The advice of today 13 September 2020 of St. John Paul II

Saint John Paul II (1920-2005)
pope

Encyclical letter «Dives in misericordia», n ° 14 © Libreria Editrice Vaticana
"I don't tell you up to seven, but up to seventy times seven"
Christ so insistently emphasizes the need to forgive others that Peter, who had asked him how many times he should forgive his neighbor, indicated the symbolic figure of "seventy times seven", meaning by this that he should have been able to forgive each and every time.

It is obvious that such a generous need to forgive does not nullify the objective demands of justice. Justice properly understood constitutes the aim of forgiveness, so to speak. In no passage of the Gospel message does forgiveness, and not even mercy as its source, signify indulgence towards evil, scandal, wrong or outrage caused. (…) The reparation of evil and scandal, the compensation of the wrong, the satisfaction of the outrage are a condition of forgiveness. (...)

Mercy, however, has the power to give justice a new content, which is expressed in the simplest and most complete way in forgiveness. In fact, it shows that, in addition to the process ..., which is specific to justice, love is necessary for man to affirm himself as such. The fulfillment of the conditions of justice is indispensable, above all so that love can reveal its face. (…) The Church rightly considers it her duty, as the purpose of her mission, to safeguard the authenticity of forgiveness.