There is such a thing as an unforgivable sin, and we will not apologise
for dealing with a sober theme. Now you know that every wise Christian
will say such words as these to you about that sin (and most of you have
heard these counsels often through your life) - hear me - that if you
are anxious that you have committed blasphemy against the Spirit, you
needn't fear, for such blasphemy is always accompanied by complete indifference
to that sin.
by Geoff Thomas
Mark 3:29&30 "'Whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will
never be
forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin.' He [Jesus} said this because
they were saying, 'He has an evil spirit.'
The glory of the Christian gospel is the finished work which Jesus Christ
completed, by which a full atonement was made for the guilt of countless
sinners. In anticipation of this the prophet can declare, "'Come
now, let
us reason together,' says the Lord. 'Though your sins are like scarlet,
they shall be as white as snow; though they are red as crimson, they shall
be like wool'" (Isa. 1:18). Scarlet sins made as white as snow! So
it was
for King David's sins of adultery, dishonesty, and murder there was
forgiveness. For the many sins of the woman of Luke 7 there was
forgiveness. For the prodigal son's riotous living in a distant city there
was forgiveness. For Simon Peter's triple denial of Christ by swearing
and
profanity there was forgiveness. For Jerusalem men who had nailed the
Son
of God to a cross and let him die hanging there forgiveness was prayed
for
by Christ and freely offered at Pentecost. For Saul of Tarsus's merciless
persecution of Christians there was forgiveness. For the Corinthian church
member who slept with his father's wife there was forgiveness.
Whatever your guilt - if you were once an SS guard in Auschwitz, yet
there
is forgiveness. You have been a modernist minister who has led people
astray for years preaching error, and calling your humanist ideas the
gospel, and yet to you too forgiveness is offered. Consider the man called
the 'Son of Sam', that merciless serial killer of many young women in
New
York more than a decade ago. That murderer has found forgiveness through
the Saviour in his prison and has walked in that jail for years in newness
of life. The blood of Jesus Christ, God's Son, cleanses us from all sin.
"But that's not fair," men complain. No it is not fair. It has
nothing to
do with fairness. It has everything to do with the vastness of God's pity;
forgiveness is freely offered to the vilest offenders. So may there be
forgiveness for me too? Yes!
The hallmark of divine mercy is that it is utterly immeasurable. God's
love
extends to the heavens. He is abounding in steadfast love to all who call
upon him. The psalmists were overwhelmed at a realisation of this: "If
thou, O Lord, shouldst mark iniquities, Lord, who could stand? But there
is
forgiveness with thee" (Psa. 130:3&4). In a letter Paul reminded
Timothy of
his own case, should Timothy ever worry that he had out-sinned the grace
of
God. Paul was the very evidence of the perfect patience of Christ. The
Lord
Jesus was never once impatient, and never will be. Paul had formerly
blasphemed and persecuted and insulted Christ himself and yet he found
mercy (I Tim. 1:13). There is forgiveness for all the sins and blasphemies
of men. Two weeks after John Wesley had his great experience of conversion
in Aldersgate Street in the city of London on 24th May in 1738 Wesley
was
invited by the Vice Chancellor of Oxford University to preach at an
official university service in St. Mary's Church. The whole university
assembled there, and Wesley began preaching on the text, "By grace
are ye
saved," speaking to these students and their teachers on the sublime
mercy
of God in Jesus Christ covering all their past sins, deliverance from
guilt, from fear, and from the power of sin. Then Wesley paused and
envisaged some objections going through the minds of his sceptical
audience. He paused and said to them:
"Ah, some will say, 'This is an uncomfortable doctrine." Nay!
It is very
full of comfort to all sinners, that 'whosoever believeth in him shall
not
be shamed.' That same Lord over all is rich in mercy unto all that call
upon him. Here is comfort. High as heaven! Strong as death! What? Mercy
for
all? For Zacchaeus, a public robber? For Mary Magdalene, a common harlot?
I
can hear someone saying, 'Then, even I, may hope for mercy?' And so you
may, you who are afflicted, whom none has comforted. God will not reject
your prayer. No, perhaps he will say this next hour, 'Be of good cheer,
thy
sins are forgiven thee, so forgiven that they shall reign over thee no
more, yea and that Holy Spirit shall bear witness with the Spirit that
thou
art a child of God.'
"O glad tidings! Tidings of great joy which are sent unto all people!
