Matthew Ichihashi Potts is the Plummer Professor of Christian Morals at Harvard Divinity School and the Pusey Minister in the Memorial Church at Harvard University. He lives with his family in Cambridge, MA.
“An exemplary application of literary fiction in theological and
ethical exploration. . . . An educational and engaging read that
will challenge, reward and enrich.”—Stephen Cherry, Church
Times
“Potts’ text is an essential therapy for the way theologies of
forgiveness have gone wrong in the modern West.”—Nathan
Hershberger, Scottish Journal of Theology
“This book is brilliant and generative and learned. A compelling
apologia for forgiveness, it takes seriously and yet disarms many
current-day critiques of forgiveness.”—Lauren Winner, Duke
University
“Both the impossibility and the power of forgiveness are
illuminated in this important and necessary work. Theologically
potent, a complex vista of the schisms of our traumatized, violent
reality is painted with lucid colors. Forgiveness is an invaluable
guide for our fractured world.”—Makoto Fujimura, artist and author
of Art and Faith: A Theology of Making
“Our world needs authentic approaches to the wounds we have
suffered and inflicted. Matthew Ichihashi Potts brilliantly
navigates this in Forgiveness, a book that moves beyond the
performance and into the profound challenge to embody compassion
and to repair and transform our mutual humanity on the pathway
toward healing.”—John Paul Lederach, author of The Moral
Imagination: The Art and Soul of Building Peace
“Matthew Ichihashi Potts meets our moment honestly with an account
of forgiveness as a practice rooted in grief. Grounding his
argument in life, literature, theology, and philosophy, Potts
challenges us to regard forgiveness not as a change in how we feel
but a decision about how we respond. Essential reading.”—Stephanie
Paulsell, author of Religion Around Virginia Woolf
“In this profound and moving book, Potts convincingly demonstrates
that contemporary novelists understand what Christian theology too
often forgets: forgiveness is more tragic than
triumphant.”—Constance M. Furey, coauthor of Devotion: Three
Inquiries in Religion, Literature, and Political Imagination
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