There was a Catholic priest living in the Philippines, who was a well loved, hard working, and respected pastor. Unknown to anyone, however, he carried a sin within his heart – something he had done whilst in seminary, and although he had repented of it some years before, he still carried the guilt within him.
He had no sense of peace, no inner joy, no sense of forgiveness.
As it happened, there was a woman in his parish who deeply loved God, and who claimed to have visions, in which she spoke to Christ, and Christ to her. The priest was skeptical of her claims, so to test her visions, he said to her,” You say you speak directly with Christ in your visions. Let me ask you a favour. The next time you have one of those visions, I want you to ask him what sin your priest committed when he was in seminary.”
The woman agreed and went home. When she returned to the church a few days later, the priest said, ” Well, did Christ visit you in your dreams?”
She replied, ” Yes. he did.”
” And did you ask him what sin I committed in seminary?”
“Yes, I asked him.”
“Well, what did he say? “
“He said, ‘ I don’t remember,'”
That is what God wants us to know about forgiveness. When our sins are forgiven, they are forgotten. The past, with its sins, hurts, brokenness, and self recrimination – is gone, dead, crucified, remembered no more.
What God forgives, He forgives,
But in today’s Gospel Jesus tells us that there is a sin that God does not forgive.
A sin that cannot be forgiven.
A sin against the Holy Spirit.
This is an obvious puzzle, don’t you think? That all the sin, all the heinous crimes, all the inhumanity of man to man, can be forgiven- all but one.
Sin against the Holy Spirit!
Why is that so?
And what is sin against the Holy Spirit?
Mark tells us that Jesus said this, because they – the Pharisees- said abut Jesus, ” ” He has an unclean spirit.”
Does this mean that Jesus is angry and denying forgiveness to those who accused him of working with Satan?
I don’t think Jesus, nor God would hold back forgiveness if forgiveness were truly sought.
Don’t you agree?
So what is all this about?
Well it is explained by some who study these sayings closely, that Jesus could not have used the phrase ‘ The Holy Spirit ‘ in the way we Christians use the term. The Spirit as we know it, did not come until Jesus had returned to his glory.
It wasn’t until Pentecost that men and women came to the supreme experience of the Holy Spirit.
Jesus must have used the term, they say, in the Jewish sense of the term.
In Jewish thought the Holy Spirit had two functions. First was to reveal God’s truth, and the second was to enable the truth to be recognised. And acknowledged.
The Holy Spirit enables people to recognise God’s truth, when he enters their lives. The truth of how they are living, for example.
The old saying is that the Holy Spirit convicts us of our sins.
That’s fine, but if we don’t do anything about it what is the point? .
Ignoring God’s truth, denying it, leads to a condition where one can look on the goodness of Christ, for example, and call it evil – as the Pharisees did.
When you can see goodness and call it something else.
When you can see the truth and deny it, and instead profess a lie to be the truth.
I have met people like that. They can lie to your face and not blink while doing it,
They can see a kind act and denigrate it.
They can do evil and present it as virtuous.
And if you have no sense of guilt for what you have done; no contrition, no regrets, no remorse, then how can you be forgiven?
God cannot forgive someone who refuses forgiveness, laughs in the face of God, calls the Son of God, Satan’s minion.
The prerequisite for forgiveness is the expression of penitence.
If someone does not accept what they are – doesn’t even know what they are, then how can they be forgiven?
There are many stories of men on death row who have accepted Christ as their Saviour and experienced forgiveness, and who went to their deaths quietly and at peace.
There are as many stories of men on death row who laughed in the face of those who would bring Christ to them. and went swearing and cursing, and struggling to their deaths.
Then there are gracious examples of forgiveness coming from the victims, of terrible acts.
Corrie ten Boom had been a prisoner in a nazi concentration camp during the war and she and her sister had endured terrible degrading acts from one of the German guards. He had jeered at them and visually raped them as they stood naked in the delousing shower.
Now, this man, one of the most cruel and heartless of the guards, was facing her, with hand outstretched, and asking, ” Will you forgive me?”
She says, ” I stood there with coldness clutching my heart but I know that the will can function regardless of the temperature of the heart.
“I prayed, ‘ Jesus help me’ .
“Woodenly, mechanically, I thrust out my hand onto the one stretched out to me and I experienced an incredible thing.
“The current started in my shoulder and raced down my arms and sprang into our clutched hands. Then this warm reconciliation seemed to flood my whole being, bringing tears to me eyes.
“I forgive you brother,” I cried with my whole heart.
“For a long moment we grasped each other’s hands, the former guard, and the former prisoner. I have never known the love of God so intensely as I did in that moment.
“To forgive is to set a prisoner free and discover the prisoner was you.” She says.
That guard knew his sin. And wanted – needed – begged for – forgiveness – from the person he had sinned against.
He was acknowledging the goodness in the woman facing him, and the evil he had done..
His former victim forgave him, and so, I am sure, did God.
Those whom Jesus says cannot be forgiven are those who know no guilt, and feel no need for forgiveness.
How can they be forgiven?
What for?
If they feel no guilt.
There is one condition for forgiveness and that is penitence. And as long as people see the loveliness of Christ’s love , as long as they hate sin, even though they can’t leave it, even if they are in the mud and the mire, they can still be forgiven.
Praise God.
But those who have lost the ability to recognise goodness when they see it, and have so inverted their moral values that to them evil is good, and good is evil, then they can never be forgiven.
That is sin against the Holy Spirit.
When you come across that sort of person you are convinced that Satan must live within them.
In this modern era, however, I wonder if that way of being, that sort of behaviour, is a sign of mental illness, manifesting itself as evil.
And if that is so, that sin is caused be a mental illness, then could the actions of such a person, be understood by God?
And in His gracious wisdom, could He then forgive?
And if so, then could we?
Amen.
