning from Jewish folks to see what I didn’t know.
1/
Antisemitism has existed for several millennia, Christianity has been at the center of it for the last two of those millennia. Our Jewish siblings have suffered pogroms, displacement, abuse, mistreatment and genocide over and over and over again, at the hands of Christianity.
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And I thing it’s worth sitting in the grief of that reality and doing everything we can to end it. Jewish people include people of all races, and the ones erased, the most and most vulnerable right now, are our Black and Brown Jewish siblings.
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While Independence Day commemorates the founding of the United States and the ideals of freedom and liberty, it is essential to acknowledge the stark contrasts between these ideals and the experiences of Black people and Indigenous communities.
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Capitalism played a significant role in the oppression and marginalization of both Black people and Indigenous peoples throughout US history. The institution of slavery, driven by economic interests, dehumanized and exploited Black individuals for centuries.
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The profit-driven slave trade and the labor-intensive plantation economy were integral parts of the capitalist reality in which we now exist.
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I was strapped by feet and wrists to a bed, against my will, and given haldol even though I was just grieving loss.
The cops and medical professionals at the hospital were so unprofessional an abusive that I’ve been in a panic for over 48 hrs.
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Please scroll down at your own discretion.
TW: medical abuse.
I am having a rough year, we all know that. And I currently live in my sister’s basement because we had to flee CA to ensure the protection of our kids.
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The last week I’ve had to navigate a lot of new grief, including heartbreaking business conflict, the death of a loved one’s trans child by suicide, and all my own trauma and pain from where we are in life with Caleb after all the years of fighting religious abuse.
3/
I don’t want to be a Christian anymore. I am not anti-Christianity. This is my journey, and I want to share it with you all. I am not, at all, trying to prescribe it, it’s just my journey.
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I’ve tried, I really have, I’ve tried to hold on but Christian spaces; progressive, conservative and everything in between, are just too harmful for me. They keep on harming me and I got to a place where I don’t understand what the point of holding on is.
2/
There is nothing good, healthy or necessary for me inside Christianity. Unfortunately, the opposite is true.
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