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War & Peace Quote by Johann Kaspar Lavater

"He, who cannot forgive a trespass of malice to his enemy, has never yet tasted the most sublime enjoyment of love"

About this Quote

Forgiving your enemy here is less a moral chore than a dare: can you handle love at its highest proof-of-concept? Lavater, an 18th-century Protestant theologian with a knack for aphorisms, frames forgiveness not as social hygiene but as a kind of ecstatic palate test. If you cannot pardon malice, he implies, you have not yet had the real thing. Love isn’t defined by warmth toward the lovable; it’s authenticated in the moment your pride has every reason to harden.

The wording is telling. A “trespass” is an injury that crosses a boundary; “malice” removes any comforting loophole about misunderstanding. This is not “forgive the clumsy friend.” It’s forgive the person who meant it. Lavater’s subtext is almost provocative: the soul that refuses this refuses not just virtue but pleasure, “the most sublime enjoyment.” He’s selling spiritual discipline as an elevated sensation, a rapture available only when the ego stops collecting receipts.

Context sharpens the edge. Enlightenment-era moral thought often prized rational restraint, but Lavater tilts toward the devotional and experiential: Christianity as lived intensity, not mere doctrine. The enemy becomes the stage on which love proves itself, and forgiveness becomes a kind of spiritual alchemy, converting humiliation into freedom. It’s also a quiet rebuke to punitive righteousness. If your piety culminates in keeping score, Lavater suggests, you’ve missed the point and the payoff.

Quote Details

TopicForgiveness
SourceQuote attributed to Johann Kaspar Lavater — listed on the Wikiquote page 'Johann Kaspar Lavater' (original work/source not specified there).
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Citation Formats

APA Style (7th ed.)
Lavater, Johann Kaspar. (2026, January 18). He, who cannot forgive a trespass of malice to his enemy, has never yet tasted the most sublime enjoyment of love. FixQuotes. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-cannot-forgive-a-trespass-of-malice-to-his-23002/

Chicago Style
Lavater, Johann Kaspar. "He, who cannot forgive a trespass of malice to his enemy, has never yet tasted the most sublime enjoyment of love." FixQuotes. January 18, 2026. https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-cannot-forgive-a-trespass-of-malice-to-his-23002/.

MLA Style (9th ed.)
"He, who cannot forgive a trespass of malice to his enemy, has never yet tasted the most sublime enjoyment of love." FixQuotes, 18 Jan. 2026, https://fixquotes.com/quotes/he-who-cannot-forgive-a-trespass-of-malice-to-his-23002/. Accessed 3 Apr. 2026.

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Forgiveness and the Sublime Joy of Love
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About the Author

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Johann Kaspar Lavater (November 15, 1741 - January 2, 1801) was a Theologian from Germany.

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