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News and views from the German-language region of Europe

March 9, 2012

Leaving the past behind

Filed under Sabbath Thoughts

In four weeks we will keep the Passover and remember the sacrifice of Jesus Christ for our sins.

Some people turn to therapists to deal with their feelings of guilt. Humanly devised teachings of psychology can make us feel good about ourselves and seek to improve our self-image. None of these human efforts, however, can forgive sin and completely remove the spiritual penalty associated with it. Only Christ's sacrifice can permanently cleanse and forgive us.

Christ's sacrifice was so complete that no sin ever committed is too big or small for God to forgive (Psalm 103:3). Paul called himself the chief of sinners, yet God used him powerfully after his conversion (1 Timothy 1:15). His example inspires great hope. No matter what our background or past mistakes, when we genuinely repent and are baptized, God promises complete forgiveness.

As God no longer associates us with our old sins, so should we put the past behind us. With our old sins now buried in the grave, as pictured by baptism, we should not go back and dig them up. Considering the symbolism involved, this would be akin to grave robbing.

For some, such grave robbery in the form of continuing to fret about past sins may seem like repentance. But it’s more a way of punishing oneself. We need to understand that God wants repentance, not penance. He does not want us to throw old sins back into His face by continuing to be consumed with thinking about them. He expects us to trust Him and His desire to completely forgive and forget.

We need to learn from our mistakes; but once we have done so, we need to leave them buried in the past. We are to "walk in newness of life" (Romans 6:4). An individual who does this, in God’s eyes, becomes a new person, someone completely forgiven as though he or she had never sinned.

It is important that we see ourselves from this perspective and focus on the future. Paul expressed the concept this way in Philippians 3:13-14: "One thing I do, forgetting those things which are behind and reaching forward to those things which are ahead, I press toward the goal for the prize of the upward call of God in Christ Jesus."

With these thoughts I wish us all a rewarding Sabbath!

Paul Kieffer's blog with personal insights and news from the German-language region in Europe.

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