Leviticus 19:18 (NIV)
18 “‘Do not seek revenge or bear a grudge against anyone
among your people, but love your neighbor as yourself. I am the Lord.
God asks us not to bear grudges, but instead to love our
neighbors as ourselves. We are to do this no matter how tough it might be to
love the other person.
A Florida priest murdered in 2016 has appealed from
beyond the grave for his alleged killer to be shown mercy, reports the BBC. In
a letter written 22 years before his murder, Reverend Rene Robert requested
that whoever took his life be spared execution "no matter how heinous
their crime or how much I may have suffered."
The body of 71-year-old Fr. Robert, of St Augustine,
Florida, was found riddled with bullets in Georgia in April 2016. Authorities
say he was killed days earlier by a man, Steven Murray, whom he had been trying
to help for months. Mr. Murray, a repeat offender, had asked the priest for a
lift in Jacksonville, Florida, before abducting and murdering him, authorities
said. At the time of the trial, the prosecutor was pushing for the death
penalty.
But in 1995, the priest had signed a "Declaration of
Life" document, which was witnessed and notarized by a lawyer. Fr. Robert
wrote, "I request that the person found guilty of homicide for my killing
not be subject to or put in jeopardy of the death penalty under any
circumstances."
Fr. Robert devoted his life to helping society's most
troubled people, including convicts and the mentally afflicted, say friends.
"He was well aware for the potential violence that might involve his
ministry, but he cared for those people nonetheless," said Archbishop
Wilton Gregory. During a court appearance, Mr. Murray appealed for forgiveness
by noting Fr. Robert's own words: "If anybody loves Father Rene, they'll
forgive me because he was a man of God, and forgiveness is forgiveness."
Reverend Robert understood the need to love others and
show mercy so much that he prepared a statement to others long before his
death. It was a request to forgive anyone who might have a hand in his death.
How many of us are willing to forgive others for the minor things they might do
to us, much less the murder caused by another’s hands.
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