Saturday, March 5, 2016

Forgiveness and Deliverance from Evil

The tradition speaks of sin as a “contagion”. We are so used to thinking of sin as individual transgression, that we miss the point. As individual transgressors, we ARE all forgiven. That is what for-giveness means. Any debt we think we have incurred by our immoral actions has been forgiven before we were born. The Sin that is “contagious” is a condition – like a disease – that infects us all.
          This is why Sin seems – in some mysterious sense – to be external to ourselves (“The good that I would I do not, the evil that I would not, that I do”). Tradition calls it The Evil One. It is the “Evil’, from which our Lord taught is to pray for deliverance: not a person, like us, but a mysterious fact about us, which Augustine called the mysterium iniquitatis. It is what causes people to do things they never thought they would or even could do. It takes over completely in the chaos of war, when perfectly decent men and women do indescribable things. It is manifest in blood-lust, rape, and torture. But it is present, in principle, whenever one group defines another as alien, whenever one person judges another, whenever an unkind word is spoken, whenever a thought less than charitable is entertained. The difference between these “little sins” and the Nazi annihilation camps is only a difference of degree.
In the face of this horror we have some choice: we can excuse ourselves. “It wasn’t me; I wasn’t in my right mind”. In other words, “the devil made me do it”. And, in a sense, we are right. “The devil” is the condition  in which we all participate, whether we want to or not.   Or we can also seek to justify ourselves, which is worse: “they had it coming”. [This kind of thinking still dominates the American narrative concerning Hiroshima and Nagasaki.]
But there is another choice. Not every soldier becomes a rapist. Not every injured person seeks revenge. We do not have to return evil for evil. In fact Christians are commanded not to do so, and, rather, to love our enemies. As human beings, our life is communal. If we damage another, we damage ourselves; if we condemn another, we condemn ourselves; if we bless and forgive another, we bless and forgive ourselves. Not to do so is to acquiesce in slavery to the mysterium iniquitatis.
          Our Divine Savior has broken the hold of evil on us. When He forgave his executioners, He destroyed the power of the mystery of evil. He also added that the soldiers “(knew) not what they (did)”. They did it, but “the devil made them do it”.  They had been forgiven from before the foundation of the world. The Lord’s prayer for the soldiers was for our edification. Forgiveness of real injury may seem superhuman, but that’s just an excuse – especially for those who look to the Cross for salvation. The Godman’s victory over the Evil One enables us to forgive as He forgave.
          And forgive we must if we are to be delivered from the Evil One – because forgiveness – our forgiveness of our enemies – IS deliverance from evil. That is why the petition for deliverance follows the petition for forgiveness. One leads to the other. In the act of forgiving those who sin against us, we are delivered from the power of evil.* And right after we say the Lord’s Prayer we receive the Blood “which was shed for you and for all, that sins may be forgiven”. By taking Christ’s Death into ourselves in Holy Communion, we receive not God’s forgiveness of our own sins, but the power to forgive those who sin against us. And that divine power destroys the power of evil.

*[NOTE: Hebrew poetry, as in the psalms, relied on repetition and paraphrase. To say “thy will be done” is to say “thy Kingdom come” in another way. Perhaps also, to say “deliver us from evil” is to repeat the petition about forgiveness.]


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