Psychotherapists would have us learn to forgive ourselves. However,
shouldn’t we instead seek forgiveness from the offended party? If you just
robbed the local convenience store and beat up the clerk, self-forgiveness
represents a refusal to acknowledge culpability, a denial of the obvious. Instead,
you first have to be reconciled to the victim, as Jesus taught:
·
“If you are offering your gift at the altar [or
are performing any spiritual exercise] and there remember that your brother has
something against you, leave your gift there in front of the altar. First go
and be reconciled to your brother; then come and offer your gift. (Matthew 5:23-24)
We cannot forgive ourselves until we deal
with the circumstances of our guilt. Clearly, there are objective moral debts
that first have to be paid. Certainly, the clerk would not be overjoyed to hear
of the abuser’s self-forgiveness as long as the actual offense is ignored. In
fact, the refusal to objectively deal with the offense just compounds it.
It is no better than an adulterer taking a drug to assuage his guilt. Rather
than silencing his conscience, he must listen to it!
This
has been on my mind because I just heard a sermon ending with the benediction
to “forgive yourself.” While I am sure that the pastor wasn’t talking about a
self-forgiveness apart from taking responsibility for the sin, she seemed to be
leaving an important ingredient from her equation.
I’m
referring to God. When we transgress, we also transgress against the Law-Giver.
Therefore, if self-forgiveness is both inappropriate and offensive when it
ignores the offense and the offended, it also offends God.
I
know that it sounds medieval, archaic and guilt-producing to suggest that God
is also offended by our sins, but why shouldn’t He be? He is righteousness, and
He is love. When we are victimized, we tend to look favorably upon a God who is
equally disturbed by our victimization, One who suffers along with us. We want
justice and also a God who promises justice in the form of punishment.
The
imposition of justice brings peace and the possibility of reconciliation. I have
heard of many cases where the victim lovingly reached out to the now convicted
prisoner. However, I have never heard of a case where the rape victim reached
out with love to the defendant who had beaten-the-rap. Instead, the victim is understandably
left with the burning feeling that justice must first be done.
If we
are created in the moral image of God (Eph. 4:23-24), then we shouldn’t expect
that God lacks a moral compass, moral sentiments, and perhaps even a sense of moral
outrage. Instead, the entire Bible confirms the fact that He is deeply offended
by sin. If this is the case, what does this suggest about self-forgiveness? It
suggests that exonerating ourselves without first checking in with God about
our guilt-status is terribly offensive to Him.
Well,
how can we first be reconciled to Him and forgiven? For one thing, we need to
recognize the seriousness of the offense. A man who had an affair with a
married woman cannot pay-off the aggrieved husband. Such a payment cannot
compensate for the enormity of the offense. It fails to recognize its enormity
and just compounds the insult.
If
God loves His children more than the husband loves his wife – and He does - it
is even more futile to attempt to buy-off God. Meanwhile, forgiving yourself for the affair
is an utter abomination in His eyes. No amount of self-adulation could possibly
lift the weight of the offense.
On
the other hand, if the aggrieved husband has also been unfaithful on several occasions,
he might be easier to placate. However, God has never been unfaithful. He has
birthed us, feed us, sustained us, and has planted His truths within us. He
cannot be placated by any amount of gifts. (Even self-sacrifice is futile!) He
made them all and is able to give Himself far greater gifts than we can.
Even
our best offerings are “filthy rags,” the garments of adultery, before our
perfect and all-sufficient God. In light of this, our only hope is in His mercy.
Although we cannot buy-off God, He has bought-off our sins by paying the price
for them on the cross. An adequate payment had to be made, and only He was able
to make it.
Instead of crying out for mercy, any attempt at
self-forgiveness or even restitution is a grave insult to Him and a
minimization of our culpability. Instead, our God desires us to confront our guilt and to
take full responsibility. And He has promised to aid us in this (Psalm 51:6).
If virtue and relational restoration are measured by an
appreciation of the enormity of our sins, then Western society and secular psychotherapy
have taken us in the wrong direction.
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