Guilt
PostPosted: Mon Aug 18, 2003 10:50 am
Can you ever drift too far?
"There's no way I can be forgiven for what I did."
"I feel terrible about not being able to help out."
"I'll never be free from this guilt, or from this behavior."
"I don't want to do this, but I'd feel awful if I said no."
"How can I even look him (or her) in the eye? I know what I've done!"
There is no emotion so slippery, so controlling, so unshakeable as guilt. Guilt is an accuser. It tells us that we've fallen short of expectations, that we've failed our loved ones and family, that it's selfish to say "no" even to demands we cannot realistically handle.
Sometimes guilt is a reminder of past mistakes, regrets, failures. Sometimes it's the threat that others will be hurt or disappointed by our actions. And like so many emotions, guilt can be both a positive and a negative thing. Guilt can be good when it reminds us of a past transgression that we haven't yet come to terms with. Guilt can be bad when it pressures us into falling in line with unrealistic or even unhealthy human expectations. But guilt can be worse yet. It can convince us that we've drifted too far away from God to ever be brought back.
Are you living a life controlled by guilt? Do you carry the baggage of guilt and regret with you as you go about your day, at work, at home, at church? If so, that's not what God wants for your life. God wants to permanently free you from your guilt, no matter what sort of guilt is holding you down. He wants to see you released from its crushing control and made into a new person--a person confident that there is absolutely no sin, no failure, no disappointment great enough to put you out of His reach.
Follow the links at left to read passages from the Bible that show us how God can free us from guilt, or view some of these online resources for more guidance in coming to grips with--and casting away--the chains of guilt.
"There's no way I can be forgiven for what I did."
"I feel terrible about not being able to help out."
"I'll never be free from this guilt, or from this behavior."
"I don't want to do this, but I'd feel awful if I said no."
"How can I even look him (or her) in the eye? I know what I've done!"
There is no emotion so slippery, so controlling, so unshakeable as guilt. Guilt is an accuser. It tells us that we've fallen short of expectations, that we've failed our loved ones and family, that it's selfish to say "no" even to demands we cannot realistically handle.
Sometimes guilt is a reminder of past mistakes, regrets, failures. Sometimes it's the threat that others will be hurt or disappointed by our actions. And like so many emotions, guilt can be both a positive and a negative thing. Guilt can be good when it reminds us of a past transgression that we haven't yet come to terms with. Guilt can be bad when it pressures us into falling in line with unrealistic or even unhealthy human expectations. But guilt can be worse yet. It can convince us that we've drifted too far away from God to ever be brought back.
Are you living a life controlled by guilt? Do you carry the baggage of guilt and regret with you as you go about your day, at work, at home, at church? If so, that's not what God wants for your life. God wants to permanently free you from your guilt, no matter what sort of guilt is holding you down. He wants to see you released from its crushing control and made into a new person--a person confident that there is absolutely no sin, no failure, no disappointment great enough to put you out of His reach.
Follow the links at left to read passages from the Bible that show us how God can free us from guilt, or view some of these online resources for more guidance in coming to grips with--and casting away--the chains of guilt.