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Unforgivable!
Are you guilty of the unpardonable sin?

Overview
We will see why it is normal for Christians to fear their sin is
unforgivable. We will look at Bible saints who were clearly forgiven even
though they once seemed guilty of the unpardonable sin.
Whatever Jesus meant by his puzzling statement, the correct
interpretation will be consistent with the rest of biblical revelation. God
declares over and over in his Word, his eagerness to forgive anyone and
everyone who comes to Jesus, genuinely wanting forgiveness. The God of truth
has given his word. In the light of so many unbreakable promises, it must be
that if anyone were to become unforgivable, something happens that makes
that person refuse to appropriate those promises. So to be unforgivable,
someone must refuse to repent or fail to seek forgiveness through Jesus.
What must one do to blaspheme the Spirit?
Let’s see what the Bible says Jesus was referring to:
Mark 3:22 And
the teachers of the law who came down from Jerusalem said, “He is
possessed by Beelzebub! By the prince of demons he is driving out demons.”
(28) So Jesus . . . spoke to them . . .
(28) I tell you the truth, all the sins and
blasphemies of men will be forgiven them. (29)
But whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven; he
is guilty of an eternal sin.” (30) He said
this because they were saying, “He has an evil spirit.”
Verse 30 is crystal clear. These people were not swearing at the Holy
Spirit. In fact, they were devout theologians who would not dream of being
disrespectful to the Spirit of God. Those in danger of committing this sin
were proposing that Jesus had a demon. Imagine someone convinced that Jesus’
miracles came from an evil spirit! Such a person is blaspheming the Spirit,
through whom Jesus ministered. Since divine forgiveness is available only
through Jesus, saving faith is impossible while anyone believes that the
holy Son of God is demon possessed. No one believing that blasphemous
doctrine can be forgiven in this life, nor in the next. Should a person stop
believing that blasphemy, however, and start believing that Jesus is God’s
sinless sacrifice for the sins of the world, that person is no longer
blaspheming and can now find forgiveness through Jesus. This truth is
confirmed in the book of Acts.
Beginning with his Spirit-filled sermon on the Day of Pentecost, Peter
repeatedly preached salvation to people to whom he said such things as
‘Jesus, whom you crucified,’ and ‘You handed him over to be killed, and you
disowned him before Pilate, though he had decided to let him go. You
disowned the Holy and Righteous One and asked that a murderer be released to
you. You killed the author of life . . . Repent, then, and turn to God, so
that your sins may be wiped out, that times of refreshing may come from the
Lord . . .’ (Scriptures).
These people charged with such offenses obviously did not believe they were
killing a godly man. They were well aware of the undeniably supernatural
character of Jesus’ miracles. They must therefore have blasphemed the Spirit
of God by believing that Jesus’ miracles were the work of an evil spirit.
Saul of Tarsus must have been one such person and yet, like so many others,
he completely reversed his belief about the source of Jesus’ miracles and
through this complete change of heart, he found forgiveness through Jesus.
No one believing that Jesus is demon possessed can be forgiven, but
anyone no longer believing that blasphemy can find forgiveness.
Any sin for which you sincerely seek Jesus’ forgiveness, is not the
unpardonable sin
Scripture promises forgiveness to any wicked person who turns to God.
Isaiah 55:7 Let the wicked forsake his way and the evil man his
thoughts. Let him turn to the LORD, and he will have mercy on
him, and to our God, for he will freely pardon.
[Other wonderful Scriptures
to read]
Anyone who seeks Jesus’ forgiveness is obviously turning to God. It would
make God a liar if he were to spurn anyone who sincerely turns away from his
sin, seeking the true God with all his heart. The judgment of God upon those
who continually resist his Spirit is not that God won’t respond when they
turn to him. The judgment is that they would become so hardened that they do
not turn to God.
Isaiah 6:10 Make the heart of this people callused . . . Otherwise
they might . . . turn and be healed.
[Full verse] Do you see
it? If they turned they would be forgiven (healed). The judgment is that
their heart becomes so callous that they refuse to turn to God.
Proof that you have not blasphemed the Holy Spirit
Jesus’ warning against blaspheming the Holy Spirit sends a chill down us.
And rightly so. We dare not abuse God’s grace. It is true that God’s Spirit
will not ‘always strive with man’ (Genesis 6:3). However, if you find
yourself longing for fellowship with God, it is clear that the Spirit is
still ‘striving’ with you – passionately working within you in an attempt to
woo you back to God.
John 16:8 When he [the Comforter, the Spirit of Truth] comes, he will
convict the world of guilt in regard to sin and righteousness and judgment
Since conviction of sin is the work of the Spirit, if you feel convicted
of your sin, the Holy Spirit obviously has not withdrawn from you. On the
contrary, he is actively working in your life seeking to bring you back to
Jesus. Feeling the need of forgiveness is clear proof that God has not given
up on you.
John 6:44 No-one can come to me unless the Father who sent me draws
him, and I will raise him up at the last day.
