Bible Theme

Forgiveness

Summary

Forgiveness is the release of a debt — God choosing not to count our sins against us, and calling us to do the same for others. It is costly, never cheap: someone always absorbs the wrong rather than passing it back. At the center stands the cross, where God both upholds justice and cancels the debt. Forgiven people are summoned to become forgiving people.

On This Thread

Follow this theme across the whole library — its people, stories, prayers, witnesses, and more.

In the Old Testament

God revealed himself as one who forgives, removing our sins 'as far as the east is from the west.' Through Isaiah he promised, 'Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be as white as snow' — a cleansing only he could provide.

In the New Testament

From the cross Jesus prayed, 'Father, forgive them.' He tied our experience of forgiveness to our practice of it: 'if you forgive others… your Father will also forgive you.' Paul completes the logic: 'forgiving one another, as God in Christ forgave you.'

Common Misconception

Forgiveness is often confused with excusing, forgetting, or pretending the wound never happened. It is none of these. To forgive is to face the wrong honestly and then release it — refusing revenge, entrusting justice to God, and freeing yourself from the prison of bitterness.

Application

Is there someone you are still charging with a debt? Remember how much you have been forgiven, and choose release — not because the wrong was small, but because grace toward you was great. Forgiveness may be a process; begin it today.

Key Passages

Psalm 103:12

God removes our sins as far as the east is from the west — fully and finally.

Isaiah 1:18

Though our sins are scarlet, God makes them white as snow.

Matthew 6:14

Jesus links receiving forgiveness with extending it to others.

Luke 23:34

From the cross Jesus prays forgiveness even for those killing him.

Ephesians 4:32

Forgive one another as God in Christ has forgiven you.

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