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Forgiveness, Boundaries, and Biblical Wisdom

  • Posted on February 7, 2026

In many church spaces, forgiveness is often pushed as something that should be quick, easy, and unquestioned. There’s an unspoken belief that if you truly forgive, you must continue allowing people access to your life — that cutting people off is unloving or unchristian.

But when we look closely at Scripture, that idea doesn’t fully hold up.

Yes, the Bible clearly teaches forgiveness. Forgiveness is essential. It frees the heart from bitterness, resentment, and the weight of carrying offenses. But forgiveness was never meant to cancel out wisdom.

The same Bible that teaches forgiveness also warns us about proximity.

Scripture tells us not to be unequally yoked, not just in marriage but in close, binding relationships that influence our direction. It reminds us that bad company corrupts good morals. These verses don’t contradict forgiveness — they complement it. They remind us that while we can release someone from our anger, we are not required to stay entangled with people who harm our peace, faith, or growth.

Forgiveness is internal.
Boundaries are external.

And the two can exist at the same time.

Even Jesus modeled this. He forgave freely, yet He did not give everyone access to Him. He walked away from hostile environments. He didn’t entrust Himself to people with wrong intentions. He instructed His disciples to leave places that were unhealthy and unreceptive. None of this was unforgiveness — it was discernment.

Unfortunately, church culture sometimes confuses forgiveness with endurance. People are encouraged to stay connected to relationships that drain them, wound them, or pull them away from who God is shaping them to be — all in the name of being “Christlike.”

But Jesus never asked us to be doormats.
He asked us to be wise.

Forgiving someone does not mean reconciling with them. Reconciliation requires repentance, accountability, and change. Without those things, continuing close relationship can do more harm than good.

You can forgive and still choose distance.
You can forgive and still protect your peace.
You can forgive and still walk away.

That doesn’t make you bitter. It makes you discerning.

God cares about the condition of your heart — but He also cares about the direction of your life. Some people are meant to be forgiven, released, and left behind, not carried forward into your next season.

Forgiveness is obedience.
Boundaries are wisdom.

And the Bible calls us to both.

Categories: Uncategorized
Tags: Facts, Forgiveness, Truth
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