Dear Reader,
Yesterday, I found myself in a painful conflict with someone I love deeply. We were both frustrated—he with my position of authority, and I with the responsibility I carry. I own the house he lives in, and in the moment, I asserted that power. He didn’t back down. In fact, he calmly and firmly pointed out how off-base and emotionally reactive I was—immature, even.
His words stung—but they also stopped me.
Right there, I had a choice: I could dig deeper into my anger, or I could take a quiet inventory of my motives, my care for him, and the real cost of pride. I realized I cared more about him than about being right. I saw that we were both wounded, both defensive, both trying.
And I let go.
Forgiveness came—not just of him, but of myself. I dropped the need to win and reached for the relationship. What came next was mutual respect, real conversation, and a compromise that honored us both. That’s when I saw it: this is the power of forgiveness. Not lofty or sentimental—but gritty, immediate, and transformational.
The Word Itself: A Deeper Giving
The English word forgive comes from the Old English forgiefan, which means to give completely—to let go, to release, to no longer demand payment.
At its root is the ancient Proto-Indo-European verb gheb(h)-, meaning “to give or to receive.” So forgiveness, even in language history, has always meant the giving up of a debt or harm. It's not about forgetting what happened—it's about choosing not to hold it hostage anymore.
Forgiveness in Scripture: To Release, To Lift, To Grace
In the Greek New Testament, the word for forgive is often:
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ἀφίημι (aphiēmi) – “to send away,” “release,” or “let go.”
In Matthew 6:12, Jesus teaches us to pray, “Forgive us our debts,” showing forgiveness as the act of canceling a spiritual debt.
Another word, χαρίζομαι (charizomai), means “to give grace freely.”
In Ephesians 4:32, we are taught to forgive “even as God for Christ’s sake hath forgiven you.” This points to a forgiveness rooted not in obligation, but in love.
In the Hebrew Bible, the meaning deepens further:
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סָלַח (sālach) – “to pardon, to cleanse,” used almost exclusively for God’s acts of forgiveness.
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נָשָׂא (nāsā’) – “to lift up or carry away,” as in Isaiah 53, where the suffering servant “bears our iniquities.”
Forgiveness in Hebrew tradition is not just emotional relief; it is a holy act that removes guilt and restores peace.
Recovery Application: Forgiveness in Steps 8–12
Step 8: Made a list of all persons we had harmed and became willing to make amends to them all.
Forgiveness begins here—not just seeking it, but preparing to give it. Step 8 calls us to name our wrongs and hold them up to the light, not to shame ourselves, but to free ourselves and others. As we become willing, the spiritual door opens.
“Aphiemi”—we begin to “let go” emotionally, even before we make contact.
Step 9: Made direct amends wherever possible, except when to do so would injure them or others.
This is where forgiveness becomes action. We ask for release from others, and often, in doing so, we forgive them as well—for their part in our pain, or for the times they were silent or misunderstood us.
“Charizomai”—we give grace, just as grace has been given to us.
Step 10: Continued to take personal inventory and when we were wrong promptly admitted it.
Forgiveness becomes daily. We become less afraid of being wrong. In the example I shared, this was key. I had to admit my own immaturity in that moment—not later, not next week, but now.
“Sālach”—we ask God for cleansing, and we offer ourselves and others space to try again.
Step 11: Sought through prayer and meditation to improve our conscious contact with God...
Here we meet the source of real forgiveness. God, who “lifts our burdens” (nāsā’) and washes us clean (sālach), becomes the wellspring of our ability to forgive and be forgiven. The anger begins to leave. We start to want healing more than justice.
In this contact with God, we see the other person as He sees them—and ourselves with grace.
Step 12: Having had a spiritual awakening as the result of these Steps...
Forgiveness becomes a way of life. We are no longer trapped in cycles of blame. We carry the message not just by speaking—but by how we show up in moments of tension, how we let go, how we give grace.
It is no longer something we do. It is someone we are becoming.
Closing Reflection: The Liberating Power of Letting Go
“To forgive is to release the grip of the past.
In Greek, it is aphiēmi—to send away the debt.
In Hebrew, it is sālach—a sacred act of cleansing.
In recovery, it is a spiritual awakening in real time.”
Forgiveness is not weakness. It is the greatest strength we’re given—the power to disarm anger, to lift burdens, to change the course of a relationship in a single moment of grace.
We forgive because we are forgiven.
We release because we were once released.
We carry the message because someone once carried it to us.
Let’s do the same—today.
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