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How do I deal with pain from the past? (About Forgiveness) [Catholic Caucus]
Roman Catholic Spiritual Direction ^ | August 9th, 2010 | Father John Bartunek

Posted on 12/01/2010 11:58:49 AM PST by Salvation

How do I deal with pain from the past?

Posted on August 9th, 2010 by Father John Bartunek

Q: “The truth is that we cannot remain prisoners of the past; people need a sort of ‘healing of the memories’ so that past evils will not come back again.”  My question arises from this quote. HOW, HOW do I make it so that the past evils not come back, when the Hurt is there. The Mistrust is there?

A: This question is relevant for all of us, because all of have wounds from the past, whether wounds caused by our own sins, or by others whose sins affect us.  Often, a vague understanding of how the healing process happens can cause frustration, and that can distract us from following God’s lead on a day-to-day basis, seriously hindering our spiritual growth.

Standing on the Right Foundation

In the case alluded to by this question, the origin of the past wound seems to [be] with someone else.  The questioner has been hurt and, it seems, betrayed.  That reality is inhibiting them from hoping that the future can ever be truly joyful, healthy, and fruitful.  The pain and the fallout from the past betrayal has created an impenetrably black horizon, or so it seems.

The same experience can result from one’s own sins and betrayals.  Having fallen over and over again, having sinned grievously in relation to a crucial relationship or responsibility, or having culpably missed a God-given opportunity – these failures can sap hope and vitality as much when we commit them as when we suffer them.

In either case, God wants to pierce the dark horizon with his unconquerable light. And he not only wants to, he can. God is both all-good, and all-powerful: “And the light shines in darkness, a darkness which was not able to master it” (John 1:5).  We must consciously return to that conviction of our faith when we run up against this painful situation.  In prayer, we should express our faith in God’s goodness and omnipotence, and we should also express the depths of our sorrow and pain.  Look, for example, at Psalm 32 (for situations in which we are the ones who have failed), or Psalm 22 (for situations in which we are suffering because of the sins of others).  This is the foundation of supernatural hope: We know, by the sure knowledge of faith, that the hurt and mistrust we experience now is, in God’s plan, only a short part of the story, not the end of the story.

Having taken our stand on that foundation, God will usually roll back the darkness in one of two ways.

Two Paths to Heal Past Wounds

First, he can dissipate the darkness directly and quickly.  This happens.  Sometimes he grants an extraordinary grace in which the battered heart is renewed almost as soon as it has been wounded.  A memorable example of this was seen in John Paul II’s visit to the prison cell of his would-be assassin, Mehmet Ali Agca, in 1983, almost as soon as he was released from the hospital.  Later, the Pope also greeted and embraced the assassin’s mother.  The common and oppressive – and in this case even justifiable – darkness of anger and vengeance never even had a chance to take root in the pontiff’s heart.  Certainly, John Paul II’s long life of prayer and penance had created a spiritual maturity that allowed God’s grace to act quickly and decisively.  But even for less mature Christians, God in his wisdom sometimes grants quick release from darkness and hurt.

Second, and more frequently, God performs the healing gradually, and he allows us to be active participants in the process.  In this case, the spiritual wound, like a serious physical injury, requires time and treatment.  The treatment takes the form of grace obtained through prayer and the sacraments.  We not only need to ask for God’s healing in prayer, but we need to learn to reflect deeply and meditatively on the example of Christ – this is commonly called mental prayer.  At the same time, we need to approach the sacraments of confession and the Eucharist frequently and with supernatural confidence.

When God chooses to follow this second path, we usually face a couple temptations.  In the first place, we become impatient.  We just want the healing process to be over already!  And secondly, we can begin to rebel against God by refusing the treatment, through giving up on prayer and distancing ourselves from the sacraments.  But if God chooses to lead us along the path of time and treatment, he has his reasons.  He will use that path to heal other wounds too, wounds we don’t even know we have.  He will use it to help us grow in virtues that we don’t even know we need.  Throughout this long and painful journey, in other words, God is coaching us in hidden ways, helping us fulfill the dream for our lives that he has always had, even since before he formed us in the womb.  Along the way, it’s helpful to keep St Peter’s dictum in view: “But one thing, beloved, you must keep in mind, that with the Lord a day counts as a thousand years, and a thousand years count as a day” (2 Peter 3:8).

A Couple Practical Tactics

I can’t finish without mentioning two very practical tactics we can use to cooperate with God’s time and treatment: forgiving and giving.  Forgiveness takes place in the core of our being, in our will.  If someone has wounded us, we forgive them by praying that God absolve them from their sin and lead them to heaven.  If you wish someone would go to hell, you have not forgiven them.  This spiritual forgiveness can coexist with a lot of emotional pain, resentment, and anger.  Those emotions reside in a more superficial part of the soul, and they will gradually diminish, especially if you begin to pray for the person who has offended you.  On the other hand, if it is one’s own sins that are causing the darkness, this “forgiving” step takes the form of accepting God’s forgiveness.  This acceptance takes place at that core of our being, and can also coexist with tricky emotions.  But in our hearts, we know that God’s mercy is infinite, and infinitely capable of forgiving our sins: “Though your sins are like scarlet, they shall be white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall be like wool” (Isaiah 1:18).