Ho,
everyone that thirsteth, come ye to the waters. Come ye, and buy without
money and without price. Whatsoever your sins are, though red like crimson,
though more than the heirs on your head, return unto the Lord, and he
will
have mercy on you, and to our God, for he will abundantly pardon. This
must
be the foundation of all our preaching, that is, forgiveness must be
preached first." Those themes were the foundation of the Great Awakening,
the message that men were sinners, but through the love of God in Jesus
Christ full forgiveness could be offered to them and that they could
receive it by faith. And if there were to be another mighty work of God
in
our land before the end of the world it will again be characterised by
such
lively offers of pardon through the grace of God in our Lord to the chief
of sinners.
The theme of divine forgiveness is at the very heart of the good news
about
Jesus Christ. If some people reading this are obsessed by one sin which
they have committed then there is wonderful news of free forgiveness from
heaven offered to you. For all of you who listen week by week, some who
for
many years have been distrusting Christ and now are beginning to think
that
it is too late, that the day of mercy is past, I say No! To you too
forgiveness is offered in Jesus' name. There is good news of mercy to
all
creatures, however enormously defiling their sins, no matter the grief
and
pain they have caused others.
Then if all that is true what is the Lord Jesus talking about when he
says
here that "whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never
be
forgiven; he is guilty of an eternal sin" (v.29)? Why is this warning
in
such urgent tones? Is there some specially heinous sin amongst the roster
of sins which we commit? Then which one is it? Is there one of the ten
commandments which, if we break it, brings this terrible judgment upon
us?
Does a violation of that command plunge a sinner into the despair of the
unforgiven for ever? Our Lord does tell us that there is an unforgiven
sin.
The Lord Jesus speaks of it, and what is recorded her in Mark is repeated
in also in the gospels of Matthew (chapter 12) and Luke (chapter 12).
All
three refer to his words about the eternal sin. This warning is put into
the Bible that none should presume that every single sin of every single
person is going to be forgiven. Let none think of forgiveness lightly
as
though it were simply God's job, like a machine when a coin is inserted
dispenses soft drinks or chocolate.
This warning is put into Scripture three times to help every one of
us
resist sin more earnestly than we've been doing. Remember that they are
not
my words, nor man's words but they are the words of loving Jesus. Let
me
say immediately that I know the identity of the sin which can never be
forgiven, and so do many of you. In other words, there is no mystery as
to
what is the unforgivable sin, and by the end of this sermon those of you
who want to know the answer to that question will know it too. We have
the
biblical data so to speak with such confidence. He who has ears to hear
let
him hear!
1. WHAT THE UNFORGIVABLE SIN IS NOT.
There are many gross sins which, like all sins, are sins against the
Holy
Spirit, yet they are not this sin of blasphemy against the Holy Spirit,
which is unpardonable.
i] The unpardonable sin is not blasphemy. You might think at first that
it
is because our Lord talks of "whoever blasphemes against the Holy
Spirit
will never be forgiven" (v.29). But you must go back a verse and
read the
preceding sentence: "all the sins and blasphemies of men will be
forgiven
them" (v.28). Forgiveness for the blasphemer, and so we cannot take
it to
be blasphemy - of which the Heidelberg Catechism judges, "No sin
is greater
or more provoking to God than the profaning of His name" (Q. 100).
Maybe
that is true, but for that great sin we must affirm that there is great
forgiveness. You remember that Saul of Tarsus in his rage against the
first
generation of Christians tells us "I tried to force them to blaspheme"
(Acts 26:11). He brought some terrible pressure or torture to bear upon
them to make them curse the name of Jesus, but the God who pities his
children will certainly forgive them for that. A student once came to
me
troubled with blasphemous thoughts racing through his mind. How distressed
he was. We looked together at other men in the history of the church who
have also been troubled like that, men like John Bunyan. Those thoughts
are
the fiery darts of the wicked one. We read and prayed together a few times
- "Drop thy still dews of quietness till all our strivings cease"
- and
those thoughts dissipated, not to trouble him ever again. They were not
the
unpardonable sin. I don't know whether Peter's swearing at a fireside
that
he didn't know Jesus was accompanied by blasphemies, but there was
forgiveness for Peter. Blasphemy is not the sin which cannot be forgiven.
