The offense of God
Let me rephrase the question
by putting it on a more personal level.
“Is there a sin that is so grievous to God, that He cannot forgive it?”
Is there a sin that we may
have committed that may put us in danger of being unforgivable?
What if you had killed
someone? I am not talking about unintentionally killing someone, but actually
taking the life of someone with intent.
Could God forgive that offense?
I have read that 50% of the
women that are sitting in an average
Sunday morning service have had an abortion. If that is true and some have told
me that 50% is a low estimate, then there are lots of women who are carrying
around the guilt of murdering their unborn child and that burden is so heavy
that the weight of it is slowly killing them.
One of the most powerful
Christians who ever lived was a murderer.
Saul of Tarsus hated Christians with so much passion that he actually
hunted them down so he could have the pleasure of watching them die. You can
read about it in Acts 8:1 and 9:1. God forgave him and then used him unlike
anyone else since.
Listen, if you are carrying
around the guilt of abortion get that heavy burden off your life. All that it takes is for you to confess your
sins (I John 1:9), and repent
(Ezekiel 18:32), (Acts 3:19-20).
Please, please, please, don’t
carry that heavy burden one more day, you can go to bed tonight with that heavy
burden lifted from your life.
What about adultery and
fornication, are those sins forgivable?
Contrary to what our debased culture teaches us today these are indeed
serious sins. There are a whole list of scriptural warnings of the futility of these
offenses to God. Luke 16:18, Mark 10:11,
Matt. 19:9, ICor. 6:9 plus many more. If someone has fallen into one of these
sins is there hope?
In John chapter 4 Jesus met a
woman near a town called Sychar in Samaria who had been married 5 times (It
doesn’t say that she had been widowed 5 times) and she was presently living
with a man who was not her husband. Upon
this woman’s confession she was forgiven by Jesus and after being relieved of
her burden of sin she became a passionate testifier of God’s forgiveness.
Another time in John chapter
8 he forgave a woman who had been dragged to Him after being caught in the very
act of adultery. Jesus forgave her and then told her to repent and change her
life style.
What about lying? Is that unforgivable? In John 18 Simon Peter,
one of Jesus’s disciples lied three times when asked if he even knew
Jesus. Peter was forgiven and became a
strong witness for Jesus and even died a martyr’s death.
What about stealing? With his
dying breath, Jesus forgave the thief next to him on the cross of his sin.
I should think that I have
touched some of us, if not all of us with at least one of the sins for which
Jesus died, myself included.
But we have not answered the
original question, “Is there a sin that Jesus cannot forgive?”
If one were to ask the
average church goer to come up with a definition of GRACE he or she would
probably say something like this. “It’s an umbrella of favor that I live under
that allows me to live knowing that my sins are forgiven.” Now, I am not saying
that they would use those exact words, but if you were to observe their
lifestyle, that is what they believe.
Allow me to give you the
definition of GRACE according to Dietrich Bonhoeffer. “Grace is the gospel which must be sought
again and again, the gift which must be asked for, the door at which a man must
knock. Such GRACE is costly because it calls us to follow, and it is GRACE
because it calls us to follow Jesus Christ. It is costly because it cost a man
his life, and it is GRACE because it gives a man the only true life. It is costly because it condemns sin, and
GRACE because it justifies the sinner.
Above all it is costly because it cost God the life of His son. “Ye were
bought with a price.” And what has cost God much, cannot be cheap for us. Above
all it is GRACE because God did not reckon His son too dear a price to pay for
our life, but delivered Him up for us. Costly GRACE is the incarnation of God.”
If we contrast that Biblical
definition and our responsibility to it as Christians, with the contemporary
church goers definition we find GRACE to be not costly, but cheap.
GRACE is preached today as an
inexhaustible treasury of blessings, so infinite that there is no limit to what
I can get away with and still come under its covering.
Today’s believer shows little
desire to be delivered from sin. As a
matter of fact today’s Christians live very much like the rest of the world, so
much so that you’d be hard pressed to pick one out in the market place on
Wednesday morning.
Cheap GRACE does not require forgiveness,
does not require repentance, does not require confession, and
does not require integrity, or discipline.
I live in a world where all
my sins are justified and forgiven before I even commit them. I can go and sin as much as I can get away
with and rely on GRACE to forgive me.
You may ask, “Surely you
don’t mean to say that people believe that?” My answer to that question is that
there are thousands of churches today who make their living peddling that very
belief. Why do you suppose people flock by the thousands to those huge mega-churches?
The wide road that leads to
HELL as outlined in Matt. 7:13 is easy for it asks nothing whereas the narrow
one which leads to life requires everything, even our very lives. The narrow
road that leads to life is so narrow that Jesus tells us that only a few enter
through it. Some translations render it, “Only a few find it.” It is not only
narrow but it is a steep climb. Proverbs 15:24
So, is there a sin that God
cannot forgive?
I would suggest that to
continue in one’s sins without contrition, hoping that God will overlook your
sins is such an abuse of His GRACE that is so deadly that even God cannot
forgive them.
Someone has said that,
“Today’s church has gathered like eagles around the carcass of cheap GRACE and
there we have drunk of the poison which has killed the life of Christ in her.”
We must heed the command that
Jesus gave the woman caught in adultery, “Go and sin no more.”
Let’s see what John the
apostle said in his letter. I John 3:9 says “Those who have been born into God’s
family do not make a practice of sinning, because God’s life is in them so they
can’t keep on sinning, because they are children of God.”
Read Matt. 7:22-23 NKJ I Cor. 6:9-11
AMEN