Giving is the second tactic.  It involves focusing our energy on living the here-and-now as God would have us, in spite of the pain, darkness, and interior storms.  Each moment, we know pretty well what God’s will is for us: being faithful to the normal, everyday responsibilities of our lives, whether it’s washing dishes or preparing for a board meeting.  By giving ourselves to these duties with a spirit of faith, and doing so because God wants us to and as God would like us to, we invest less energy in the past, the source of the darkness.  It’s like moving forward under a cloudy sky knowing that the sun is still shining above the clouds.  In other words, we can still make a decent effort to do all the good we can do here-and-now, even if the here-and-now happens to look a bit like a shipwreck.  And doing good is the best way to outsmart evil: “Do not be mastered by evil, but master evil with good“ (Romans 12:21).

Yours in Christ, Father John Bartunek, LC, ThD



TOPICS: Apologetics; Catholic; History; Theology
KEYWORDS: catholic; catholiclist; forgiveness; reconciliation
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To: Paved Paradise

Bless you. Yes, sometimes it takes the tears to bring us to the reality of our part in these matters.


41 posted on 12/01/2010 3:27:08 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: ArrogantBustard; Tax-chick

Thanks for the Latin. The Spanish should be very similar.


42 posted on 12/01/2010 3:31:20 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: Salvation

ha ha... well in this particular case, it is the sins of others and not my own.


43 posted on 12/01/2010 3:43:36 PM PST by Paved Paradise
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To: Salvation

“Sabiduria” is wisdom, and “consuelo” is counsel.


44 posted on 12/01/2010 5:19:06 PM PST by Tax-chick (We know that terrorists are Moslems. I repeat, we know that terrorists are Moslems.)
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To: gracie1

Don’t get me wrong. I no longer harbor animosity for these people, I hold no feelings at all for them, I am through with them.

There was one woman that I cheerfully would have killed, if I could have gotten away with it. Now, it ould be too much trouble to spit and cause her death, But if she neede help, she would not receive it from me.

She not not only lied and cost me some friends that I treasured, she cost me a subtantial sum of money, and endangered my wife’s life. It is that last that I can’t really forgive her for. I recovered financially, and friends that believe lies without a little investigation aren’t worth having.

My nwife is still alive, but she could have died, and this woman knew it.


45 posted on 12/01/2010 5:28:37 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: Paved Paradise

here’s the thing. for 3 years, my stomach was tied in knots with rage. I finally got over that, I would not harm her but I do not wish her well.

It took a lot of prayer and effort to get that far. I live in Alabama, she lives in Texas, last I heard. I will never see her again, not willingly any way. She has made no effort to apologize, and never will. I know for a fact that she tried the same thing on another man, although he was smart enough to learn from my mistakes. The woman is a psychopath, and that’s the truth.

One thing that made it so hard was that I never could figure out her motive. She gained no advantage from what she did, and I have no idea how I could have offended her, so revenge on her part is out. What she did was just evil,


46 posted on 12/01/2010 5:40:12 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: chesley

Wow, they really must have done something horrible.

I was discussing a similar topic with a friend. We talked of love, hate, betrayal and the need to move on. I shared my view that love and hate are just 2 sides of the same coin. The real opposite is indifference. If you can think of the person, see them on the street, and feel nothing, no anger, affection, nothing, then you have truly moved on. Most of the time, I can say that I really have no feelings for those who have harmed me. I mean no ill will to them. I just don’t let them get the better of me. Sometimes I feel a sense of pity because they really have no clue why they anger others so.


47 posted on 12/01/2010 5:46:26 PM PST by gracie1 (Look, just because you have to tolerate something doesnÂ’t mean you have to approve of it. - Mr Mack)
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To: TheConservativeParty

Thanks for your comments. If I still had to deal with the woman, I would kick her out of my life. Fortunately I don’t. And as a matter of fact, my life is much better as a result of what she did.

But it was the blessings of God, and the support of my family, and my own efforts that did it. That does not negate her malice


48 posted on 12/01/2010 5:55:37 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: Salvation

It was, but kicked up. If it had been just talk, it wouldn’t have been so bad.


49 posted on 12/01/2010 5:57:29 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: mlizzy

I’ve gotten over the pain. I no longer care about this person. I have written her out of the human race.

The pain is gone, truly. But the scars remain. It’s only when the topic of revenge comes up that I even remember.


50 posted on 12/01/2010 5:59:54 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: Paved Paradise

I don’t really see how true forgiveness takrs place without the other person asking for, unless you define it as not caring how the other person gets on. I read that somewhere in connection with some person talking about a cheating spouse.

