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Confessing Sins

C.J. Mahaney has a great post on confessing sin. You can read the whole thing here, but here’s a teaser: When I have sinned against someone, a sincere confession is required. A confession that is sincere and pleasing to God will be specific and brief. I have learned to be suspicious of my confession if it’s general and lengthy. A sincere confession of sin should be specific (“I was arrogant and angry when I made that statement; will you please forgive me for sinning against you in this way?”) and brief (this shouldn’t take long). When I find myself adding an explanation to my confession, I’m not asking forgiveness but instead appealing for understanding.If my so-called confession extends beyond a very specific (acknowledgement of sin) sentence or two, then I am most likely excusing my sin, and requesting understanding for my sin, rather than sincerely asking forgiveness because of my sin. So I have learned to be suspicious of any confession of sin that is lengthy. Genuine conviction of sin is evidenced by a sincere,specific, and brief confession of sin, without any reference to circumstances or the participation of anyone else. When I sin, I am responsible for my sin, and the cause of my sin is always within my heart and never lies outside my heart.Often after I sin, and even after I confess my sin—most importantly to God to receive the forgiveness I need from him for my sin through the death of his Son for my many sins—I experience a conflict in my soul about the confessing, when necessary, to the appropriate individuals. And whenever there is this conflict in my soul about specifically confessing my sin, I am aware that pride is actively at work in my soul, opposing the confession and seeking to persuade me that it wouldn’t be wise or even necessary for me to confess. But I have learned to ignore this noise from my arrogant heart, and instead weaken this noise by specifically confessing my sin to the appropriate individual as quickly as possible.When I do confess, first and foremost to God and then (where and when appropriate) to others, I want my confession to be sincere and specific. I want my confession to express genuine sorrow and gratefulness to God for the mercy I experience because of the substitutionary sacrifice of his Son for my sins on the cross.And when I confess my sin to others and ask their forgiveness when I have sinned against them, I don’t want my confession to resemble the press conference of a high-profile athlete, characterized by evasive language and the refusal to be specific. Instead, I hope my confession of sin is the sincere and specific confession of one genuinely convicted of his sin, sorrowful about his sin, and amazed at the grace of God provided for the forgiveness of sin. 

~ by rabbi on February 23, 2008.

3 Responses to “Confessing Sins”

  1. Do you think it is possible –if a person does not know we have sinned against them (or, until they know)– then the only One we have sinned against is God?
    Or, put another way, if the person we have sinned against does not know we have sinned against them, is it necessary to ALWAYS confess our sin to them? Or, are there times when we should NOT confess the sin we have committed against them? Sometimes it seems that a confession would be committing even more sin, for we would be hurting the one to whom we are confessing.

  2. I think confessing to get something off your chest or to appease your conscience is not often helpful to the person sinned against who may be ignorant.

    However, suppose that person finds out from another?

    For example, what if I slander a brother or talk smack about him, but he doesn’t know about it … yet. Better to hear my repentant confession from me than learn of my sin against him from another.

  3. Yes, this is the tension that we live between. Being led by the Spirit is a must.

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