Be cheered you who have blasphemed! If you seek mercy in God through Christ
your sin will be covered.
ii] It is not any sexual sin. There are all sorts of sexual aberrations
commonly spoken of today, which are the laughter of fools, so hideously
and
blatantly trivialised. I wouldn't minimise the special implications of
sexual sin for the destruction of personhood and peace and purity, let
alone for the spread of sexual disease and the break-up of families and
so
much pain, but sexual sins are not unpardonable sins. You know how soberly
Paul refers to this is his first letter to the Corinthians. He has been
informed that one of the church members has gone to a prostitute and he
responds like this: "Flee from sexual immorality. All other sins
a man
commits are outside his body, but he who sins sexually sins against his
own
body" (I Cor. 6:18). It is a mysterious phrase, and maybe it is saying
this, that in sexual union we communicate our love, our oneness with that
person, in a very intimate way, by our actual bodies. But in sexual
misconduct we sin also in a unique way against our bodies - bodies that
are
destined for heaven and the presence of God. Paul has referred to what
that
church member has actually been doing - a Christian has taken the members
of Christ and joined them to a prostitute - think of it! How horrible.
You
are sinning against your bodies which are joined to Christ. Then he goes
on
to add this: "Do you know that your body is a temple of the Holy
Spirit,
who is in you, whom you have received from God?" (2 Cor. 6:19). You
will
remember that Joseph in Egypt, when tempted by Potiphar's wife, said to
her, "How could I do such a wicked thing and sin against God?"
(Gen. 39:9).
Yet there is nothing to suggest that any form of sexual sin whatsoever
is
the unpardonable sin. In those passages where we read about sin against
the
Spirit there's no reference to the seventh commandment. So those of us
who
have sinned in this sphere, please do not even imagine that you have sinned
the unforgivable sin.
iii] Suicide is not the unforgivable sin. I have a friend who lived
for the
first 30 years of his life without Christ, living for the world and making
money. He made a million, but was in utter despair. There was no purpose
at
all to life. Who wants to be a millionaire? He had wanted to be one, and
now that he was one life was no sweeter. He contemplated suicide most
seriously, but the Jesuits who had taught him - he was raised a Roman
Catholic - had told him that that would take a person to hell, and so
he
thought if he ended his own life he would be in a worse state than his
present bleak condition. The fear of hell kept him from suicide and that
was good, but did not give him knowledge of the Saviour from heaven. Then
he met my friend Dave Dykstra who wisely and gently befriended him and
they
did things together and talked for some months. Then he went along to
Dave's church where I met him a few years later by which time he had come
to know the Lord, and his darkness, and that of his wife too, had been
turned to light. The purpose and attempt to self-murder is not the sin
against the Holy Ghost. The jailer in Philippi intended to kill himself
and
Paul cried to him, "Do yourself no harm!" That is our message
to the people
of despair who live all around us. We have good tidings of great joy for
them and all people. We have a Saviour for you: forgiveness for you: more
abundant life for you. Saul of Tarsus had driven Christians to think that
suicide could be better than the torture he inflicted upon them. What
a
monster! Yet his sins were pardoned. There is no grounds for us to believe
that suicide is the unforgivable sin, or that those who take their own
lives when the balance of their minds is disturbed are inevitably lost.
I
do not believe that.
So those are three cases which have been thought of as unpardonable
sins,
but they are not. There are many others. People think it might be growing
apostasy, like Solomon, taking wife after wife, and erecting temples and
idols to strange gods in Jerusalem. But even that wickedness is not
blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. There is hope for all of you who have
sinned ever so fearfully in these great words of Christ, "I tell
you the
truth, all the sins and blasphemies of men will be forgiven." He
says that
they will be, and so who are we to say they won't be?
2. WHAT IS THE UNFORGIVABLE SIN?
Look at the context in which these words of Jesus are spoken. He has
begun
his public ministry and has set the nation on fire. By the power of the
Holy Spirit he has healed every kind of sickness in everyone who has come
to him. He has preached like the archangel himself, such authority, wisdom
and graciousness. He has delivered people from demons: they flee back
to
hell with a word from Christ and those demoniacs are restored. Tens of
thousands walk to Galilee to meet him and touch him. This is a mighty
work
of the Spirit of God. By the Holy Ghost Christ is doing these great works.
The kingdom of God has come. It has been established in Capernaum by the
King from heaven.
