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Octavius Winslow

Proverbs 28:13

Proverbs 28:13
Octavius Winslow August, 22 2016 3 min read
709 Articles 90 Sermons 35 Books
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August, 22 2016
Octavius Winslow
Octavius Winslow 3 min read
709 articles 90 sermons 35 books
What does the Bible say about confessing sins?

Proverbs 28:13 teaches that confessing and forsaking sins leads to mercy.

The Bible highlights the importance of confessing sins as seen in Proverbs 28:13, which states, 'He that covers his sins shall not prosper; but whoever confesses and forsakes them shall have mercy.' This verse reveals the contrast between hiding sin and coming clean before God. When we attempt to conceal our sins, we cut ourselves off from the mercy and grace that God offers. Instead, true confession restores our relationship with God and brings His tender mercy into our lives.

Moreover, unconfessed sin distorts our view of God, just as Adam hid from God after his transgression. Guilt can cloud our perception, making us feel distant from His loving presence. Acknowledging our sins not only secures forgiveness but also helps us view God rightly—as a loving Father rather than a harsh judge. Thus, the act of confession is not just a duty but a means by which we cultivate intimacy with God and maintain a healthy, humble conscience in our walk with Him.

Proverbs 28:13

How do we know that confession of sin is important for Christians?

Confession is vital as it restores our relationship with God and maintains a tender conscience.

Confession of sin is essential for Christians as it serves as a conduit for receiving God's mercy, as emphasized in Proverbs 28:13. Without confession, individuals may become desensitized to sin, allowing it to harden their hearts and alter their relationship with God. The effects of unconfessed sin include distorted views of God's character and a heavy conscience. As Christians, we are called to engage in the practice of daily confession, which facilitates stronger communion with God and a keen awareness of His holiness.

Furthermore, neglecting to confess can lead to a fearful forgetfulness of one’s sin without embracing the grace of forgiveness that comes through genuine contrition. This forgetfulness can often necessitate a painful reminder of sin, causing shame and humiliation, but ideally, confession invites the Holy Spirit's restorative work within us. Remembering our sins in the light of grace fuels our admiration for God's love and draws us closer to Him, demonstrating that confession is not just important, but a necessary privilege in the life of a believer.

Proverbs 28:13

Why is it important to forsake sins after confession?

Forsaking sins after confession is crucial for true repentance and spiritual growth.

Forsaking sins following confession is a crucial part of true repentance and spiritual growth. Proverbs 28:13 emphasizes the need not only to confess but also to turn away from sin, indicating that genuine confession involves a commitment to change. When believers confess their sins without the intention to forsake them, it risks becoming merely a ritual without the transformative power that true repentance brings. Forsaking sin reflects an acknowledgment of God’s holiness and a desire to align one's life with His will.

Additionally, forsaking sin allows believers to avoid the repercussions of hardened hearts and a distorted perception of God. When Christians choose to turn from their sinful ways, they cultivate a lifestyle that honors God and invites continual mercy and grace into their lives. This process cultivates spiritual tenderness that enables believers to remain sensitive to the Holy Spirit’s leading, thereby promoting a vibrant, proactive faith rather than a reactive one burdened by guilt. In essence, true forsaking of sin is a demonstration of a heart transformed by grace, eager to live in accordance with the teachings of Scripture.

Proverbs 28:13

“He that covers his sins shall not prosper; but whoever confesses and forsakes them shall have mercy.”

— Proverbs 28:13

A sense of guilt upon the conscience invariably occasions distant views of God. The moment Adam became conscious of having sinned, He hid himself from God's eye. He sought concealment from the endearing presence of Him who had been used to walk in the cool of the evening through the bowers of Paradise, in sweet and confiding communion. It is so now! Guilt upon the conscience, sin unconfessed, imparts misty, gloomy, distorted views of God. We lose that clear endearing view of His character which we once had. We dare not look up with holy, humble boldness. We misinterpret His dealings; think harshly of His ways; and if providences are dark, and afflictions come, in a moment we exclaim, "I have sinned, and God is angry." And so we seek concealment from God. We sink the Father in the Judge, and the child in the slave.

Another evil that results from sin unconfessed is the hardening tendency it produces upon the conscience. To a child of God, who has felt and mourned over the power of sin, we need not stay to prove how hardening is the tendency of sin; how it crusts the heart with a callousness which no human power can soften, and which often requires heavy affliction to remove. Where a child of God, then, neglects the habit of a daily confession of sin, by slow and almost imperceptible degrees, the conscience loses its tenderness, and becomes, by this gradual process, so hardened as at length to think nothing of a sin, which at a previous period would have filled the soul with horror and remorse.

One more evil we may mention, and that is, that a neglect of this most important duty causes a fearful forgetfulness of sin, without the sweet sense of its forgiveness. The believer loses sight of his sin, not because he knows it to be pardoned, afresh blotted out, but from a mere carnal forgetfulness of the sin. The child of God, on whose conscience the atoning blood has been afresh sprinkled, cannot soon forget his sin. Oh no! Freed from a sense of its condemnation, delivered from its guilt, and looking up to the unclouded face of a reconciled God, yet He remembers how far he could depart from the God that so loved him, and so readily and freely forgave him. The very pardon of his sin stamps it upon his memory. He thinks of it only to admire the love, adore the grace, and extol the blood that blotted it out; and thus he is led to go softly all his days. "My soul has them still in remembrance, and is humbled in me."

But the believer who neglects the duty and the privilege of confession loses the remembrance of his sin, until brought under the rod of the covenant. Then some deep and heavy chastisement recalls it to his memory, and fills him with shame, humiliation, and contrition. In this state, the Eternal Spirit comes into the soul with His restoring mercies, leads the abased and humbled believer afresh to the "fountain opened,"; and God; the God of all comfort; speaks in words of comfort to his broken heart.

From Morning Thoughts by Octavius Winslow.
Octavius Winslow
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