I’m sorry for what happened to you, and agree that it is easier when you are still enduring suffering. I got to feeling better about it when I figured out a way to even the score. Once I knew that I could, I could choose not to do so. I recovered power over the situation.

It took me 3 years to reach that point, and eight more years have passed. I don’t think about it much anymore, but that person had better never need my aid for any problem, no matter how serious.

Not that that’s likely to happen.


51 posted on 12/01/2010 6:08:25 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: gracie1

It was pretty bad. Basically her lies cost me my job at a time when my wife was undergoing treatment for cancer and I needed the insurance.

If I had been one more day finding a new job, she could have been denied coverage because of a pre-existing condition.

As it was, everything worked out fine for me, but that wasn’t to her credit.


52 posted on 12/01/2010 6:23:27 PM PST by chesley (Eat what you want, and die like a man.)
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To: Salvation

For more reasons than I can remember, this helps:

“Lord Jesus Christ, Son of God, have mercy on me, a sinner”

Many, many years ago a priest told me to repeat this continually until it becomes the background sound of my life. I didn’t succeed, but this little monastic prayer, called “The Jesus Prayer”, makes all the difference for me every day.


53 posted on 12/01/2010 7:16:50 PM PST by Kolokotronis (Christ is Risen, and you, o death, are annihilated)
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To: chesley

I recently lost a friend to cancer, so I understand. I can’t fathom why people will tell falsehoods about someone else, much less when the ramifications can be devastating. It denotes a lack of conscious, total egocentrism.


54 posted on 12/01/2010 7:27:06 PM PST by gracie1 (Look, just because you have to tolerate something doesnÂ’t mean you have to approve of it. - Mr Mack)
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To: Tax-chick

Thanks. That was one of the words he used. The other one must have been Italian.


55 posted on 12/01/2010 10:06:24 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: chesley
Beginning Experience -- a weekend retreat in your area to work through grief and reach the healing that is possible for those who have experienced the loss of a loved one
56 posted on 12/01/2010 10:08:58 PM PST by Salvation ("With God all things are possible." Matthew 19:26)
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To: mlizzy

mlizzy, I’m so glad you wrote that. I have a sister who tried to convince my elderly parent that I snuck into his house and stole a figurine from him; who pointed out my every flaw and weakness to my parents, who begrudged me every tender moment with my parents, and who recently tried to get hospital staff to document that I am a detriment to my dad’s health.

I will ponder your thought that she is really hurting herself. I still love her for the life we shared together as children and our shared memories; but I find it hard to love her in the present. It’s gotten to where I just want to stay away from her. I’m constantly on guard when I’m around her, waiting for the next blow.

Would it be forgiveness if I pray she has a great and happy life- a thousand miles from mine?


57 posted on 12/01/2010 10:46:36 PM PST by Melian ( See Matt 7: 21 and 1 John 2: 3-6)
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To: Salvation

Thank you for posting this article. I have a question I would love answered, though. What do you do when the hurt continues? In other words, its not just a hurt from the past, you have close family who still hurt you, even seem to enjoy causing you pain? At what point is enough enough? Can you forgive and yet try and limit your exposure to them, even if its your own parents?


58 posted on 12/01/2010 10:55:50 PM PST by Lil Flower (American by birth. Southern by the Grace of God!)
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To: HungarianGypsy

I have noticed that people who are extremely kind and fair to everyone are very deeply hurt when injustice is done to them.

Your post touched me deeply. Permit me to offer this: your soul is crying out for justice- and rightly so. The evildoer will receive perfect justice someday that will last for eternity. Your sad job is to wait on the Lord as patiently as possible. Perhaps the thought that the murderer will experience eternal, perfect justice will comfort you. The Lord promised us there would be little justice in this world. He also promised those who mourn in this world will be consoled in the next. Your suffering is not in vain and matters a great deal to Him. I am sure God loves your intense longing for justice for your father and He knows how terribly a just person like you is suffering under this weight.

Finally, thank God you are the kind of person who feels this pain so deeply. You are not callous and hardened; you are the sane one. Those who feel deeply also love deeply. You obviously have a great capacity for love. Don’t pull away from people; use that gift of yours that allows you to feel deeply to love others well. There is great satisfaction in loving others well.

I will pray for you. I hope you aren’t offended my my post.


59 posted on 12/01/2010 11:01:34 PM PST by Melian ( See Matt 7: 21 and 1 John 2: 3-6)
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To: Lil Flower

Also, how do you forgive someone who doesn’t want it
, or ask for it,or think they have done anything that requires forgiveness. If I want forgiveness from my sins, don’t I have to repent and ask for it? God does not just grant forgiveness to everyone whether they seek it or not. So how can I do more than God can? How do I grant forgiveness without being asked for it?


60 posted on 12/01/2010 11:03:50 PM PST by Lil Flower (American by birth. Southern by the Grace of God!)
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