But there is powerful opposition. His mother Mary and his half brothers
and
sisters arrive from Nazareth. They want to take him away and keep him
under
control until his delusions have disappeared. The leading theologians
in
the land, the teachers of the law in Jerusalem, have been informed about
all that is happening. They go north up the Jordan Valley to Galilee to
examine all that Jehovah Jesus is doing and saying. After seeing for
themselves the majesty and power of the works of God the Holy Spirit
through our Lord this is the conclusion this Inquisition comes to: Jesus
"is possessed by Beelzebub! By the prince of demons he is driving
out
demons" (v.22).
It is in answering that accusation that the Lord says the words of our
text, "whoever blasphemes against the Holy Spirit will never be forgiven."
The setting in which those words are spoken is one in which the mighty
accomplishments of the Spirit are present in abundance, but these men
utterly pervert the Spirit's works. They deny what is divine, and display
hellish rage against Jesus and the testimony of the Spirit. It is in that
context that we can start to understand what the unpardonable sin
specifically is. It has obviously to do with attributing to the devil
what
is the work of the Holy Spirit.
i] The Unforgivable Sin During the Earthly Ministry of Christ.
But before we define it we need to look at how Matthew records these
same
words of Jesus because in his account something slightly puzzling is added:
"And so I tell you, every sin and blasphemy will be forgiven men,
but the
blasphemy against the Spirit will not be forgiven" (Matt. 12:31),
but then,
in this account in Matthew (and in Luke 12:10 too), Jesus goes on to say
these words, "Anyone who speaks a word against the Son of Man will
be
forgiven, but anyone who speaks against the Holy Spirit will not be
forgiven, either in this age or in the age to come" (Matt. 12:32).
What can
that mean? Blasphemy against Jesus is forgiven, but blasphemy against
the
Holy Spirit never forgiven.
Let me explain it to you. It is not difficult to understand. That
distinction between blasphemy against Jesus and blasphemy against the
Holy
Spirit was only relevant before Calvary. It doesn't apply to us today.
It
has not applied since the resurrection of Jesus Christ and Pentecost.
That
distinction cannot be found in any of the New Testament letters, because
it
was only during the earthly ministry of our Lord that Jesus could make
such
a distinction. If you are still puzzled, then let me explain: the reason
was that Jesus' identity as the eternal Son of God was veiled from people
during the thirty-three years he walked amongst men. So he perplexed people
and they disagreed amongst themselves about him, some being very harsh
in
their judgments. His family considered him to be just the son of Mary
and
Joseph who had developed religious delusions about himself and so was
one
brick short of a load. Others argued, "He is Elijah, or he is one
of the
old prophets returned to us." Others suggested John the Baptist.
But the
Pharisees were most harsh, saying, "No. I think he's the devil."
Part of
the reason they said such wicked things about him was that the Lord Jesus
was deliberately hiding his glory from men. Who would dream that the Lord
of glory could sleep in a stable in Bethlehem? What veiling of his glory
to
hang between two thieves on a cross. He wouldn't let demons announce that
he was the Holy One and the Son of God. "Keep it to yourself,"
he ordered
them. He healed some men and then he forbade them to tell people that
he
was the one who had transformed them. Thirty years of obscurity were
followed by three years of humiliation. He had nowhere to lay his head
-
what a strange son of king David! He was a wanderer on earth. He called
himself the Son of Man, but he was the hidden Messiah. He entered Jerusalem
as the prophesied Messiah, but he did so sitting on a little donkey. "Is
this the Messiah?" people asked. He made such shadowy application
to
himself of Old Testament Messianic prophecies. His disciples were often
saying to one another, "What is he saying to us? What does he mean?"
He
talked to them in parables and they didn't know what he was getting at.
Before his resurrection Jesus prevented men coming to a full knowledge
of
who he himself was. His nature is hidden from the eyes of men from his
baptism right up to the resurrection morning. For that reason blasphemies
against him during those years could be forgiven. If men made all manner
of
cruel judgments about him during those three years their blasphemies could
be forgiven. We can understand that because the Lord Jesus himself was
keeping his identity as the eternal Son of God hidden from us.
Then listen and look at what is going on in Galilee. What a contrast.
