Let's look at it this way:
Does one have to be free from hatred in order to be compassionate? If so, there must be some sort of mechanism for freeing yourself from hatred (forgiveness) before one can be compassionate, no? Can compassion become poisoned by hatred, so that what we think is compassionate, really isn't? (Delusion)
Well, I certainly want to avoid delusion, as well as self-deception in any form. Let's see what we've discovered this far, and what conclusion our discoveries lead us to:
Premise A. What we decided earlier: (1) Compassionate thoughts are compassion. (2) Compassionate words and deeds are the effects of compassion.
Premise B. My thought now: If (A) is true, then it follows that whatever is compassionate must be either (1) compassion or (2) an effect of compassion.
Premise C. When I asked you today if forgiveness is compassionate, you said it was. I agree.
Therefore:
The only conclusion I see from premises (A), (B) and (C) is this: Forgiveness is either compassion, or an action caused by compassion.
* * *
Now if this is a delusion, logic requires us to demonstrate the deception this way: Either show that one of the three premises has what logicians call FE, or factual errors. Or show that the conclusion is the result of what they call LE, or logical errors. (That is, show that the three premises actually lead to a different conclusion.)