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Witnessing Forgiveness in the Aftermath of the Amish School Shooting

By Garnet Miller, published Oct 13, 2006
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True forgiveness is foreign to those with only a fleeting knowledge of God. In today’s society, we use phrases like “forgiven, but not forgotten” to characterize our feelings. This implies that our forgiveness of others is in some way conditional. Wherever the idea of such an attitude came from, it didn’t originate with God.

In the wake of the shooting deaths that occurred on Monday, October 2nd in a one room school house in Nickel Mines, Pennsylvania, people are stunned by the evil that invaded this quiet Amish community. Even more so, people are dazed by the actions of that same Amish community.

In most other areas of the country, by now there would have been a display of public outrage. Community leaders would be asking for justice. Other concerned neighbors would be asking that measures be taken to keep this type of crime from happening again. News stories said that instead of public outrage, there has been public forgiveness. The Amish community has extended the hand of God’s forgiveness to the family of Charles Carl Roberts IV, the man who took the lives of their children.

I don’t pretend to have all the answers on the subject of forgiveness. An individual’s walk with God is intensely personal and based on life experiences. I do know that forgiveness is essential to a life guided by God—forgiveness of self and others.

Forgiveness is not easy or comfortable, but that’s where God comes in. We are all human and we make poor choices. Sometimes, those choices result in harm to others or even death. Jesus Christ talked about forgiveness in his Sermon on the Mount in the Book of St. Matthew. To be forgiven for our offenses we must be willing to forgive others. To God, sin is sin. There are no levels within it. Man has created that distinction for himself. When we sin against God, we ask Him to pardon us. When we sin against another, it is their forgiveness we ask for.

Takeaways
  • True forgiveness can only be accomplished with God's help.
  • Public forgiveness and compassion has grown out of the terrible tragedy in Nickel Mines, PA.
  • To be forgiven by God for our offenses, we must be willing to forgive others.
Did You Know?
The term "Amish" comes from Jacob Amman, a Mennonite leader who split from the early Mennonite church because he felt they were moving away from their original teachings.
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