The Gift of Guilt

Many years ago, when I was fairly new to ministry, I experienced an unprecedented delight in my relationship with God. My life wasn’t sinless or pain free; I was simply experiencing the joy of staying connected with God. I spent regular time with Him, talked with Him throughout the day, and confessed sin quickly when I became aware of it. I didn’t have any illusions that I had “arrived” spiritually or had achieved maturity; I had just found a satisfying stride in walking with God.

One morning, when I arrived at our ministry center, I noticed some friends (a married couple) that appeared to be arguing in the parking lot and having a difficult time of it. I silently prayed for them and entered the building. Later, when I saw the husband (I’ll call him Jason), I told him that I had prayed for him and his wife that morning. Jason looked intently at me and said, “Wait, did you pray for us before you saw us in the parking lot?” I immediately felt rattled. Why was he asking that question? If I admitted that I had prayed for them after I saw them, I might come across as if I had been staring at them and eavesdropping. Of course, the other option would be to lie. In that split second of confusion, I opted for the latter, and I lied that I had prayed for them before I had seen them that morning. He of course (incorrectly) thought that I must be very in tune with God, because I had prayed for them without having seen that they were struggling. He was encouraged that God saw them, which is why he had asked the question in the first place.

As I walked away, I was overcome by a crushing sense of guilt. I had just lied to my friend to make myself look good! I quickly confessed to God what I had done … but the guilt remained. Certainly I couldn’t admit to Jason that I had lied; I was utterly mortified. So I said nothing… and that joy of staying connected with God vanished. Oh, I still spent time with Him and I know there were ways that He used me during that time … but in the back of my mind there was this nagging feeling that things just weren’t right.

While the Bible refers to guilt as the status of being guilty, in our contemporary language we often use guilt to refer to the unpleasant feelings we experience when we have done something wrong. If I say something hurtful or lie on an exam (or to my friend) or do one of any number of things that I shouldn’t do, I often feel “guilty.” It’s an unsettledness, a feeling that something is not right within myself, or between me and another person. It nags at me. In my situation with Jason, I felt guilty because I was guilty.

The Bible actually speaks to these feelings, even if it doesn’t use the words “feeling guilty” for them. In Psalm 32, David rejoices over forgiveness for his sin. As he recalls his experience, he says,


When I kept silent about my sin, my body wasted away
Through my groaning all day long.
For day and night Your hand was heavy upon me;
My vitality was drained away as with the fever heat of summer. Selah.
– Psalm 32:3-4

I can attest to the truth of these words! I experienced similar feelings daily after my conversation with Jason, and that was a relatively small drop in the ocean of my sins. Sometimes feeling guilty presents as a vague sense of discomfort, other times as a crushing sense of remorse. What is the solution? David continues,

I acknowledged my sin to You,
And my iniquity I did not hide;
I said, “I will confess my transgressions to the Lord”;
And You forgave the guilt [i.e. the state of my being guilty] of my sin. Selah.
– Psalm 32:5

It then follows that forgiveness is the gift, right? Where does guilt fit in? Forgiveness certainly is a gift, a beautiful gift given by a gracious Heavenly Father through His Son Jesus. But how is guilt a gift? While the feeling of guilt is unpleasant, it isn’t the source of our problem; the actual state of our guilt is the real problem. I experience something similar when I touch a hot stove. The pain I feel isn’t the problem; it is simply a warning sign to real danger. Without pain, my hand could be irreparably damaged by its proximity to the real problem, the dangerously hot stove. I don’t keep my hand on the stove and inject myself with anesthesia to remove the pain; I flee the damaging heat. Similarly, my feelings of guilt provide a warning sign. “Deal with the problem or your life will be damaged!” When I respond appropriately to the guilt by seeking forgiveness, I deal with the problem at its source.

My feelings of guilt offer me an invitation. Something is wrong, but there is a way it can be made right. When I have sinned against God and/or another person, I can humble myself, admit my fault, and ask for forgiveness. While I can’t be guaranteed that the other person will accept my apology or extend forgiveness, I can be assured that I am following the command of Romans 12:18: “If possible, so far as it depends on you, be at peace with all men.” My experience of guilt urges me on to deal with the problem at hand.

Whatever happened with Jason? I am embarrassed to say that I avoided telling him the truth for a whole year! My pride was just too great. But when I finally couldn’t bear hiding any longer, I pulled Jason aside and explained what I had done. He was gracious and forgiving (although I’m sure he didn’t understand why I had waited so long to say something) and within minutes the conversation was over. Immediately, the “fever heat” (Psalm 32:4) was gone and my fellowship with God was renewed. I wasted a lot of time in my pride, and my feelings of guilt certainly didn’t feel like a gift at the time. But I saw how kind God was to bring me to a point where I could see humility as a better option than the alternative. The gift of guilt pushed me towards the gifts of forgiveness and reconciliation with both Jason and my heavenly Father.

When God Ran

I was running the other day and this song came up on my Pandora station:

https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=asU6FXnHWus

Actually it was a newer version, but the link above is the Benny Hester version of “When God Ran” that I first heard back when I was in college.  It was my senior year and I was in the living room of my apartment with my roommates.  They had turned on the radio and found K-Love, way in its early days before it was a nationwide “thing”.  The signal was not great – Christian music was hard to come by in Berkeley in those days – but it was enough to get the message.  The picture of the prodigal son sheepishly returning home as his father ran to embrace him was burned in my memory.  I often turned on the radio after that hoping that they would play the song again.  I have only heard it a handful of times but 25 years later I still remember it.

God is not soft on sin.  He doesn’t smile and shake His head with a sigh and say “Oh, well, kids today, you know” when we turn our hearts away from Him.  He paid a high price to purchase our redemption.

But Romans 2:4 says that the kindness of God leads us to repentance.  I can’t tell you the number of times when I have known I was guilty and needed to repent and I received an unexpected check in the mail or a message with good news … and my heart was reminded that God still loved me.  His conviction brought me to a point of confession (agreeing with Him that my sin was wrong), but His kindness led me to repentance (turning away from my sin and wholeheartedly towards Him).