No
hiddenness there. The people are given such a a view of the unveiled work
of the Holy Spirit in the ministry of Jesus of Nazareth, teaching,
convicting, illuminating, saving and transforming sinners. The glorious
person of God the Holy Spirit is not at all hidden. When a man blind from
birth actually sees - how mighty is the work of the Holy Spirit. When
many
people are delivered from demons - how powerful is the activity of the
Spirit! When every kind of illness in every kind of personality is healed
-
the Spirit is really at work in the land! When tens of thousands come
from
all over to see and hear Jesus Christ then how mighty is the work of the
Spirit! The Spirit was not at all incognito. He had been poured out
abundantly on Galilee, and yet . . . these teachers of the law came from
Jerusalem, experienced the power and presence of the Spirit in these ways,
and they jumped to the conclusion, "By the prince of demons this
is being
done. Beelzebub is at work." Jesus could not be the Messiah. They
were
blaspheming the work of the Spirit of God.
So the unforgivable sin is not some general antagonism towards Jesus;
it is
not the fact that many in Israel heard him and rejected him - "he
came unto
his own and his own received him not" throughout his ministry. The
unforgivable sin during the life of Jesus of Nazareth was to experience
the
power and presence of God the Spirit and give the rationale for those
mighty works to the power of Beelzebub. For such an attitude to the Spirit
there could be no forgiveness. But during that same time some men could
argue that Christ was an evil blasphemer, and sentence him to death, nail
him to a cross, stand in front of him as he hung there, mocking and
taunting him, and yet God didn't say to them, "Right! The unforgivable
sin!
No forgiveness for you!" At Pentecost those very people experienced
the
love of God. They were called to repentance and 3000 were converted.
Now, if you have come with me so far . . . I have explained to you that
during Jesus' ministry, before his cross and resurrection, the unforgivable
sin could have been committed by someone like you and me if we had lived
in
Galilee and we displayed this locked in and defiant attitude to Jesus.
We
attributed to the devil the mighty works of the Spirit of God that we
had
been actually experiencing in the life of the Lord Jesus. That would have
been the definition of the unforgivable sin during the years of humiliation
of the Son of God.
ii] The Unforgivable Sin Since the Resurrection of Christ.
Now let us move on to Easter morning and the message of the conquest
of
death increasingly preached abroad and confirmed and energised at
Pentecost. This is a new era in which Christ is preached as the Son of
God
and as Lord. The apostles tell men plainly that Christ is the brightness
of
God's glory and the express image of his person. From the resurrection
on
there is no distinction between blaspheming against the Spirit and
blaspheming against Christ. There is still an unforgivable sin, but now
it
can be directed towards either the Son or the Spirit. How do the apostles
speak of the unforgivable sin? They do so as in two famous passages in
the
letter to the Hebrews:
a] Hebrews 6:4-6: "It is impossible for those who have been enlightened,
who have tasted the heavenly gift, who have shared in the Holy Spirit,
who
have tasted the goodness of the word of God and the powers of the coming
age, if they fall away, to be brought back to repentance, because to their
loss they are crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting
him
to public disgrace." You understand that it is a very similar kind
of
situation that we have seen in Galilee in Mark 3. Again, under the
apostles, there has been a wonderful outpouring of the Holy Spirit and
some
people have been enlightened, and have tasted the heavenly gift Jesus
Christ. They have shared in the Holy Spirit's convicting work and have
had
a foretaste of heaven from God's blessings poured out on a church, but
after all that, these people have become apostate and fallen away. These
Hebrews have gone back to the synagogue and the temple and the sacrifices
of bulls and sheep and have said, "We tried Jesus Christ and he's
rubbish."
They are in fact crucifying the Son of God all over again and subjecting
him to public disgrace. While they reject Christ - after receiving so
many
blessings - they are guilty of an eternal sin. There can be no forgiveness
for those who have a locked-in rejection of Christ.
b] Hebrews 10:26-29: "If we deliberately keep on sinning after
we have
received the knowledge of the truth, no sacrifice for sins is left, but
only a fearful expectation of judgment and of raging fire that will consume
the enemies of God. Anyone who rejected the law of Moses died without
mercy
on the testimony of two or three witnesses. How much more severely do
you
think a man deserves to be punished who has trampled the Son of God under
foot, who has treated as an unholy thing the blood of the covenant that
sanctified him, and who has insulted the Spirit of grace?" Again,
we can
easily move back from these words to this Mark 3 situation in Galilee.
