Details

Forgiven but Not Forgotten


Forgiven but Not Forgotten

The Past Is Not Past

von: Ambrose Mong, George Yeo

24,99 €

Verlag: Wipf And Stock Publishers
Format: EPUB
Veröffentl.: 09.12.2020
ISBN/EAN: 9781725283428
Sprache: englisch
Anzahl Seiten: 184

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Beschreibungen

This work explores issues of forgiveness and reconciliation in countries that had experienced political conflicts, civil war, and even genocide. It attempts to move beyond mere discussion by examining case studies and the initiatives taken in dialogue and reconciliation. In many cases, religion can be a force for peace and play a significant role in resolving conflicts. This work also examines the relationship between justice and forgiveness, emphasizing that there will be no peace without justice and no justice without forgiveness. Human justice is fragile. Thus, respect for rights and responsibilities must include forgiveness in order to heal and restore relationships.
Ambrose Mong is assistant parish priest at St. Andrew’s Church, Hong Kong and research associate at The Chinese University of Hong Kong. His recent publications include:
<i>A Tale of Two Theologians: Treatment of Third World Theologies </i>(2017),
<i>A Better World is Possible: An Exploration of Western and Eastern Utopian Visions </i>(2018),
<i>Power of Popular Piety</i>:
<i> A Critical Examination</i> (2019), and
<i>Sino-Vatican Relations: From Denunciation to Dialogue</i> (2019).
“Examining the conflicts that have divided and even killed millions of people—in Nazi Germany, South Africa, Northern Ireland, Guatemala, El Salvador, and China—Mong shows that ‘there can be no peace without justice and no justice without forgiveness.’ . . . The past is not past; it must be remembered, not as it was, but as a promise of and power for a transformed future.”
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<br> —Peter C. Phan, Georgetown University
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<br> “Inspired by the civil and human rights unrest in his home of Hong Kong, and realizing the eventual need for true reconciliation there, Ambrose Mong has written this thoughtful and often moving book. . . . Central to Mong’s thinking is that memory is the key to lasting reconciliation. We forgive, but we cannot—we must not—forget.”
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<br> —Stephen Bevans, SVD, Catholic Theological Union, Chicago
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<br> “Forgiving does not involve forgetting. To forget is to repeat our mistakes. Mong has given us an excellent book of practical theology that is thought-provoking and challenging. . . . His book can inspire us to become peacemakers in conflict situations everywhere.”
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<br> —Michael Amaladoss, SJ, Institute of Dialogue with Cultures and Religions, Loyola College, India
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<br> “Framed by events taking place in present-day Hong Kong, Ambrose Mong explores issues of forgiveness and reconciliation in a wide range of countries that have experienced devastating conflict, including genocide, in modern times. He alerts us to the complexity of economic, political, and socio-cultural issues involved. At the same time, he acknowledges the existential hope that may be found through traditional and cultural values, truth-telling, and the promotion of peace through justice, leading to personal liberation and social transformation.”
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<br> —Patricia Madigan OP, Centre for Interfaith Ministry Education and Research, Australia
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