Jesus (just a pic) taught his disciple |
“Anyone who isn’t
with me [Jesus] opposes me, and anyone who isn’t working with me is actually
working against me. So I tell you, every sin and blasphemy can be forgiven –
except blasphemy against the Holy Spirit, which will never be forgiven. Anyone who
speaks against the Son of Man can be forgiven, but anyone who speaks against
the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven, either in this world or in the world to
come” (Matthew 12:30-32, NLT).
Discussions about
forgiveness often get detoured by the question, “Is there a sin God can’t forgive?” Once this question has been
raised, there is an almost inevitable corollary, “How to know I haven’t committed that sin?” Today’s passage
certainly seems to declare that there is indeed an unforgivable sin. And blaspheming
the Holy Spirit sounds suspiciously like a sin someone might commit simply by
thinking about it.
So what does it mean to
blaspheme or speak against the Holy Spirit? At the basic, personal level, those
who worry about this probably haven’t done it! Someone who blasphemes the Holy
Spirit isn’t interested in forgiveness.
Blaspheming the Holy Spirit involves invalidating or
rejecting God’s most compelling move toward us. Once the Holy Spirit has
appealed to us, God can go no further. If we are hardened against the approach,
we have placed ourselves beyond reach of forgiveness, even if it’s offered. When Jesus described the Holy Spirit’s role in
salvation, he said, “When [the Holy
Spirit] comes, he will convict the world of its sin, and of God’s forgiveness,
and of the coming judgment. The world’s sin is that it refuses to believe in me”
(John 16:8-9). Unbelief in Christ is the sin we all commit and that the Holy
Spirit works to convict us about. If we irrevocably turn from that conviction,
we’re permanently lost. Therefore, we “will never be
forgiven.”
Knowing what blaspheming
the Holy Spirit is doesn’t give us the right to declare when anyone (even
ourselves!) has done it. Only God ultimately knows about those who have
blasphemed his Holy Spirit. Rather than worrying about offending the Spirit, we
ought to invest more time in obeying the Spirit! Think about this: The Holy
Spirit is God’s indwelling presence in us, starting from the moment of faith
(Ephesians 1:13-14). Just as Jesus is Immanuel – “God with us”
– the Holy Spirit is – “God in us.” He is not our conscience, dispensing
common sense. He is the eternal wisdom – wholly God. Amen.
THINK BIG.
START SMALL. GO DEEP.
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