RT Article T1 Can Forgiving Ever Be a Moral Mistake? Complexifying a Central Commitment of the Christian Moral Life JF Irish theological quarterly VO 91 IS 1 SP 17 OP 34 A1 Pope, Stephen J. 1955- LA English YR 2026 UL https://ixtheo.de/Record/1961546949 AB This article proposes that Christian ethics is best understood as offering an affirmative answer to the question, ?Can Forgiving Ever Be a Moral Mistake?? It argues that the most adequate Christian account of forgiveness rests on three claims. First, that we are generally morally obligated to strive to forgive our truly repentant wrongdoers. Second, that in particular circumstances we should strive to forgive our unrepentant wrongdoers when practical wisdom indicates that doing so is best, all things considered. Third, that in other particular circumstances, practical wisdom may indicate that we may, or even should continue to hold justifiable resentment against our wrongdoers and seek to impose just retributive punishment on them. These three claims imply that we would be mistaken to assert either that we must forgive every wrongdoer or that we may only forgive repentant wrongdoers. K1 Forgiveness K1 moral mistake K1 Practical Wisdom K1 Resentment K1 Retribution K1 Wrongdoing DO 10.1177/00211400251404100