PureX
Well-known member
There are physical "acts of forgiveness" if we choose to physically act on our forgiveness of others. For example, telling someone that we forgive them is a physical act, presumably based on our having forgiven them. Or perhaps forgoing an offer or demand for some form of restitution might also be considered a physical "act of forgiveness" based on our having forgiven them. But the forgiveness itself is not an act unless we proclaim that choosing to forgive, in our own mind and heart, is an "action". And that is a semantic determination.Let me try to understand. Are you of the opinion that there are no physical acts of forgiveness, because forgiveness is a thought and never a word or deed?
Love is love. The 'biblicality' of love being expressed as action is a separate issue.Are you likewise of the opinion that there are no physical acts of biblical love, because such love is a thought and never a word or deed?
Love is not the deed. Love is the internal spirit that inspires and enables the external deed.
Forgiveness is not the deed, forgiveness is the internal choice that enables the external deed (if some external deed is deemed appropriate).
Likewise, sin is not a deed. Sin is the internal spirit of self-centered fear and grandiosity that inspires and enables us to commit 'sinful acts'.
I don't like to blindly conflate the internal spirit with the external deed. Doing so creates the illusion that I can see into men's souls, and I cannot.