Those teachers of the law from Jerusalem had come to hear and see the
Lord
Christ. They had received the knowledge of the truth, but they would not
have the Messiah. They deliberately kept on sinning. So it was with the
apostatising Hebrews. No other sacrifice for sins exist than the Lamb
of
God. They may return to dragging their lambs to the Temple, but there
is no
pardon in their blood. There remains for them only a fearful expectation
of
judgment and a raging fire to consume them. These once enlightened people
who once professed to love the Lord Jesus are now saying that Christ was
a
blasphemer, and he deserved to die on Golgotha. They had looked at his
cross, the blood of the covenant, and have turned and are now treating
it
as an unholy thing - the execution of criminal who got what was coming
to
him. They have insulted the Spirit of grace (Hebs. 10:29). The writer
of
the Hebrews says that there is no forgiveness for such a mentality. To
have
known the truth but then to have rejected it utterly, an
d to say that Jesus of Nazareth got what he deserved when he died as a
criminal on Calvary, to treat his blood as an unholy thing and insult
the
Spirit of grace as some 'emotional spasm' - that is the end of their
relationship with God. There is no hope for them. They have sinned the
unforgivable sin.
The unforgivable sin is a sin against the obviousness of salvation,
and the
reality of Christ, a salvation which has come right up to us and we've
had
a taste of it and some knowledge of it. What have we done? We've dismissed
it all as something below contempt, even evil, utterly unholy. The
unforgivable sin is our radical, total, blatant and willful apostasy.
Remember, when the Bible speaks about the unforgivable sin it is not
speaking for the benefit of other people, it is for you and for me. It
is a
warning to every single Christian. It is not in order that I may speculate
about people who were once baptized here by me and subsequently have fallen
away. The warning has been given for me to lay it to my heart. It has
been
given in order to exhort me to live a more holy life, to mortify remaining
sin, and walk with the Spirit, and present my body a living sacrifice
to
God.
What is most encouraging is this, that when you get a fearful section
of
warning like Hebrews 6 that tells us how close we can get to Jesus Christ
without ever being actually eternally in him, and falling away and being
lost, you find immediately after the deadly warning words like this: "Even
though we speak like this, dear friends, we are confident of better things
in your case - things that accompany salvation" (Hebs 6:9). "I
believe you
yourselves haven't rejected the gospel unlike that little group of
apostates," he is saying. "You haven't tasted and then turned
away. You
haven't received the knowledge of the truth and then rejected it. You
are
going on trusting and obeying every day. You are stirring up one another
to
love and good works." I can say that to almost all of you.
So, let me define for you the unforgivable sin: it is the ongoing and
continual rejection of the witness of the Holy Spirit to Jesus Christ
as
Saviour and God. That is the eternal sin. It is constant resistance to
the
grace and mercy of God. It is a stubborn fixed opposition to Jesus which
expresses itself in treating him as a great evil in our lives. It is the
wickedness of dismissing conversion to Christ and obedience to him as
Lord
as the ultimate folly. That sort of thing is the eternal sin.
Think of Ananias and Sapphira. Here were a husband and wife who were
amongst the first Christians to join the church after Pentecost. They
had
Peter and John as their pastors. There was a wonderful work of the Spirit
of God going on in the city of Jerusalem with thousands of new converts.
There was deep love amongst the brethren, and glorious preaching. You
would
think that no one in such days could get near to committing the
unforgivable sin, but Ananias and Sapphira did. They sought a name for
generosity by selling their land and saying that they had given everything
to the church, but they had lied. They kept a sizable chunk of the proceeds
in their pockets. They lied publicly before the representatives of Christ,
who were the apostles. Peter's words to Ananias were these, "How
is it that
Satan has so filled your heart that you have lied to the Holy Spirit?
. . .
You have not lied to men but to God" (Acts 5:3). We are told that
Ananias
heard those words and fell down dead and so did his wife a little later.
It
was a warning to the whole church not take for granted the privileges
of
the ministry of the Holy Spirit, and to speak with integrity and judgment
day honesty as the members of Christ to the representatives of Christ.
