"If we confess our sins, He is faithful and just and will forgive us
our sins and purify us from all unrighteousness." - 1 John 1:9
The
apostle Peter was one of three disciples who walked with Jesus closer than the
other nine. He was the most enthusiastic and the one man who was willing to
step into territories where others would not dare. He was the first to step out
of the boat and walk on water. He wanted to protect Jesus at times when Jesus
rebuked him for having a demon influence him. He cut off the ear of the guard
who wanted to arrest Jesus in the garden. As Peter matured, the Holy Spirit
harnessed his many extreme emotions.
The
greatest trial for Peter was when he denied the Lord just before Jesus was
crucified. Three times he denied knowing Jesus. Jesus predicted that the cock
would crow after the third time just to reinforce the prophecy to Peter. Peter
was crushed when he realized he had failed His Lord so badly.
The Lord
forgave Peter for his denial. However, gaining forgiveness from Jesus was not
the most difficult part for Peter. The hard part was forgiving himself. As we
mature in the faith, we begin moving in victory after victory with our Lord.
Then out of nowhere, an event happens that reveals our true sin nature, and we
are confronted face to face with this reality. We cannot believe that we are
capable of such sin. There is no good thing in us save the grace of Jesus
Christ and His blood that cleanses us. When God looks at us, He looks at the
blood of Christ that has covered our sin. He does not look at our sin once we
confess it.
When we
have difficulty forgiving ourselves, this is pride at its deepest level. We are
making an assumption that we should never have sinned and that we are too
mature to sin. This is a trap from the enemy of our souls. People who cannot
forgive do not recognize from what they have been forgiven. That includes us.
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