I suspect that some of you who have posted to this thread have not been the victims of the actions of the one who was disfellowshipped for cause and for whom you now wish to clap. It is much easier to cheer the reinstatement if you have not been crushed by this person’s actions. Let me give you some examples of persons who might not want to clap:
Disengaged said of the one he was concerned about:
“And the person was just a young teenager with the hormones running wild.”
I’m sure that his family was very glad to ‘have him back.’ But what if the parents and family of the object of this ‘indiscretion’ were also in the audience. Perhaps their teenager daughter was the object of an elder’s son’s “hormones running wild?” Maybe they feel that if this teenager had not ‘encouraged’ their teenager the whole mess wouldn’t have happened. What if their teenager is not being reinstated at the same time for whatever reason?
In another case, perhaps one spouse was unfaithful to the other spouse and the family is forever scarred and possibly fractured beyond repair. Can you see that while some might want to cheer the reinstatement, others would not yet be ready to forgive? Can you grant that some family members or friends of the parties may know more than the elders do and have private thoughts about the reinstatement that are not very sympathetic? Perhaps some “know” as I did in the case I sighted earlier that the reinstated person was far from repentant or the damage of this person’s actions was so devastating that it would take many years for the wounds to heal, if they could ever heal?
While some of you have referred to the prodigal son example of forgiveness, remember that that case involved a parent and a child. Almost all parents are willing to forgive almost all “sins” of their child. However, Jesus said that in the case of marriage one who “sinned’ against the marriage did not need to be forgiven. That is, the innocent mate was not required to forgive the adultery of the other mate. The offended mate could proceed with divorcee, thereby forever breaking the marriage contract and leaving the offending mate in a state of non-forgiveness.
So, as SJ and Philo have suggested earlier, in the eyes of each of us there may be legitimate differences of opinion about the merits of an individual reinstatement.
Sorry, but reinstatement is not always a time to cheer. Too many elders (read JC) have “blown it” too many times, IMHO.
Whether Dfing should happen at all is another issue for other threads. We all come from a different prospective and will see things differently and while cheering may be appropriate on some occasions, I have seen too many cases where the reinstatement (by JW standards) was so premature as to be sickening.
Regards,
Sam Beli