
What do you do if you’re the one who has done the wrong? You have
acknowledged your error, but the other person won’t forgive you. Or they
say they forgive you, but act like they’re still trying to even the
score? Do you have to keep asking for forgiveness? Do you need to beg?
These are tough questions. Most marriages deal with this problem at
some point. It’s relatively easy to restore a relationship when both
partners are willing —one willing to seek forgiveness and the other
willing to forgive. But when the wronged partner is unforgiving, what
can the guilty partner do?
First remember the closed hand. The unforgiving partner has probably
closed his or her spirit to you, and you need to find ways of reopening
it. You can’t do that by yelling, warning, shaming, or threatening. “You
call yourself a Christian? You have to forgive me or I’ll tell everyone
at church what you’re really like!”
Will that help to open anyone’s spirit? Of course not. The fist will just tighten further.
You do not want to go on the offensive in this situation. Remember
your position. You have done wrong. You have caused pain. You are now
asking a favor. Even if you are both Christians, forgiveness cannot be
demanded. Your partner does not owe it to you. You are asking your
partner to take a chance on you, a chance to be hurt again. Your partner
has every right to have a closed spirit. Now, is there any way to coax
it open?
The first attempt is the apology, which you have already offered. Was
it sincere? Did you recognize the full extent of your misdeeds? Was it
unconditional?
Let’s go to the example of Wilma. Let’s say her apology went
something like this: “I’m sorry I threw away your stuff, but you really
needed to get rid of it anyway.”
That’s what we call a conditional apology. These usually contain a yeah-but clause in them. If there was any excuse or but in your apology, then go back and apologize more sincerely.
Or you may have used blame shifting in your apology. Kids
are especially good at this technique: “I know you told me not to go in
the water, but Joey pushed me.” (That’s one I used as a kid.) Even
adults use this technique at times: “I know I said I’d be home by 6:00,
but my boss wanted me to..”
While Joey or the boss may have affected your behavior, you still
need to take full responsibility for the wrong you committed. “My boss
asked me to stay and finish payroll, but I know you told me that you had
a doctor’s appointment at 6:00, so I should have called or gotten
someone else to fill in for me. I was wrong to come home late today. I
know that it really messed up your day, and you have good reason for
being angry with me. I hope that you will be able to forgive me.”
Conditions, excuses, and blame shifting are manipulative. They erode
trust rather than restore it.
But what if this has all happened before? You are late for the
umpteenth time. If it’s not your boss, it’s the train or the traffic or
the terrorist incident that happened on your way home. You have become
adept at apologizing with so much practice.
Do you wonder why you’re not being forgiven? Apologies can lose their
effect, after about the tenth or twentieth time. Your partner may be
withholding forgiveness because he or she does not trust what you’re
saying. That’s why our apologies need to be followed by an attitude or
behavioral change. In religious terms, you might call this repentance. You stop the offensive behavior, confess it, and then turn the other way.
This step —repentance —may require some time to demonstrate that you
really have changed, such as when Art had to prove to Sylvia that he
really could be trusted again. Will your partner’s spirit reopen to you?
Maybe. Your only remaining tools are prayer, patience and persistence.
• Prayer —Pray that God will open your partner’s spirit, and that He will give you the strength and wisdom to know how to respond.
• Patience —When you’re trying to mend
fences and your partner is stonewalling, the natural, human reaction is
to get mad and resentful. You need patience to continue being nice when
you’re getting little or no reinforcement.
• Persistence —Don’t continue to
apologize, as long as you have done so sincerely. But you do need to
persist in your attempts to demonstrate love, concern, and the desire to
improve the relationship. This can be done by reassuring hugs,
persistent nonsexual touch, and affirming words of encouragement—even if
your partner is not as receptive as you’d like.
What if Sylvia didn’t accept Art’s apology after he had been
unfaithful to her but felt sorrowful afterwards? What if she was cold
and closed to him for several months? What could Art do to help her
forgive him?
First, he could pray that God would open her spirit. If Sylvia was willing, they could even pray together.
Then Art would need to show patience, treating her gently and
lovingly. He would need to make behavioral changes in order to rebuild
trust. But he would also need to make spirit-opening gestures
as well. He wouldn’t want to do this in a manipulative way: “Oh, I’ll
buy her some flowers and gifts and she’ll get over it eventually.”
Instead he might discuss how he knows that he’s hurt her deeply but
that he’s committed to rebuilding the relationship. He might even ask
her to give him hand signals from day to day, showing how open or closed
her spirit is toward him-a closed fist, a partially open fist, and then
a hand which is steadily opening.
In a solution-based model, we would ask, “How did Art win Sylvia’s
trust during the very beginning of their relationship?” While they were
dating, Art paid close attention to her needs, listened to her ideas and
concerns, and sent her little cards and notes. They went on special
dates, held hands, and exchanged reassuring hugs and kisses. Now Art
needs to do all those things that he did to win her over in the
beginning.
This article is edited from the book, The Marriage Mender, by Dr
Thomas A. Whiteman and Dr Thomas G. Bartlett, published by Navpress.
This book gives solution-based tools to begin rebuilding your marriage.
With illustrations and exercises, it teaches how to look to the future
of your relationship instead of focusing on the past with its problems.

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