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#TIM KELLER FORGIVENESS HOW TO#
I’ve talked to several university faculty members, counselors and people on campus who say college students are absolutely, completely flummoxed and conflicted over breaking up, they don’t know how to do it. “They don’t go and talk to them and say, ‘Hey, you did this or that,’ they just have nothing to do with them. “What young adults learn is if they don’t like somebody or feel like they’re being used, they just stop texting and emailing,” the 72-year-old pastor noted. That’s an especially acute need with young adults, he said, who have a problem with forgiveness. One of his hopes is to explain the need for forgiveness. Vengeance believes that since you knocked someone’s tooth out, I’m going to knock all your teeth out.” Without properly understanding that relationship, people will continue to seek vengeance, he said. Keller believes the two go hand-in-hand: There can be no true justice without forgiveness. Many young people see forgiveness as the opposite of seeking justice.” You don’t see as many people being kind and forgiving, and a lot of young people question whether we should do forgiveness. The book is needed, he believes, because “there’s a lot more anger in today’s culture. Keller is a prolific author and was the founding pastor of Redeemer Presbyterian Church (PCA) in Manhattan, which he started in 1989 and led for 28 years. This is the topic of his latest book, Forgive: Why Should I and How Can I?

Now there’s a lot of people questioning it.” I think most people would say, “Oh yeah, forgiveness is great. “There’s a problem with forgiveness in our culture right now,” he said in a recent interview. Tim Keller wants to help forgiveness have a good reputation once again.
