R
Robert_in_SD
Guest
Hello Isdaari;My take on it in a nutshell:
“If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just to forgive us our sins”
So… if God forgives us, and we don’t forgive ourselves… isn’t that really presumptuous and arrogant of us? I mean, putting our opinion of ourselves above God’s opinion? Bad idea.
If God says we’re forgiven, we’re forgiven, our sins cast “as far as the East is from the West”, “as though we’d never sinned”, and we should forget about it and move on. No use at all for guilt at that point!
I don’t think the issue is that scrupulous Catholics doubt being forgiven of sins they confess to God. Rather, I think the problem is in knowing what is a sin… and what is not a sin. That seems to me to be the real issue with people who scruple over the smallest of issues. And I don’t think it’s confined to Catholics alone, although the stereotype certainly does exist. I’m sure there are some very scrupulous Baptists, Lutherans, Non-Denominationals, and even Methodists out there struggling over whether to confess to God that they sampled the cooking sherry and burned the Christmas cookies…
In the larger sense, I do agree with you that we need never doubt God’s power to forgive even the blackest of sins.
Peace,
Robert