There was a man at the time of the reformation called Fritz Spiera,
a
contemporary of Luther and Calvin. He was someone who began so well,
impressed by evangelical Christians, he began to study the Scriptures
himself and to believe upon Jesus Christ. He told others of his new joy
in
Jesus. He kept his membership in the Roman Catholic church but when they
discovered what he believed they brought charges against him that he was
undermining the authority of the pope. He had to chose between dying in
agony at a stake being burned alive or withdrawing his statements. He
recanted and told the Roman church and his Protestant friends that he
had
given up his Bible doctrines and faith in Christ. He lived in agony for
the
next five years; there was no hope for someone like himself, he believed,
because he had committed the unforgivable sin against the Spirit. No one
could comfort him, and many people thought that his sorrow was like that
of
Judas Iscariot. He became infamous for what he had done. John Calvin wrote
to help him and Calvin also wrote to Christians in Germany, France and
Italy about him. The Puritans often used his sad end as an illustration
of
the eternal sin.
But no one can know with certainty whether Spiera or any particular
person
has committed the unforgivable sin. Of course we know that if a person
goes
on rejecting Christ and trusting in his own merits there is no hope for
that person. Love is silent. Jesus tells us that, "Whoever believes
in the
Son has eternal life, but whoever rejects the Son will not see life, for
God's wrath remain on him" (Jn. 3:36). I don't know that from any
special
feelings I might have but because the Saviour tells the world that very
plainly in the New Testament. We can all know that, but no one personally
knows whether he has got to the point where it is impossible for him to
trust in Christ and receive a pardon because he has committed the
unforgivable sin. Spiera might say that he thought he had, but how could
he
say it with certainty? Only by determining to go on defying and disobeying
the inviting Christ. But I am not going to take Spiera's bleak opinion
about himself as the last word because Jesus Christ always has the last
word not men. Spiera may feel he has blasphemed against the Spirit, but
I
won't believe him. I refuse to believe him. I don't have access to the
book
of life in heaven to take it down and see that there is no entry under
Fritz Spiera's name - but neither does anyone else. Those are secret things
that belong to God. The revealed things that belong to us tell us, "Sinner,
come to Christ!", whoever we are and whatever ups and downs we have
gone
through in our past, whether we once as teenagers made a profession of
faith and then fell away for many years. That is not the unpardonable
sin.
Come back!
I would say to Fritz Spiera, "How do you know that you have committed
the
unpardonable sin?" He would tell me that he once recanted and rejected
the
Christ whom once he confessed. "Do you feel happy about it?"
I would say.
"Happy? I'm in agony of soul, without hope." "No you're
not," I'd say to
him. "This is a day of grace in which Christ invites rebel sinners
to come
to himself for rest, and he sincerely invites you. Come as you are to
Christ and come now. Come as the most reluctant sinner ever to have come.
Come with little assurance and little hope that God will hear you, but
still come. Die coming! Say, 'I died trying to come to Christ.' None who
died thus will be turned away." I would say to him, "You say
that you know
that you don't have Christ?" "Yes," "But do you know
that if you did have
him you'd be saved?" "Yes . . ." "Then you are a Christian.
Do you ask God
to forgive you your sins for Christ's sake? Then that is a Christian."
I
would use every means of encouraging him to put his faith - even as fine
as
a spider's thread - in Christ. I say, do not trust in your belief that
you
have committed blasphemy against the Holy Spirit. Trust in the one who
says, "Come to me."
Christians get depressed and sick for various reasons, and then they
may read these words of Jesus about the unforgivable sin - at such a time
of sickness. They cling to those awful warnings and they say, "That
is me! I am in that state." But I refuse to believe them. That is
the illness talking. They read Pilgrim's Progress and they come across
Bunyan's man in the iron cage, and they say, "That's me." I
will not believe such assurance of damnation. "Don't say that,"
I'll say to them, "That's your sickness talking." This is a
day the Lord has made, when we may go to him for mercy and grace to help
us in our time of need. However long our imprisoned spirits have lain
fast bound in sin and nature's night Christ's eye still gives a quickening
ray. We can awake, and our chains can fall off, and our hearts be free,
and we can follow him.
There is such a thing as an unforgivable sin, and we will not apologise
for
dealing with a sober theme. Now you know that every wise Christian will
say
such words as these to you about that sin (and most of you have heard
these
counsels often through your life) - hear me - that if you are anxious
that
you have committed blasphemy against the Spirit, you needn't fear, for
such
blasphemy is always accompanied by complete indifference to that sin.
