loolalooh
Well-Known Member
Hypothetical situation ...
A mother disowns her son because he is a difficult child and very disrespectful. It never got physical, but it was to the point where he was emotionally and verbally abusive. Months after she puts him out on the street (he's 19 by the way), he repents and asks the Lord for forgiveness. He gets help in the form of counseling from a professional and the church. After a while, he seeks forgiveness and reconciliation from his mother. She claims she forgives but she rejects reconciliation continuously.
The questions: Was his mother wrong for abandoning him? Is she wrong for refusing to reconcile with her repentant son? How does the son move forward when his mother ignores his request for reconciliation and continues to reject him? Would your answers to these questions be different if they were not mother and son? Do we have certain obligations to forgive + reconcile in the case of family or do the same rules apply to all of our neighbors regardless of blood relation?
A mother disowns her son because he is a difficult child and very disrespectful. It never got physical, but it was to the point where he was emotionally and verbally abusive. Months after she puts him out on the street (he's 19 by the way), he repents and asks the Lord for forgiveness. He gets help in the form of counseling from a professional and the church. After a while, he seeks forgiveness and reconciliation from his mother. She claims she forgives but she rejects reconciliation continuously.
The questions: Was his mother wrong for abandoning him? Is she wrong for refusing to reconcile with her repentant son? How does the son move forward when his mother ignores his request for reconciliation and continues to reject him? Would your answers to these questions be different if they were not mother and son? Do we have certain obligations to forgive + reconcile in the case of family or do the same rules apply to all of our neighbors regardless of blood relation?