Your longing to come to Jesus is proof that Father God is drawing you. It
is irrefutable confirmation that he has not abandoned you.
Someone who is unforgivable must be someone who no longer meets the
conditions of God’s promises of forgiveness. In other words, they become so
hardened that they never want Jesus to forgive their sins.
Either they turn their back on God so defiantly that they refuse to return
to Jesus, or they never seek forgiveness because they imagine God approves
of their sin. An example of the latter might be someone so caught up in
homosexuality or damnable heresy that for the rest of their lives they
believe that their sin is acceptable to God.
There is a huge emphasis in Scripture that forgiveness is freely
available to anyone who comes in simple trust to Jesus, willing to let go of
their sin. [Here’s a few
examples.]
Moreover, the Bible indicates that it is not those who have done little
wrong who most easily find salvation, but those who see themselves as among
the worse sinners. [Relevant
Scriptures]
Consider Paul, so mightily forgiven and blessed of God. He considered
himself the greatest sinner (1
Timothy 1:15-16).
Why most Christians have thought themselves guilty of the unpardonable
sin
It
is normal for Christians to find themselves strongly tempted to think
that they are beyond God’s forgiveness. This is so common because we all
have the same spiritual enemy. Relative to the God who dwells in us, our
enemy is such a weakling that he can do little else but tell us cunning
lies in the hope of tricking us.
The devil is like a school bully. He hates you furiously but he is
powerless to hurt you because your best friend towers over him. As long as
you and your friend remain inseparable, the bully can only fume in utter
frustration at his helplessness. Your friend is faithful and will never
desert you. The bully’s only hope is if you wander away from your friend.
But why would you be so stupid? You would only do so if you imagined your
friend no longer cared for you and would not defend you.
The devil knows his options are limited. For as long as you cling to
Christ, you are a thousand times more powerful than him. So he hatches a
plan. Somehow he has to convince you that God is no longer devoted to you.
If you believe that lie you will wrongly imagine that prayer and staying
close to God is pointless. You might therefore gradually drift from the
only Person who can foil the Evil One’s plans to destroy you. If he can
fool you into not calling upon the devil-crushing power of God when he
attacks, he can turn you into his plaything.
So the Accuser of the brethren feverishly tries his old con job on you,
just like he does with every other Christian, hoping to trick you into
thinking the loving Lord has rejected you. If he could bring this off in
your life, he could twist you around his little finger, like someone
ordering people around because they do not realize that what looks
threatening is nothing but a toy gun. If you see through the devil’s
trick, he is a goner. He’ll have to run for his life.
No one on this planet deserves divine forgiveness. God offers
forgiveness, not because of what you have or haven’t done, but because of
what Jesus has done. In his extravagant love God wants to treat everyone
as if they were sinless. All that Justice requires is that you make it
legal for him to pardon you. This happens when through faith you so
identify with Christ that a divine exchange takes place whereby Christ
receives your sin (that’s what killed him) and you receive his sinlessness
(that’s what gives you spiritual life).
Remember that when Jesus was tempted, the devil quoted from the Bible.
Jesus exposed the devil’s lies by quoting Scripture back at him, proving
that the devil had distorted God’s Word. That is what I have done in this
webpage and in the next, and indeed in this whole series of pages. Don’t
let the Deceiver mess with your mind. Instead, resist the Evil One’s
powerfully persuasive brainwashing by continually immersing yourself in
the truth of these pages. Don’t give him license to deceive by dwelling on
his lies.
For effective medical treatment you must take identical pills day after
day. Likewise, you need to absorb these truths by reading them over and
over. Jesus overcame the devil’s lies by quoting Scripture from
memory. And he was so conversant with the full teaching of
Scripture that despite the deceiver’s powerful intellect, Jesus saw
through every cunning attempt to distort God’s Word.
Forgiven people whom one might guess had committed the unpardonable
sin
Who was the greatest first century Christian? Some would say Peter.
Some would say Paul. And yet both committed sins so grievous as to seem
unforgivable. When we gloss over the gravity of their sin we miss
something very significant about the extent of God’s forgiveness.
It was not false modesty that moved Paul to label himself the ‘chief of
sinners’. Though his mind had been saturated with Scriptures that told him
the opposite, he sought to murder powerful Christians like Stephen who, if
allowed to live, could have saved thousands of souls from eternal torment.
Even worse, he tried not just to end their precious lives, but to torture
Christians in the hope that they would blaspheme and turn their back on
their only Hope of salvation. Even mass murderers and violent, hate-crazed
rapists rarely try to violate their victims’ eternal destiny. Some people
have tried to banish Christianity from their country, but few people in
history have tried like Paul to obliterate every trace of Christianity
from the entire planet. Above all men, Paul was most worthy of
destruction, yet God was so eager to forgive him that the Lord
dramatically took the initiative by powerfully intervening on the Damascus
Road.