In
other words, if you are afraid you have committed this sin we can say
with
great confidence that you have not, because the troubled conscience you
have is a sure testimony that you haven't committed it. Even in our text
the Lord Jesus doesn't tell these Pharisees from Jerusalem, "You
have
committed the unforgivable sin." He does not! Rather he is telling
them to
take care, because whoever he might be who blasphemes against the Holy
Spirit - though he be a Jerusalem theologian - he will never be forgiven.
3. THE LORD JESUS SPEAKS THESE WORDS OF WARNING.
Let us face up to the warnings of the Lord as well as his wonderful
promises and comforts. Let us be careful not to treat casually those
particular words of assurance men give us that we cannot have committed
the
unpardonable sin if we are worried about it. When we are new Christians
we
want to please God in everything we do, and our consciences are sensitive,
but one day that person who was once so scrupulous about sin may become
very indifferent to that sin which is unto death. "That's theology,"
he
will yawn
Let us remember how the New Testament writers go on to talk about sinning
against the Holy Spirit. They say three things:
i] Resist not the Spirit. He is convicting you of your sin; do not resist
him. He is showing you the loveliness of Christ; do not resist him. He
is
enlightening you concerning the truth of the Bible; do not resist him.
He
is drawing you to the Saviour; do not resist him. John Kershaw told the
story of an old man who was witnessed to by his neighbour for many years
so
that finally he agreed to go with him to his dissenters' church. The sermon
struck home to him and troubled his conscience. He sat by the fire and
said
nothing when he returned home as his wife tried to cheer him up. The next
Sunday he was present voluntarily at the service and the Spirit worked
in
his heart more powerfully than ever before. He returned home and sat by
his
fire for a long time, his wife watching and hovering. John Kershaw records
their conversation like this: "I wish," he said to his wife,
"you would
find me our old Bible." It needed to be found, for it had not been
used for
months, or perhaps for years. The Bible was found. The wife took her apron
and rubbed off the dust, and gave the Book to her husband. He read a little
here and here, and ponders it over in his mind, and then he said, "I
say
wife, is this our old Bible that we have had ever since we married?"
"Yes,"
she said, "you know we never had any other." Then he read again,
and after
thinking, with greater earnestness, he said, "I say, is this our
right old
Bible?" "Yes," she said, "Why can't you believe me?
We never had another."
"Well, then," he said, "if it's our right old Bible, I've
got new eyes."
The Spirit of God was illuminating his mind, and giving him understanding.
The veil of ignorance was being taken away and the loveliness of Christ
was
being seen. Do not resist the Spirit when he works like that or you may
end
up committing the unforgivable sin.
ii] Grieve not the Spirit. The Spirit is not like the wind, or like
a
computer, some powerful but inanimate force. He is a loving person whose
delight is to help us by strengthening us to serve Christ more and more.
Do
not grieve the person of the Holy Spirit. How do we grieve one another?
By
spurning their love, by ignoring them, by refusing to share our lives
with
them, by behaviour that hurts them, by cruel words and deeds. So it is
with
the Holy Spirit. Our defiance of God's commandments grieves the Spirit.
The
hardness of our attitude to him can grieve him and we can find ourselves
coming spiritually to a desert in winter time. We have to go on in our
lives without his strength and guidance. How can you face the future
without God the Holy Spirit? Is the loss of the Spirit something you would
find unbearable? Then do not grieve him or you may end up blaspheming
against the Holy Spirit.
iii] Quench not the Spirit. A flame of sacred love has been kindled
on the
mean altar of your heart. There is some warmth and light for Jesus Christ.
You have built an altar for God. You yourself are the sacrifice stretched
out upon it. God's fire has fallen to consume you, this living sacrifice.
Do not quench the flame. Be a burning and a shining light! Your faith
is
only a smoking flax. Do not quench it by foolish unbelief and sinful
defiance of our loving Saviour. Stir up the gift that is in you. Once
there
was a zeal, a courage in witnessing, a prayerfulness. No duties required
in
the name of Christ were spurned. You would hew wood and gather water if
the
Saviour asked you. You would give a cup of cold water; you would lay your
life down for the brethren. Now you have quenched the Spirit. Sigh,
"Return O holy dove return!
Sweet messenger of rest.
I hate the sin that made Thee mourn
And drove Thee from my breast." (William Cowper).
Then there is some hope for you. Do not quench the Spirit so that you
grow
indifferent to his work in your life. Then you may end up guilty of an
eternal sin.
23rd March 2003
GEOFF THOMAS