The Minnesota humorist, Garrison Keillor, once observed that
people do bad, horrible, dirty, rotten and despicable things, then, instead of
repenting, they just go into treatment. “Whatever
happened to guilt?” he lamented. “Guilt, is the gift that keeps on giving.”
Keillor’s tongue in cheek appraisal of guilt belies the
truth. While there may be a few sociopaths
who feel no remorse for their actions and show no capacity for guilt, most of
us know the feelings of guilt only too well.
Religious leaders sometimes revert to guilt as the trump
card to keep church members and parishioners in line. Parents use it with children. Siblings, co-workers and even friends
occasionally rely on it to get their way. When husbands and wives are unable to
settle a heated argument, one or the other often reverts to guilt’s lethal
weapon by recalling past offenses that were supposedly forgiven and forgotten.
In its best moments, guilt can protect and guide us, much
like the pain that teaches us to avoid a hot stove or sharp objects. When we
respond to guilt with confession and repentance, we can move forward to live a
better life on a higher plane.
But guilt can be destructive and debilitating. Sometimes we
feel guilt over clearly remembered wrongs we have done. At other times we may
feel guilty and not know why. We wake up
with a feeling of unworthiness and shame with no specific deed to identify as
the source. Our feelings of guilt are irrational, leaving us at a loss to
identify the source or the solution.
Guilt can lock us in its prison and shackle us so that we feel
helpless. It robs us of energy and
steals our joy. Guilt can leave us
smoldering in anger or suffocating in depression.
The good news is that Jesus came to set us free from
guilt. When confronted with the woman caught in the act of
adultery, he dismissed those who condemned her and said, “Neither do I condemn
you. Go your way and sin no more.” (John 8:1-11).
We can live our lives free of guilt and self-recrimination. Paul
wrote, “Therefore there is now no condemnation for those who
are in Christ Jesus. For the law of the Spirit of life
in Christ Jesus has set you free from the law of sin and of death. (Romans
8:1-2). John wrote, “We will know by this that we
are of the truth, and will assure our heart before Him in
whatever our heart condemns us; for God is greater than our heart and knows all
things.” (1 John 3:19-20).
An interesting thing happens when God removes our guilt, and
we know it. Not only can we live with greater joy and freedom, we no longer feel
compelled to heap guilt upon others.
No comments:
Post a Comment