And consider Peter, the other contender for the title of greatest first
century Christian. When he first came to Jesus he was so overwhelmed by
his sinfulness that he fell at Jesus’ knees, begging the holy Lord to
leave him (Luke 5:8). Jesus welcomed Peter not only as a beloved follower,
but as an apostle, and not only an apostle, but one of the inner circle of
three (Peter, James and John). And yes, even among these three, Peter’s
name regularly topped the list.
Yet we find Peter committing one of the most grievous sins imaginable –
being used as a tool of Satan to tempt the holy Son of God. And this was
no minor temptation. He sought to use his special friendship with Jesus to
entice the Lord to reject the way of the cross – the only means whereby
anyone on this planet can find salvation. Had he succeeded, we would all
have been spiritually doomed! And coming from someone so close to Jesus’
heart, and from someone who had just delighted Jesus by his sensitivity to
the Spirit, Peter hurled at Jesus a most enticing temptation. ‘Get behind
me Satan!’ Jesus was forced to retort.
[Comment]
Still later, Peter disowned his Lord, not once or twice but three
times, using oaths and everything he could think of to totally
disassociate himself from his only Hope of salvation.
Years later, Paul had to confront this powerful church leader,
compelled to publicly accuse Peter of hypocrisy, lest he lead many astray
(Galatians 2:11-14).
Yet Peter was fully forgiven and showered with spiritual blessings. And
that same offer of divine forgiveness – that same extravagant love – is
eagerly extended to you.
Seal it with a prayer
Here’s a prayer I suggest you read to God.
Lord,
I am overwhelmingly aware that I have nothing to boast of in your
presence. And yet this realization is bringing me into line with exactly
the attitude you say we should have. ‘For it is by grace you have been
saved, through faith – and this not from yourselves, it is the gift of
God – not by works, so that no one can boast’ (Ephesians 2:8-9). And
again you say you chose the lowly and the despised things of this world
so that no one may boast before you (1 Corinthians 1:28-29). So here I
am, finding myself utterly unlike the Pharisee Jesus spoke of, who could
boast, ‘God, I thank you that I am not like other men – robbers,
evildoers, adulterers – or even like this tax collector. I fast twice a
week and give a tenth of all I get.’ Whether I like it or not, I am the
opposite of this man, who saw no need to ask forgiveness. Instead, I
find myself like that despised tax collector of whom you said, ‘He would
not even look up to heaven, but beat his breast and said, “God, have
mercy on me, a sinner.” ’ And yet you said of this tax collector, ‘This
man, rather than the other, went home justified before God’ (Luke
18:10-14).
You say, ‘If we claim we have not sinned, we make him [you] out to be
a liar and his word has no place in our lives’ (1 John 1:10). I am
certainly in no danger of that. I am overwhelmed by my sin, and yet you
say, ‘If we confess our sins, he is faithful and just and will forgive
us our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness’ (1 John 1:10). I
might think myself the greatest of sinners, but the apostle Paul was
certain that title belonged to him (1 Timothy 1:15) and you clearly
accepted him.
You say repeatedly in your Word that the basis of salvation is our
faith in you – faith that you are so loving and so powerful as to
purchase our forgiveness despite the magnitude of our sin. Since faith
is critical to salvation, it is obvious that the one you call the Father
of lies would focus his deceptive powers on trying to undermine my faith
in your forgiveness. I determine with your help not to dishonor you by
surrendering to satanic lies about your power and willingness to forgive
those who seek your forgiveness.
I regret everything I have ever done to dishonor you, and I refuse to
continue to dishonor you by doubting your willingness to forgive me. I
exalt you, Lord Jesus, as the sinless Son of God who chose to die and
rise again, thereby enabling me to live with you forever.
I choose to believe you, not satanic attempts to twist your words
against you. I choose to believe you when you said, ‘I am with you
always, to the very end of the age’ (Matthew 28:20) and, ‘Never will I
leave you; never will I forsake you’ (Hebrews 13:5).
You say your relationship with Christians is like that of a husband
and wife, and you say you hate divorce (Malachi 2:16). If a husband will
not leave his wife, the only way they could possibly split up is if the
wife refuses to live with her husband. That’s not me, Lord. I long to
live with you.
Obviously, it would delight the Deceiver if I were to doubt your love
and shrink from you in despair. So I choose to draw near you, conscious
of your promise that you will draw near to those who draw near to you
(James 4:8) and that whoever comes to you, you will never drive away
(John 6:37). So I put my faith in your faithfulness. I trust not my
righteousness, but your righteousness. I refuse to accept the Liar’s
attempt to slander you as being a liar. I praise you that because you
are righteous you will keep your word. And because you keep your word
about forgiving those who repent and put their faith in Jesus, I am one
of the millions who enjoy your undeserved forgiveness.
Not to be sold. © Copyright, 1997, 2002
Grantley Morris. Not to be copied in whole or in part without citing this
entire paragraph. Many more compassionate, inspiring, sometimes hilarious
writings by Grantley Morris available free at the following internet site
www.net-burst.net Freely you have received, freely give.
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