When Jesus teaches us to pray in the Lord’s Prayer (Matthew 6:9–13; Luke 11:1–4), there is a really difficult line in it: “forgive us our sins, as we forgive those who sin against us.”
Wow. That is challenging.
It’s one thing to ask God for forgiveness. Most of us know what it is to get things wrong. We all have regrets, mistakes, moments we wish we could redo. Asking for forgiveness can feel natural, even necessary.
But then Jesus links it to something much harder. That same forgiveness must flow through us to others.
Suddenly, this prayer becomes more than comforting words. It becomes a mirror.
The Measure We Use
Jesus isn’t suggesting forgiveness as an optional extra for especially kind people. He puts it right at the centre of prayer. Forgive us as we forgive.
In other words, the way we deal with others becomes part of our relationship with God.
That’s uncomfortable.
Because if we’re honest, forgiveness can feel impossible. Some wounds go deep. Some words linger. Some actions leave scars. Everything in us wants justice, or at least acknowledgement of the hurt.
Yet Jesus invites us into a different way.
Why It’s So Hard
There’s a reason this line in the Lord’s Prayer is so challenging. Forgiveness costs us something.
It costs us our sense of control.
It costs us our right to replay the hurt.
It costs us the satisfaction of holding onto the score.
But holding on comes with a cost too. The mix of emotions we carry, bitterness, anger, grief, and hurt, can quietly shape our thoughts, our mood, and even our relationships with others. They can weigh us down in ways we don’t always notice.
Jesus isn’t asking us to forgive because it’s easy, but because it sets us free.
When Forgiveness Feels Impossible
It’s important to say that for some people, this isn’t just a challenging idea. It touches very deep pain.
Some experiences leave deep and lasting wounds that don’t simply fade away.
So when we talk about forgiveness, this is not about minimising what happened or pretending it didn’t hurt. It is not about rushing people through pain, or telling them they should feel differently than they do. Anger, grief, and confusion can be honest and understandable responses to being deeply hurt.
And in those places, Jesus does not stand at a distance waiting for us to get it right. Again and again in the Gospels, we see him drawing close to those who are hurting, overwhelmed, and struggling. He meets people where they are, not where they think they should be.
Forgiveness, then, is not a demand placed on us from afar. It is something we are gently invited into, at the pace we are able to walk, with Jesus alongside us.
A Powerful Example of Forgiveness
Perhaps one of the most powerful real-life examples comes from the story of Anthony Walker.
Anthony was an 18-year-old student with a bright future ahead of him when he was murdered in a racially motivated attack in Liverpool in 2005.
His death shocked the nation. It was senseless, violent, and rooted in hate.
And yet, in the midst of unimaginable grief, his mother, Gee Walker, made a choice that is almost impossible to comprehend.
Drawing on her Christian faith, she chose forgiveness over bitterness. She spoke about forgiveness as a deeply personal decision, something that goes against our natural instincts, but becomes part of how we learn to live and endure.
Instead of allowing anger and hatred to define the future, she founded the Anthony Walker Foundation, dedicating her life to challenging racism, supporting victims, and promoting peace and reconciliation.
Her forgiveness did not mean she excused what happened. It did not mean the pain disappeared. But it meant she refused to let hatred have the final word.
That is what forgiveness can look like at its most powerful.
What Forgiveness Is (and Isn’t)
Forgiveness is often misunderstood. It does not mean pretending nothing happened. It does not mean saying what was done was acceptable. It does not even mean trust is instantly restored.
Forgiveness means choosing not to hold onto bitterness. It is releasing the desire to cling to what has been done to us, in all the different ways it may have shaped our lives, and handing it over to God instead of trying to carry the weight of it ourselves.
That does not always happen in a single moment. Sometimes forgiveness is a process, a decision we make again and again until our hearts begin to soften.
Forgiveness and Understanding
There is something profound in the connection Jesus makes. As we forgive, we begin to understand forgiveness more deeply.
Not because forgiving others earns God’s grace, but because as we take steps, however small, towards forgiveness, we discover that Jesus is already with us, gently opening our hearts to receive his grace more fully.
When we cling tightly to resentment, it can be harder to recognise that presence. As we begin to let go, even a little, something shifts.
Gee Walker’s story shows us that forgiveness is not weakness. It is strength. It is a refusal to let evil define the future. It is choosing light in the face of darkness.
A Prayer We Can Grow Into
Maybe the most honest way to pray this line is not with perfection, but with openness:
“God, forgive me, and help me to forgive.”
That might be the starting point. Not pretending it’s easy. Not forcing feelings that aren’t there. But taking whatever step feels possible, trusting that God will meet us in the struggle.
Because this difficult line is not meant to burden us. It is meant to lead us into freedom, one act of grace at a time.
As we walk with Jesus, we may begin to notice that the weight we carry starts to lift, and our hearts find a new kind of freedom.
