So let's continue the investigation: You hold the consistent position that love is compassion, which chooses to act, and one such action is to forgive. Forgiveness, being an effect of love is not itself love. It is ceasing to feel anger or resentment. So one would never be correct to say love is forgiveness, though one would be correct in saying love chooses to forgive.
I suppose, then you would concur with this: It would never be accurate to say love is patient, love is kind, love is not being envious, love is not being proud, love is not easily angered, love is not keeping a record of wrongs. For these traits describe the effects of love (such as forgiveness) but not the compassion that causes these effects.
Does this ring true so far?
I think love is more than compassion. I think it's also respect for the individuality and autonomy of the beloved, and a genuine concern for their welfare and well-being. Many Christians claim that they love their fellow humans when they judge them and tell them they are condemned to hell. And I believe they do love them and fear for their well-being. But unfortunately, they are almost completely lacking in respect for the other persons individuality and autonomy. So that their love for others is only 'half-baked'. And therefor not particularly believable, or effecting, to others.
I believe that forgiveness is a means of repairing our damaged capacity and ability to love. It's a means of dispelling the anger and fear and resentment that chokes off our desire and ability to love others freely and effectively. And that therefor harms ourselves and often those we would otherwise want to love and trust.
As an example: there are many posters here on TOL that HATE president Obama. Even though they have never met the man, and never had any personal interaction with him, and know very little about what he thinks or does in his life, they have convinced themselves that he is to blame for a whole host of terrible actions that have harmed them, personally, and are harming others. Their desire and ability to love their fellow man, as Christians, as we are admonished by Christ to do, has somehow been severely damaged.
They need to forgive president Obama for whatever it is they imagine that he has done to them, so as to begin repairing their ability to love their fellow human beings appropriately and sincerely. And that forgiveness involves a process that will have them looking deep within themselves, to see how they have in fact projected so much evil onto someone who is essentially a stranger to them. And they will need to investigate
why they have done this. Because part of the process of forgiveness involves untangling that knot of blame, and determining what of it belongs to us, and what of it does not. And this quest will begin to change them. And hopefully to heal them. So that eventually they will be able to feel compassion for president Obama even though they may not always agree with him (who do we ever
always agree with?). And respect him for his uniqueness and respect his autonomy as a fellow human of equal stature in the eyes of God.
Or; they will continue to wallow in irrational rage and resentment based on blind projections and here-say from his political enemies. Magnifying their ignorance and hatred with their own. All the while proclaiming themselves to be Christians.
Forgiveness is a choice. And it's often a difficult choice because it means WE HAVE TO CHANGE.