With a global recession on the horizon, war, COVID, and an
increasingly polarizing political climate, it feels like we’re more at
odds with our fellow man than ever. Social media has made it even easier
for friends, relatives, and strangers alike to offend us. But what if
holding a grudge is keeping you from finding true peace and happiness?
It’s been said that “resentment is like drinking poison and waiting for
the person to die.” If resentment is poison, maybe forgiveness is the
antidote.
Georgia Congressman John Lewis is an African American
civil rights activist who suffered through unspeakable oppression in the
racially divided American South of the 1960s. Some 30 years after he
suffered a severe beating for standing up in solidarity for racial
equality, he wrote a (now famous) op-ed piece for The New York Times
following the death of one of his most outspoken political persecutors.
In
the piece, Lewis surprised the nation when he offered up words not of
hatred against the man, but kind-hearted reprieve and forgiveness....<<<Read More>>>...